Wednesday, July 7, 2021

Welcome, Linda Carroll-Bradd

The idea behind Sweet Inspiration came when some friends I’d known while living in San Antonio decided to create an anthology of stories set in their new home state, Arkansas. Multiple authors would write short stories featuring a different location within the state, and we hoped to sell the anthology to tourist places that had bookstores. Fired up about the idea, I flew to Little Rock, met with a couple friends, and we drove to the Ozark Folk Center in northern Arkansas. The folk center is set up with individual shops featuring silversmiths, quilters, weavers, blacksmiths, leather workers, candlemakers, etc. An area is also set aside for musical performances. The weekend we were there a folk music concert was held which included dulcimers. The town has a dulcimer making store.

My late mother-in-law was a weaver and my husband owns a dulcimer, both of which helped my familiarity with those aspects as I built my characters. All the pieces fell into place, and in our hotel room that night, we plotted our stories. Sadly, as often happens, the anthology fell apart, but I kept working on my story toward its eventual release.


Blurb:

Dependable Cadence Wills yearns for excitement. The owner of a yarn business, she is pulled in every direction by her demanding family. Haunting dulcimer notes draw her to a practice session where she spies an intriguing stranger. 

Musician Rafe Frasco is a rover, bouncing between musical competitions. Interest ignites at his first glance at a woman enthralled by his music, who he learns has a heart big enough to encompass everyone within her reach.

A fantastic opportunity for Rafe presents Cadence with a dilemma—is she strong enough to negotiate the business deal that will take him away…maybe forever?

Purchase Links:

Amazon short link: https://www.amzn.com/B094JZ9DH7

Barnes & Noble:  https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/sweet-inspiration-linda-carroll-bradd/1125862328?ean=2940162456421

KOBO Books  https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/sweet-inspiration-7

Ibooks http://itunes.apple.com/us/book/isbn9781509237456

Google Play: https://play.google.com/store/books/details?_bbid=18901893&_bbreg=us&_bbtype=email&id=uSg0EAAAQBAJ  


Excerpt

Unmarried and approaching thirty in a small town branded her as ready and willing to meet every unattached man who set foot inside the city limits. A sigh escaped. Like last week when Espe called Trent Sullivan over to their table at El Tres Amigos and then suddenly remembered an important errand, leaving them together. What Espe hadn’t known was Cadence and Trent already had been set up on blind dates—twice—by other well-meaning friends.

Nothing had clicked on those occasions either. Cadence craved someone with a mysterious past like in her beloved romantic suspense novels. A dark, shadowy figure who knew how to excite a woman with a molten look or a lingering touch. A man who fought to hide his pain and almost succeeded. Not someone like Trent—a guy whose high-school accomplishments she could probably recite.

Sweet plaintive notes of a stringed instrument floated on the breeze. Cadence stopped, straining to recognize the tune. A person didn’t grow up surrounded by folk music without knowing just about every ballad that could be plucked.

But this one eluded her. The twanging strings cried with a soulful sadness that grabbed her by the throat. Her thoughts were washed in loneliness, and she turned toward the sound, past the Heritage Herb Garden. A part of Cadence that couldn’t resist helping others had to see who was expressing such need.

She lifted the hem of her long skirt and hurried toward the haunting sound, as if the notes pulled her feet along the path. The compulsion to know who played added speed to her steps. Abreast of the groundhog pottery kiln, she slowed and peered toward the outdoor stage.

On the platform, several musicians were gathered—some unpacking instruments, others adjusting microphones. Off to one side, a dark-haired man sat in a straight-backed chair, one foot braced on a scratched case. He leaned forward and strummed a dulcimer, the light wood instrument cradled on denim-covered thighs.

Cadence stood a dozen feet away and studied the talented player. His too-long hair was tied back, his shoulders were broad inside his western-cut shirt, and his legs were long and lean. Scuffed boots, faded jeans and a worn Harley-Davidson tee-shirt composed his attire. Definitely more attractive than her own outfit. Even from this distance, she spotted a posture that meant the man had an attitude…or was mysterious. A thrill ran over her skin.

Who was this guy? He’d definitely swagger when he walked. Yummy. At the thought, she stepped closer, wanting nothing between her and the performance.

Long fingers picked the strings in a heated crescendo—note on teasing note, twang on shivery twang, strum on driving strum. He ended the song with a flourish, right hand arcing upward as the last note hung on the early morning air.

How did he know exactly how she felt on nights when everyone in Mountain View either had a date or was home curled next to a spouse? The isolation of being solo at the drive-in or enduring the knowing smile of a sympathetic waitress. His song wrapped all those feelings tight around her heart and squeezed. She inhaled, and the backs of her eyes stung.

Hadn’t she learned her lesson about musicians from the way Dale deserted her when his band got the chance to go on the road? Three years running, and he hadn’t yet steered the tour bus through his hometown.

The stranger laid a hand over the strings, rolled his shoulders, and lifted his head. Piercing brown eyes scanned the area, surveying the other musicians, and his gaze locked with hers. For a suspended moment, his gaze roved along her length, widened, and then returned to her face.

Under his scrutiny, she shifted her feet and tugged at the sides of her skirt. Her period costume didn’t exactly show off her figure to its best. Not that the fact should matter, but she couldn’t look away and chose to ignore the warning bells ringing in her head.

 


Bio:

As a young girl, Linda was often found lying on her bed reading about fascinating characters having exciting adventures in places far away and in other time periods. In later years, she read and then started writing romances and achieved her first publication--a confession story. Married with 4 adult children and 2 granddaughters, Linda now writes heartwarming contemporary and historical stories with a touch of humor from her home in the southern California mountains.

Linda’s Links:

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6 comments:

  1. Welcome, and good luck with your book!

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  2. I love your homestate inspiration. One of my good friends plays the dulcimer too. Thanks for sharing Donna

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  3. What a great place for inspiration, Linda! I love listening to the dulcimer. It's on my bucket list to learn how to play the instrument.

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  4. Sorry the anthology fell through, but at least your story didn't. Good luck with sales.

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  5. Loved the excerpt! Best with the book!

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  6. Glad you kept going, for sure! A friend used to play the dulcimer and offered to teach me, but she moved before I could start. Loved the sound of it. Best of luck with your book.

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