Media Update

Thanks so much for voting! I made it through to the 2nd round. Whew. Nice, exciting start to the week! :D And if you would be so inclined, here’s the link to vote this week:

https://www.goodreads.com/choiceawards/best-debut-goodreads-author-2013

In other news, I’m part of NaNoWriMo this month, along with 294,934 other people…seriously, that’s how many have taken on this challenge…and writing has never felt harder. I went into it all geared up. Plenty of ideas. A plan. And besides getting sick and having umpteen other *surprises* come my way this month, I’ve just been more stuck than usual. Fortunately, I have 19 days to get my act together!

Over on the FB page, I’ve been in a picture kind of mood. I found an Isaiah I think you’ll like. And of course, there are a few selections for Ian. *Thunk.* Prone to passing out when I look at a certain one…

And I’m trying, I’m really trying, to do better with Twitter. I still feel like I’m at the back of the class, trying to see the chalkboard and failing when I log on. I’ll get there, hopefully. ;)

Happy Monday! Go hug your dog and your lover. Not in that order, obviously!

The Next Book VOTE!

This is going to be so fun. I can’t wait to see how it turns out. I’ve been working on several projects~four, to be exact~and I need your VOTES at the end of the post to choose which one to focus on now! Below you’ll see the four different snippets. Please read and then make your choice! Let’s spread the word about this. I’ll leave the poll open until Saturday, November 2nd at noon.

Okay, let’s get started.

1. SLINGER

The minute I made contact with him, I knew I was in trouble. Steam was coming out of his nose and when my leg rounded over his body and I got in place, his muscles spasmed with electricity. If I’d cared enough about living, I would have gotten off right then. Walked away from it all. In my state of mind, I had no business trying to win the world championship.

Pride and stupidity—aren’t they one and the same?—kept me gripping the rope. When the bell sounded and we bounded out of the chute, there were three or four seconds that I thought I had a chance. It quickly went to hell.

Maverick, one of the top rank stock, was a bull that I’d managed to avoid for the past two years. Call it fate or call it luck—whatever it was—it seemed to be changing. Maybe it was my death wish that had finally brought me to this moment. I certainly was sick of living without her. What was the point of 1.5 million if I could never see her face again?

It’s this kind of thinking that kills a bullfighter.

When Maverick’s back legs went straight up in the air and he started kicking, my grip loosened. I was going down. I half-heartedly looked to his shoulder blades. Wherever you look is where you’re going to fall. Just as I made an attempt to right myself, he reared his head back and my shoulder and his horn collided. I flew across the dirt, bones breaking as I landed and blood came splurting out. Maverick and I made eye contact. The last thing I saw was him running toward me with drool flying and one horn hanging. I heard more bones crunch as he stepped on me; the equivalent of a car being demolished by a semi.

The next thing I remember was a bright light, but damn it all, it wasn’t heaven.

“Mr. Hart?”

I closed my eyes and willed away my breath. Every single cell in my body hurt. I just thought I didn’t want to live before, now I was desperate to just die already.

“Mr. Hart, can you hear me? Open your eyes, if you can.”

I groaned and squinted as I opened them slowly. A woman with her hair pulled back in a tight bun looked down at me, her eyes huge behind her glasses and full of concern. She wore a white coat and her name tag said Dr. Sutherland. I groaned again.

“What am I doing here? Dr. Freeman looks after me, no one else.” I shut my eyes tight.

“You were sent to my hospital,” she said. She raised my eyelids and shined a light in my eyes.

“Hell no. Leave me alone.”

“Mr. Hart, you nearly died and I’m happy to see your temper is still intact. You’re gonna need that to get through the next few months. The only thing holding your arm is muscle and ligament. Your collarbone is broken, nine ribs are broken…your nose is looking a little worse for the wear,” she paused and gave me a wink. A wink! “I daresay it’s your temper that will get you back on your feet once again. From what I hear, you keep trying to kill yourself.”

I reached up, good arm moving way too slow for how fast my brain was working, and grabbed her wrist. “I said leave me alone.”

She put her flashlight in her pocket and pulled my fingers off her wrist one by one. “Suit yourself. I will be back.”

2. BOW & FADE

It was true lust the moment he saw her. Her movements owned the music. From one song to the next, he watched as she seemed completely enraptured in the rhythm. Other dancers surrounded her, professional, skilled dancers, but she was the one who stood out. The girl could move.

“I don’t care who you pick—they all look good. But you have to keep that one.” Vander tapped the choreographer’s notes on number four, Roxie Taylor.

“Oh, that’s a given.” Anthony rolled his eyes. “She could make even you look like you know what you’re doing.”

“Watch it.” Vander tweaked Anthony’s fedora so it fell over his eyes.

“Trying to do a job here,” Anthony said as dramatically as he could, which was pretty dramatic.

Vander stood watching the dancers until Anthony raised his hand and told them to stop. He thanked them and called the next group auditioning. They had another few hours of tryouts. Vander had seen enough; he usually avoided the whole scene until he knew who Anthony had chosen. Extra guards were everywhere in the theater, and each dancer had been instructed to only speak to Anthony if they had any hopes of being part of the tour. No autographs from Vander would be given, no pictures, no exceptions. So far, only one girl had tried to get past a guard backstage and she had been escorted out.

Vander walked to the back of the theater and went to the green room, still thinking about the girl, Roxie. She made him want to forget the man he’d become. Just a year ago he would have made sure he got her into his bed. A girl who could move like that. Hell. The things he could do with her. He contemplated going back in the auditorium to see if Anthony would have her dance again, but knew it would probably be a while before that happened.

They’d been in Dallas for two days, trying a different talent pool for this tour. He had holed up in the theater or on the bus during the day, avoiding the crowds that seemed to be multiplying at their hotel. This would be his fifth world tour and as much as he loved singing for thousands every night to packed-out stadiums, he was ready for a break. A long break. Not exactly the right way to be thinking before the stringent rehearsal schedule began in a couple weeks.

Grabbing his sunglasses and ball cap, he walked back into the hall. A little boy with curly brown hair had materialized in the short time he’d been in the room. Vander wondered how he’d gotten through security, but he didn’t mind him being back there. He wasn’t bothering anyone. He was playing with a ball on the floor and didn’t look up until Vander was standing right by him.

“Hey there. Whatcha playin’?”

“My family says I can’t talk to strangers,” he lisped all his S’s, “but I know who you are so I guess it’s okay.”

“Well, they’re right. Are they here?”

The little boy nodded and then a smile took over his face. And Vander was finished, done for, smitten.

“Wanna play jacks?”

“Sure. I haven’t played with jacks since I was little—I never see kids play it anymore.”

“I do. All the time. Mom says I have a ‘diction.” He bounced the ball.

“Hmm, well an addiction to jacks wouldn’t be the worst thing, I don’t suppose. So, I’m Vander and who are you?”

“I’m George.”

“Really? George? Like Curious George?”

He laughed. “No, I’m Harry.”

“Harry. Oh, okay. So which is it? George or Harry?”

“I’m Mavid!”

“Mavid? Is that even a name?”

“Nooooo, you’re crazy, Mavid’s not a name.”

“You’re starting to look like a Mavid actually, I can see it now.”

That wiped the grin off his face. “I do not. Take that back.”

Vander held both hands up. “Whoa, dude. Just playing the game here.”

The little boy laughed. “Just kiddin’. Whoa, dude, loosen up.” He looked at Vander then and stood up. “I’m gonna get a drink of water. I’ll be right back. And you can call me Leo.”

3. JACK & KATY

I fell in love with her toes, and specifically, the hairs on her two big toes. I rode my bike past her house every day the summer I was nine, hoping for a glimpse of her. She was an angel with dark brown hair that hung down her back and big brown eyes that took over her entire face. Her lips looked red as a cherry slush at Tastee-Freeze, and when she smiled at me, I felt a twinge in my gut. The good kind of twinge.

Katy.

An older woman of fourteen.

She never made me feel like there was any difference in our ages at all. We’d sit on her front porch, and I’d stare at her beautiful feet, wishing I could reach out and touch them. We’d talk for hours about everything and nothing. She was the only one who ever heard me.

My brother, Larry, hassled me about it every chance he could get. He was a year younger than Katy and I’m pretty sure he had a crush almost as big as mine. The difference was, he thought he had a chance with her.

“You been over at Katy’s house again, Jack? Whatcha think she’s gonna see in you? A baby, that’s what.” And he’d laugh his grating laugh that never ceased to make my insides shrivel up and die a little.

“I’m gonna grow up and marry her one day,” I’d vow to anyone who would listen, excluding Katy, of course. Although, I’m pretty sure she did catch wind of it at some point. If she did, she still treated me the same and I appreciated that.

My life at home was complicated. I was the middle child and never wanted. I know a lot of middle children feel that way, but with me it was true. Every single birthday, my mother always tells about how hard she cried when I was born because I wasn’t a girl. She had her boy, Larry, and to my parents he was the golden son, even though there’s not much nice to say about him at all. And a few years after I came along, little Dee came and they got who they wanted.

My Uncle Roy and Aunt Edna saved me. They weren’t able to have children and they wanted me. I’d go stay with them on the farm and cry every time they took me home. Mama left me so long at Aunt Edna’s one time that eventually, my aunt and uncle went to my parents and asked if they could please just keep me. That seemed to snap Mama out of it for a little while, long enough to realize my value as a helper. She said I was the only one who could do a job right, so she put me to work. I’d still escape to Uncle Roy and Aunt Edna’s house every chance I could get.

Around eleven, I got a job at the grocery store. As soon as school was over, I’d rush off to my job and work until closing. My time with Katy was a little more sparse from then on, although I did see her at church. She had this one dress: yellow with a blue collar and the way her hair stood out on that yellow made me see stars. She still was just as friendly as she always had been, but she was starting to go out with boys. Butch was one boyfriend, and he mooned around town like a scalded dog when they broke up. I’ve never been happier.

The real trouble began when I turned eleven. Katy began dating a boy and I could tell this one was different. She got a look in her eye when she talked about him, and the times he was in town for the weekend, she fairly glowed. It crushed me. And I was working too hard that summer to barely even see her. But the next summer, when she told me she was getting married, I had to leave in a hurry so she wouldn’t see me cry.

The year I turned thirteen, I sat at the back of the church when she got married, head bent, angrily swiping tears faster than they could fall. Before they could walk back down the aisle, husband and wife, I ran out of the church before she could see me.

I got home late that night, my face streaked where the tears had fallen as I ran. I don’t know how long I ran, but long enough to turn into a man.

When I walked in the front door, my brother said, “Who you gonna marry now, Jack?” and his shoulders shook as he laughed. I walked up to him and slugged him right in the nose. Knocked him flat. It was the only time I felt good that day, and that was but a vapor when Daddy got ahold of me for fighting.

4. TWO LEFT GUNS

I freeze. And then adrenaline I didn’t know I had kicks in, and I begin hauling Patrick’s body into the bathroom. Don’t ask me why—I apparently lost my brain around the time a man died on me. I leave him in the floor and fold his legs a little, so he’ll fit in there when I close the door. There are three brisk knocks on the office door. I hurriedly walk out of the bathroom and toward the desk as the office door opens.
“Patrick?”
I hear Oliver’s voice before I see him. That smooth, buttery British accent that makes me swoon every single time I hear it. Oliver Strong.
“Oh, Bess. Hello. Didn’t know you were in here. Sorry to interrupt. Oh, uh, looks like Patrick isn’t here anyway…”
I open my mouth, but nothing comes out for a full minute. He clears his throat and I finally choke out, “Oh, um, well. Oliver. I didn’t see—I didn’t know you were…in town.” I smooth down my dress and do another swipe under my eyes just in case I missed some of the smudged makeup.
My nervousness has nothing to do with the dead man in the bathroom. I always become a bumbling fool around Oliver. I have had a crush on him since the company Christmas party two years ago. I had a humiliating fall over some stray tinsel and if it hadn’t been for Oliver’s gangly arm reaching out to catch me, I would have knocked over the ice sculpture filled with spiced punch.
I don’t even care that he’s the most awkward man I’ve ever met.
Oliver crinkles his nose ever so slightly, which makes his glasses sit just a teensy bit higher. I love it when he does that.
“Yes.” He seems to understand what I meant even though I never got it out. “That is a fantastic dress, Bess,” he says shyly and clears his throat again.
My face burns as fiery as my hair. “Thank you.”
His eyes narrow slightly on my dress and I shrink inside, wondering if he sees any blood.
I look down at his hands and see the file he clutches. “Can I help you with something?”
“Well, I’d hoped for a word with Patrick, but I can come back. I’ll be in the office until a week from Wednesday, so there will be plenty…” He trails off.
Ten days. Ten days he’ll be around. Suddenly, the day doesn’t seem quite so bad.
“I see. Well, feel free to enlist my help. I’m free for any favors…” I choke up when I realize what just left my mouth. I turn around so he can’t see the mortification on my face. It’s times like these that I really wish I could be a delicate swan who could just float right out of the office. Unfortunately, there is no hiding nor floating where I’m concerned.
“Rock and roll. Right. Very good. Thank you, Bess. I will come back. Carry on.”
I turn around to see him backing out of the room.
“Oliver!” I jump at the sound of my own voice.
Oliver stops immediately. “Yes, Bess.”
I smile in spite of myself. My dad used to always say ‘yes, Bess’ in a silly voice, throwing it in as he’d quote Dr. Seuss lines to me. Yes, Bess, there’s a fox in my socks…one fish, two fish, yes, Bess, a blue fish!
“I could use some help.”
“Of course,” he smiles kindly, “happy to help. What do you need?”
“Well…” I pinch my nose between my fingers for a second and hope the growing headache will go away. “It’s crazy, but…” My stomach does a nervous turn over and I feel nauseated again. I look down and Oliver’s large shoes swim in and out of focus as he nears me. “I’m not feeling so-”
And that’s the last thing I say before I hit the ground.

All work copyrighted by Willow Aster

 


Please choose your top pick Slinger, Bow & Fade, Jack & Katy, Two Left Guns  

A Little Something Fun

I need your help. I’m working on putting together snippets of the projects I’ve been working on, so I can have YOU vote for what you’d like to read (hopefully it’s a Willow Aster book) next! I hope to have this ready soon, and I hope that when I put it up, you’ll vote and help spread the word! I’d like to get as many votes as possible, so I know what people are excited about reading these days. And if you need something to read in the meantime, don’t forget to check out In the Fields! ;) I am loving the feedback I’m getting about the book. Makes my day when I hear back from you or when I read a review on Amazon that lets me know it’s resonating. Means so much! So watch for the upcoming vote post…trying to decide whether to offer two choices or four…

Hot Buttered Rum

Tried this recipe for Hot Buttered Rum from Emeril the other night. Delicious…and perfect for these blistery fall evenings.

If it’s not blistery where you are, I’m jealous. Anyway. Try it.

Ingredients
1 stick unsalted butter, softened 
2 cups light brown sugar 
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon 
½ teaspoon grated nutmeg 
Pinch ground cloves 
Pinch salt Bottle dark rum (I like Captain Morgain private stock) 
Boiling water

Directions
In a bowl, cream together the butter, sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves, and salt. Refrigerate until almost firm. Spoon about 2 tablespoons of the butter mixture into 12 small mugs. Pour about 3 ounces of rum into each mug (filling about halfway). Top with boiling water (to fill the remaining half), stir well, and serve immediately.

Blog Tour Stops!

I can’t believe this day is finally here. In the Fields is OUT! Thank you The Indie Bookshelf for hosting my blog tour! I love you ladies over there! I’ll keep the stops up on my website. I can’t even express how grateful I am to all of the bloggers for being part of this blog tour! Thank you! The ones who have interacted with me during the reading process~I just love that. It means so much that you care about my characters and stories. So, here we go!  

Tuesday, Sept. 10th:

The Indie Bookshelf

Reading Books Like a Boss

Shh Moms Reading

The Book Bellas

Book Unhinged Book Blog

Fiction and Fashion

Keep Calm and Read Romance

  Wednesday, Sept. 11th:

The Novel Tease

Three Chicks and Their Books

The Hopeless Romantics Book Blog

She Reads New Adult

Spoils of Wear

Romantic Book Affairs

The Book Hookers  

Thursday, Sept. 12th:

Addicted2Heroines

Reality Bites! Let’s Get Lost!

The Little Black Book Bloggers

Group Therapy Book Club Blog & Review

The Readiacs  

Friday, Sept. 13th:

Angie’s Dreamy Reads

Kindle Crack Book Reviews

K&M’s Book Haven  

Saturday, Sept. 14th:

Candy Coated Book Blog

Book Geeks Unite

Beauty Brains and Books  

Sunday, Sept. 15th:

StoreyBook Reviews

Bookworm Brandee

A Love Affair With Books

Stories and Swag  

Monday, Sept. 16th:

Book Nerd

The Life of Fiction

True Story Book Blog

Madison Says

 

In the Fields

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In the Fields is available as an ebook from Amazon or in paperback from CreateSpace.

What people are saying at GoodReads.

Background 1971—In the tiny, backward town of Tulma, Tennessee, optimistic, bookish Caroline Carson unwittingly finds herself in the middle of a forbidden romance. Severely neglected by her family and forced to flee Tulma to protect her secrets, Caroline’s young life comes crashing down around her. She finds refuge in a new town, but the past always has a way of stretching around time and stirring up trouble. When a new love comes into her life, she has to decide if she can give her heart to someone else, or if she will always be tied to someone she can’t have. Willow Aster is the author of True Love Story and In the Fields, and many more to come. She loves her crazy life with her husband and kids.

Giddy

I got giddy this morning when I realized that my new book, In the Fields will be coming out in just three and a half weeks! September 10th! This project has been a labor of love for me. I started it long before True Love Story. YEARS before. It was before I ever read The Secret Life of Bees and before The Help came out. Until finding those gems, I wasn’t sure where the right fit for this book would be. I’ve still been a little befuddled on how I should label it because it’s different from those too. Is it Southern Literature? Southern Gothic? Southern Romance? A friend suggested Southern Drama and I think that sounds about right. I hope you’ll go with me on this different writing adventure. I’ll get back to some hot and steamy movie star or something, don’t worry. But this book is where my heart is and what comes naturally for me. A little jog back in time when everything seemed simpler and sweeter…but was it really?

Shy

So it’s like this… I’m really a shy person who functions better behind a computer screen or a pad of paper any day of the week…but put me in a room full of authors and readers, like at Book Bash a couple weeks ago, and I will try to force myself out of my shell. The good news: I love nice people. And there were loads of nice people at Book Bash. The bad news: I get splotchy and anxious. And want to hide. No matter what. The splotchy, anxious, want to hide part came as I was going down the elevator Friday night…headed down for the author meet and greet. I felt like I needed an inhaler all of a sudden. I needed about ten more layers of deodorant. I needed to step in a freezer for at least 4.2 minutes. Fortunately, everyone was so kind and perhaps dealing with their own splotchy/anxious/want to hide syndromes that I got over myself real quick. And I was able to completely enjoy the next day. There were so many people I’d hoped to meet from online messages and to see them in person was just as exciting to me as it seemed to be for them. It’s just weird to think that people would be so excited to meet a shy girl who functions better behind a computer screen or a pad of paper any day of the week…but believe me, I’m not gonna question it! I was just so grateful to be part of the whole thing. Maryse is as beautiful as I expected, inside and out. The authors were kind and the readers, oh my word, the readers…I could not love any of you any more than I already do. You have completely rocked my world and changed my life!!! I will probably be laying low the rest of the year. I will be going to NOLA next February, but I better stay close to home so I can finish these books!!! But, I look forward to the day that I can meet each and every one of you who have made such a difference in my life.

Spring Fever Writing

So it seems that every time I start a book, three other ideas pile on top of that one. I have one at 52,460 words, one at 4,376, one at 3,900, and one at 1,567.   And wouldn’t you know it, the one I feel the most passionately about is the one at 1,567 words. Well, that could change on any given day, but today, that’s the one I can’t stop thinking about. My writing has spring fever. It’s been cooped up far too long, while I’ve been doing the fun things: blog interviews, a book signing here and there, talking with nice people all over the world, shipping books, etc. It’s been truly wonderful. But when I finally settle down long enough to do the actual thing I’m supposed to be doing—writing—it’s like playing catch-up after being out sick from school for two weeks. Thoughts are ping-boom-popping all over the place and I’m rushing to catch it all. And I love every minute of it. I’ve written for years and years, done the query thing, been rejected, blah-de-blah, and I had finally settled in with being just fine if no one ever read a word. I can honestly say I was content to just keep writing for the joy it brings me. But, WOW, this world of people reading my book and actually liking it, I can’t even tell you…it’s been 3 ½ months now and I still just can’t even get over it. I’m beyond grateful, I’m humbled, I’m ecstatic, I’m in shock…well, you get the idea. I’m a basket case. So thank you. Thank you for taking it over the top for me. Okay, gotta go write. And I’ll behave and work on the 52,460 words one…

The long awaited signing is finally here! I can’t even believe it. SO excited. It’s my first time out and I’ve been just a LEETLE bit spastic today. I’m shy, y'all. My nerves are giving me fits, but the excitement is outweigh…

The long awaited signing is finally here! I can’t even believe it. SO excited. It’s my first time out and I’ve been just a LEETLE bit spastic today. I’m shy, y'all. My nerves are giving me fits, but the excitement is outweighing it all. I can’t wait. And look at all those other fabulous authors! I’m gonna be doing some major book shopping… If you’re anywhere near the 1,000 mile radius of Minneapolis, MN, you BETTER BE THERE! :)

Amazon.com: True Love Story eBook: Willow Aster: Kindle Store

If you’ve been waiting to buy True Love Story, now is the time! For a very limited time, it is 99 CENTS!!! Click here to purchase: http://www.amazon.com/True-Love-Story-ebook/dp/B00BHF7ULY/ref=sr_1_1_bnp_1_kin?ie=UTF8&qid=1367361358&sr=8-1&keywords=true+love+story

Settled Love

Ian and Sparrow are doing well, thank you for asking. In fact, they are living high on the love right now. Nothing is better than finally being with your true love. Having been married for a while, sometimes I wish for those first days of early love—when everything felt new and exciting. The unknown played into the whole mystery of the romance. Would he stay? Did he like me as much as I liked him? Would we really make it? But there’s something about a settled love. A love that has endured time and circumstances and come out all the stronger for it. There are new joys, new excitements that are much richer than the flip-flop belly roller coaster ride that started the whole thing. It’s fun to remember those early days, but today I’m feeling content with the love I have. Enduring. Constant. Faithful. True. Even when we’re old and grey kind of love…