Category Archives: Muse

Leigh Ann Edwards stops by on St. Patrick’s Day to chat about her wrapped series – Witch and Demon Hunter.

Hello everyone! I’m happy to be back on Tule’s blog to celebrate the release of Druids’ Dark Curse, the fifth and final installment in the Realm of Fractured Time series. With my love of all things Irish, I’m especially excited to be here on St. Patrick’s Day! 

Are you wearing green? Do you have any Irish heritage? 

I’m Canadian, with English, Irish, Norwegian, Scottish, and Welsh ancestry. Despite the mixed lineage, for as long as I can remember I’ve been drawn to Ireland. As a child I loved reading tales of leprechauns and fairies. Even then, hearing the Irish harp or fiddle, stirred something inside me. 

I still listen to Celtic music to nurture my muse. While writing my first wedding scene (yes it was Alainn and Killian’s for those who’ve followed my stories) I must have listened to “The Water is Wide” from the Celtic Wedding album by Carlyle Fraser, about forty-seven times. 

A harpist played that much-loved song when my husband and I were married in 2013. It was lovely and emotional. 

So why my profound love of Ireland? My maternal great-grandparents (who I never met) left Ireland when she was pregnant with my grandfather. He was born in Canada not long after they arrived. My paternal family tree also has various Irish branches. But would those connections explain why Ireland calls to me so strongly? 

Several years ago, I purchased a DNA ancestry kit. The results showed I’m 32% Irish. I’ve since done more genealogy research and found several Irish branches from a few timelines. My Welsh ancestors even moved to Ireland sometime in the 1300s. 

It was interesting learning names of ancestors from past centuries who share my DNA. Thinking about their life stories piqued my imagination. I’m sure many Irish ancestors experienced hardships. Ireland’s history is steeped in tragedy, yet the people are resilient, and the land remains magical.

After a lifetime of longing to travel to Ireland, I made my first trip to the Emerald Isle in 2008. It was everything I hoped it would be and much more. The whole island was simply enchanting. The fields were as green as I’d heard. The scenery was breathtaking. The friendly people were welcoming and helpful. The music was poignant, the food fantastic. And the history…it just blew me away. One church I visited was over a thousand years old and still being used for services. The centuries-old graveyards with uneven moss-covered headstones and ornate Celtic crosses, told endless stories. 

 

While touring a number of castles I felt transported back in time. A word of caution if you’re planning any historic tours, castle steps are steep and extremely narrow. I was relieved that most stairwells had handrail ropes to cling to or I might’ve met a tragic end in a not-overly-exciting story. 

Some castles were only ruins; others were largely as they would’ve been when people lived there. I was as intrigued by the tiny alcoves, murder holes, and arrow slits as the massive Great Halls. The dungeons were dark and scary.

We enjoyed a medieval banquet in Bunratty Castle’s enormous Great Hall with authentic fifteenth century mead wine, food and entertainment. Blarney Castle’s lovely gardens with the mysterious wishing steps and gnarled ancient trees were a highlight. I opted not to kiss the Blarney stone. Not only did you have to bend over backwards…literally, to kiss it. But ew! 

 

I could’ve stayed forever in the little seaside town of Kinsale with the colorful buildings and unique shops. We drove the ring of Kerry, saw the spectacular Cliffs of Moher, and while in Dublin sat in a snug––a tiny room only big enough for two in one of the oldest pubs in Ireland.  

The first time I stood on the coast of County Antrim in Northern Ireland it felt eerily familiar. Even the scent of the Irish Sea that separates Ireland from Scotland, twigged a distinct memory… of being there before. Of course, I hadn’t been–– not in this lifetime–– but I firmly believe I’ve spent several past lives in Ireland. I learned months later that precise location was where my paternal Irish roots originated. 

Naysayers would claim it’s possibly cellular memory, but Ireland is too close to my heart to be explained by anything scientific. I prefer to believe I have a magical connection. 

When planning that first trip we arranged to be in Ireland for St. Patrick’s Day. We spent the previous night in Ashford Castle. Part of that magnificent yet imposing structure was built in the thirteenth century. A knight in full armor stood just inside the door. Rich wood and stunning tapestries were found throughout. Thankfully the castle’s guest rooms had been updated with modern conveniences. 

We crossed a stone bridge (formerly a draw bridge) to dine in an old cottage that had been transformed into a quaint restaurant. The dessert was my first introduction to sticky toffee pudding–– quite possibly the most delicious food I’d ever tasted before… or since. 

Ashford Castle’s St. Patrick’s Day morning buffet offered nearly every breakfast food imaginable. The most memorable decoration was a two-foot-high leprechaun butter carving.  Yes, butter! 

In retrospect we should never have planned to travel on St. Patrick’s Day. We couldn’t enjoy the festivities as we might have as our flight home was the following day. 

Also, it’s a national holiday in Ireland. We encountered or had to detour around several parades and people celebrating on the streets. Thus, it took even longer driving from County Mayo to Dublin.  

I’ve been to Ireland three times now. The city and county of Cork have become among my favorite places. If not for missing my family here in Canada, I’d gladly relocate to Ireland. I prefer the temperate Irish climate. But mostly it’s because it’s my happy place that resonates within my soul. It’s always difficult to leave.

The last time I was in Ireland was 2018, and I’m experiencing a compelling need to return. Between my husband’s job, some family health scares, everyday adult/ homeowner responsibilities and having four pets, add in a few book deadlines and the cost of traveling I haven’t ventured anywhere other than a couple of road trips. 

Not to mention we experienced a pandemic. Murphy’s Law…I was scheduled to travel to Ireland late March 2020 to stay with a friend, a fellow author, who’d invited me to a private month-long writer’s retreat in her 200-year-old Irish cottage situated near a fairy glade. I was over the moon excited. Oh, how the words would have flown! I even had my plane, train and bus tickets.

But alas, then the entire world was grounded. Consequently, my much-anticipated trip never came to fruition. (Insert heavy sigh.)

I was understandably disappointed yet considering everything that was happening and how many people were far more seriously affected, I simply had to put it into perspective.

Regardless of why I’ve always been entranced by the land of forty shades of green, little did I know how my enduring love for Ireland would one day change my life. After my very first trip I was so inspired by the history, scenery and mystical locations I’d seen, only days after I returned home, I began writing The Farrier’s Daughter, the first in my seven book Irish Witch series.

This is where I could say, and the rest is history but that would make it seem unrealistically simple. It was a super long process. I’ll always be grateful to my family and friends who supported me every step of the way when I self-published the first two novels, and to Tule Publishing for making my dream of becoming a traditionally published author come true. 

I’m honored to have a wonderful following of loyal readers who fell in love with Alainn and Killian and the bewitching Irish magic I’ve always felt. If my series aren’t set in Ireland, there’s at least one key Irish character––even in my Norse and Mystical Stones series. 

After the Irish Witch series, came the sequel, The Witches of Time, then the spinoff, the Witch and Demon Hunter that’s since been renamed Realm of Fractured Time

Now… squee I have news!!! I’m so excited I could do an Irish jig, if I could actually do an Irish jig. I’m bursting to tell someone…anyone…everyone, although details aren’t finalized, another spinoff witch series featuring the daughters of the witches of time is in the works with Tule. The first book could release in spring/ summer 2026. (Just a guess.)

Yikes! In my enthusiasm of telling you about my love of Ireland and my upcoming series, I’ve barely mentioned my newest book. Admittedly, promotions aren’t always my strong suit. 

Druids’ Dark Curse released March 13th. It’s a thrilling romantasy adventure that ties up storylines in this and the previous four books. The book touches on the mystical Druids. I’m eager for readers to know how Fiona and Lorcan’s story ends…and of course a little sad, too. I love Lorcan and Fiona.  Their character arcs might be the best of any I’ve written. They were both a bit broken after all life had thrown at them. Telling their story was rewarding. 

They infuriated me at times when it seemed they were in charge, and I was just along for the ride. But they also made me smile, cry, and laugh. I hope readers feel all those emotions and enjoy Druids’ Dark Curse and the Realm of Fractured Time series as much as I loved writing it. 

There are numerous wonderful Irish sayings/blessings I could leave you with today but here’s one I believe fits best.

May you have all the happiness and luck that life can hold ––and at the end of your rainbows may you find a pot of gold.

I feel incredibly lucky being able to do what I love. And my supportive family, friends, readers and publishing team are my pot of gold. 

Have an amazing St. Patrick’s Day.  

Magical wishes,

Leigh Ann


About the Author.

Leigh Ann Edwards writes smoking hot romantic fantasy with badass heroines, alpha heroes, history, castles, and magic. She believes love is love, that villains should get their comeuppance (sometimes with a stake through the heart), that pleasure is NOT a four-letter word, and that “dog” is another word for “joy.”

Don’t let her gentle appearance fool you; this grandmother of four ditched a sad story and is now enjoying her happily-ever-after with the love of her life in north central Alberta, Canada. Her heroines don’t need to be rescued but they’ll gladly work with a competent partner to right the wrongs of whatever world they inhabit.


A Thing for Waifs and Strays: Tule Author Kate Moore talks to us about ‘The Lady and the Secret Lord’

Like Charles Dickens, I have a thing for waifs and strays:  Bobby, the student who could never quite make it to one of my ninth-grade classes; Squeaky, the baby mouse my daughter and I rescued from the jaws of a neighborhood cat; and most recently “kitty cat,” a long-haired black cat who began the process of adopting us about a year ago, and who has finally moved in and taken over all the warm, comfy corners of our house. [Yes, we advertised for her owner, checked for a chip, and had our Vet administer necessary care.]

Naturally, strays populate my stories. I love telling the tale of the self-sufficient outsider who is drawn into a family’s circle of warmth and love. In the third book of The Duke’s Men series, The Lady and the Secret Lord, I couldn’t resist telling that sort of story again, this time about Robin Jones, the last of the Lost Boys for whom the Duke of Wenlocke has been finding families. Robin stubbornly resists the truth about his own past until he meets another pair of waifs. One of them, Aggie, was inspired by Dickens’ wonderful tough girl, Nancy, from Oliver Twist. Two actresses who have played Nancy in film versions of the novel are Sophie Okonedo and Bethany Muir. I wanted Aggie, secondary character that she is, to act with Nancy’s wonderful combo of toughness and sweetness that those actresses convey. I hope I’ve succeeded.

Look for Aggie and her friend in The Lady and the Secret Lord, out today. 

Cheers and happy reading,

Kate


About the Author.

Kate Moore taught English Literature to generations of high school students, who are now her Facebook friends, while she not-so-secretly penned Romances. In Kate’s stories an undeniable mutual attraction brings honorable, edgy loners and warm, practical women into a circle of love in Regency England or contemporary California. A Golden Heart, Golden Crown, and Book Buyers Best award winner and three-time RITA finalist, Kate lives north of San Francisco with her surfer husband, their yellow Lab, toys for visiting grandkids, and miles of crowded bookshelves.


Timeless Fairy Tales and the Power of Love – Tule Author Gerri Russell on ‘Beauty and the Beast’

The story of Beauty and the Beast has captivated audiences for centuries, transcending cultural boundaries and enduring as a timeless classic. This enchanting tale of love, transformation, and inner beauty continues to resonate with readers and viewers of all ages. But why exactly does this particular fairy tale hold such enduring appeal?

While the familiar Disney animated and live action films have undoubtedly popularized the story, Beauty and the Beast boasts a rich history. Its roots can be traced back to 1740 when Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont wrote the best-known tale of Beauty and the Beast. However, the fundamental elements of a young woman developing feelings for a creature can be found in earlier French folk tales and ancient Greek mythology.

Why does this classic story have such enduring appeal? Because at its heart, Beauty and the Beast celebrates the power of kindness, empathy, and looking beyond superficial appearances. Beauty, unlike her contemporaries, values character and compassion over wealth and status. This message of inner beauty remains profoundly relevant today, reminding us that true beauty lies within.

Another reason for the fairy tale’s popularity is one of its central themes. The power of love to transform. The Beast, initially a monstrous and terrifying figure, undergoes a profound internal transformation through Beauty’s unwavering love and acceptance. This highlights the incredible potential for growth and change within even the most unlikely of individuals.

Over time, the story has evolved, adapting to different cultural contexts and artistic interpretations. From literary adaptations to theatrical productions and cinematic masterpieces, Beauty and the Beast has consistently been reimagined, each iteration adding new layers of meaning and nuance. 

My own reimagining, Taming the Highland Beauty, flips the script. Gillie, a banished female fairy cursed with a monstrous form, lives in seclusion. Lonely and often in peril, she retains enough magic to protect the forest and aid lost children. When villagers threaten her, she is rescued by Callum MacLeod, a handsome warrior who seeks her assistance.

Enamored by Callum, Gillie agrees to aid his mother, but she must return to the forest within a week. However, their enemy burns the forest, draining Gillie’s magic. Now, with only seven days to break her curse, Callum and Gillie must find a way to save her before she perishes.

Like the original, Taming the Highland Beauty explores themes of inner beauty, overcoming prejudice, and the importance of looking beyond appearances. Through empathy, embracing change, and extending kindness, Gillie and Callum become better people, fostering a deep connection that leads them to their own fairy tale ending.


About the Author.

Gerri Russell is the award-winning author of historical and contemporary novels including the Brotherhood of the Scottish Templars series and Flirting with Felicity. A two-time recipient of the Romance Writers of America’s Golden Heart Award and winner of the American Title II competition sponsored by RT Book Reviews magazine, she is best known for her adventurous and emotionally intense novels set in the thirteenth- and fourteenth-century Scottish Highlands. Before Gerri followed her passion for writing romance novels, she worked as a broadcast journalist, a newspaper reporter, a magazine columnist, a technical writer and editor, and an instructional designer. She lives in the Pacific Northwest with her husband and four mischievous black cats.


Author Kate Moore reflects on latest release – “It is well to have as many holds upon happiness as possible.” –Jane Austen

Hello Reader,

Thanks for joining me here today. If we’ve not met, I’m Kate Moore, a fellow reader of Romance and also a writer. I write novels about falling in love standing up, mostly fully clothed, in the midst of family and friends. 

It sounds ordinary, but, of course, there is nothing ordinary about falling in love. It changes our consciousness of the world around us and of who we are. As readers, when we experience Romance novels through the characters, we, too, fall in love again. It’s a great ride, the kind you stand in line for at the amusement park just to experience once, and then dash to the end of the line, no matter the wait, to experience again.

Today, Tule releases my twenty-first Romance, The Raven’s Lady. It’s a story about a determined man’s pursuit of happiness and a spirited heroine’s rediscovery of it. 

Now wealthy, Sir Adrian Cole was once Raven, a nameless lost boy on the streets of London. (Think of the film Lion.) In Regency and post-Regency London, if you don’t know where you come from, how can you know where you belong? And Raven wants to belong. He’s over being out in the cold looking in. When his clever invention of a better fire engine and his courage in battling the great fire that destroyed the Houses of Parliament catapult him to a knighthood, he’s suddenly in the midst of the cream of London society, the ton. There he’s dazzled by an earl’s daughter and sets out to win her and, he thinks, happiness. Because he’s determined and single-minded, he won’t let anything stop him. But his sense justice makes him stand up for the underdog and brings him into conflict with the very people from whom he seeks acceptance. 

Lady Cassandra Lavenham, orphaned daughter of a duke, has had a falling out with happiness. Happiness deserted her, left her high and dry without a backward look when her first love wed another and an accident left her with a permanent injury. Now she’s desperately trying to keep the crumbling roof of Verwood Park over the heads of herself, her novelist aunt, and her imperious grandmother. Leasing Verwood to wealthy Sir Adrian Cole seems the perfect solution. But Raven is not the elderly gentleman tenant Cassie imagined. He’s young, devilishly handsome, and has an almost unconscious habit of coming to the aid of people she cares about. Cassie can’t decide whether she’s more infuriated by or attracted to him, but it doesn’t matter as he has set his heart on a cold beauty. 

Writing this story made me think about variations in story endings depending on whether the hero/heroine gets what they want and whether they still want it. Joni Mitchell’s line about Paradise comes to mind–Don’t it always seem to go that you don’t know what you’ve got ’til it’s gone... How Raven and Cassie overcome missteps and blind spots on their road to unexpected happiness is their story. Read an excerpt below. 

I like to think of reading Romance as a kind of workout for a happy heart. It’s the best kind of workout because we make only a little effort, a little bend of the elbow, a little flick of the wrist, some rapid eye movement, and some working of our smile and laugh muscles for a great reward in renewed energy and the joy of being alive. So, I hope you’ll reach for The Raven’s Lady and start working your happiness muscles. For a chance to receive an e-book or print copy (USA only), join me at the Tule Book Club on FB today. 

Cheers,
Kate

Excerpt: 

“Stop.” She sneezed, and he handed her his handkerchief. “You are getting ahead of yourself,” she said. “Even if this house can be made livable, to get your lease you have to find your way into Grandmama’s good graces first.”

“You don’t think offering her a trainer will help?”`

“It might, but perhaps there’s something else about you that would …”

“Overcome the taint of trade in iron and glass? I assure you I have been welcome this winter in all the loftiest houses in Mayfair.”

“Have you?” Her dark brows went up. “Somehow I don’t think unbridled conceit will be a winning strategy with Grandmama.”

Raven choked. “Unbridled conceit?” 

“Apparently, you have acquired boundless confidence along with your fortune. Is that how you earned your knighthood?”

“I earned…”

She sneezed again, and Raven took hold of her elbow and led her through the house and out a door in the kitchen into a small courtyard. She leaned against a low stone wall overlooking a field, and sneezed a few more times. He waited.

“Speaking of conceit…” he began. “I wager there’s plenty of conceit in a household that can’t afford coal or servants or new gowns for a lady, but that pretends to be above leasing a portion of the property to a respectable man of means.” 

Her eyes flashed up at him. She was taller than Amabel, and fearless and frank in her bearing with no illusion of feminine frailty, and, he suspected, she was about to let him have it. Then another sneeze took her.

“Oh bother,” she said, recovering. “It’s no use getting angry. The truth is that leasing Verwood is the practical solution to our family’s dilemma. It is just that the littleness of a drawing room only twenty feet across is a strong a reminder of our circumstances.”

“Will her grace care so very much about the house if the stables prosper?” 

“No,” she admitted with a laugh. “You’re right. She will hardly spend any time here. But first we have to reconcile grandmama to you as a tenant.” 

Raven liked that we. It meant she was going to be practical. But he didn’t understand the problem exactly. “My money’s not suitable for the ladies of Verwood?”

“Your money’s fine. It’s you. You aren’t what we …” She waved a hand over his person. Even without a valet Raven had dressed himself to exacting London standards, so he couldn’t think what caused her to object to him. 

“What?”

“Expected.” She blew out a sigh. “The tenant we imagined was … old, quiet, settled… married, content to drive a gig about the lanes or shoot a few pheasants in season. You’ll be noticed.”

“You didn’t tell Trimley that you required any of these qualities in a tenant.”

“That’s because the Sir misled me. I thought Sir Adrian Cole must be a merry old nabob returned from India, or a mill owner bringing his wife and daughters from some blighted northern town to live in the healthful south. How did you acquire a ‘sir’ at your age?” 

“My age?” He no longer thought of himself as a youth. Dick Crockett was a youth. “I was knighted for making fire engines.”

“Fire engines?” The perplexed look on her face made him laugh. “When I joined my grandfather’s business, he asked me what I wanted to make. His fortune came from cannons for the army and the navy, but demand had slowed. I started with glass. Glass makes money, but it doesn’t excite my grandfather. Then I suggested we make better fire engines, engines that can pump more water, at a faster rate. He liked that idea.”

“And a better fire engine led to a knighthood?”

“Five engines. Ours were deployed against the fire in the Houses of Parliament last October.”

“You were there, fighting the fire?” 

“Yes.” His reputation as a man who fought the palace blaze meant he’d been pointed out in ballrooms all winter. Whispers had followed him. Women had looked at him with a sort of awe, and some women, with a kind of hunger.

Lady Cassandra gave him a shrewd assessing glance. Plainly, his firefighting did not stir any particular admiration in her.

He laughed and pushed away from the wall. “Not impressed? What about showing gratitude for sending disagreeable Hugh on his way?”

“I am grateful. Whatever your motive for that act, it was a kindness to Dick Crockett.”

“Motive? You suspect me of having a motive for helping a fellow who was getting the wrong end of an unfair fight?”

“You threw money at a problem and made it go away. That’s hardly heroic.”

“Does my money have to be heroic to rescue Verwood from insolvency?” 

She took a deep breath. “As I said before, it’s not the money, it’s you we need to present as an unobjectionable tenant.”

He shook his head. “You would prefer a tenant in his dotage who fought at Trafalgar or Waterloo?” 

She grinned at him and shrugged her shoulders. “Even a minor victory like Navarino would do. Mostly, it would help if you could manage to be forty or fifty and a bit more … staid.”

“That,” he said, “is beyond my power. I am staying at the Crown and can return directly if you think of any way of gaining her grace’s approval.”

“Oh, the Crown. Which horse did they give you?”

“Apollo.”

Her brows went up again. “Then you have made an impression. Apollo is the Crown’s best horse, and Grandmama likes him. You must come for tea.” 

“Tea? Why isn’t your solicitor handling the lease for you?” 

“Because women can manage their own affairs,” she snapped. 

“Tea it is, then, if you agree to support me as an acceptable tenant for Verwood, for my service to the nation.” Raven stuck out his hand to seal the bargain. He would have Trimley seek out Verwood’s solicitor and find out the reason for leaving him out of the lease plans.

She cast him a brief puzzled glance, then her hand met his. The sensation of it brought him up short, her small delicate hand in his larger one. He had been thinking of her as this forthright, strong-willed person, managing business affairs women usually left to men. The soft hand threw him off for a moment. 

She withdrew her hand, and he recovered. It was Amabel he should be thinking of, not this odd, prickly independent woman.


About the Author.

A Californian, Kate taught English lit to generations of high school students, who are now her Facebook friends, while she not-so-secretly penned Romances. In Kate’s stories an undeniable mutual attraction brings honorable, edgy loners and warm, practical women into a circle of love in Regency England or contemporary California. A Golden Heart, Golden Crown, and Book Buyers Best award winner and three-time RITA finalist, Kate lives north of San Francisco with her surfer husband, their yellow Lab, black cat, toys for visiting grandkids, and miles of crowded bookshelves.


Leigh Ann Edwards talks about writing enemies to lovers, opposites attract, and age-gap romance tropes tied to her release of “Ghost Ship’s Dark Spell”

I’m so happy to be here on the Tule blog.

Today I’d like to tell you a little about Ghost Ship’s Dark Spell, book four in my Witch and Demon Hunter series. This has been such a great series to write. I’m really enjoying the enemies to lovers, opposites attract, and age difference romance tropes. 

My main characters, Fiona, a powerful witch and Lorcan, the half-human half-demon who in book one, Dark Irish Demon, were forced to become partners at LAMB, the agency who locates and assesses magical beings, were polar opposites. Yet during the last year they’ve changed considerably. They’ve overcome fears, past trauma and their complicated history. I love their character arcs, especially Lorcan who has grown so much. Fiona has learned to trust men again (mostly) and they’re both finally willing to let their vulnerabilities show.  

They’ve already faced many challenges and those certainly aren’t over. There’s a lot of excitement and adventure in this installment. Readers are in for a wild ride through time. 

I’ve been asked whether I gravitate more towards time travel or magic. I love both and include them in almost every series. However, I’d have to say magic because it is a consistent element in all my books. In fact, it’s often through magic that the characters are able to time travel. 

In most of my series my protagonists have some supernatural abilities. I also often include amusing magical  beings, terrifying mythological creatures, and sometimes other realms. I’ve had fun including some beloved old characters from my Irish Witch and Witches of Time series. This book features Angelique, a modern day water witch who’s like a daughter to Fiona, and her husband, Lorcan’s brother, Faolan, an eighteenth century pirate. They were also one of my favorite couples. 

Time travel makes for humorous situations when characters from the past meet and try to converse with those from the future. I especially like including some actual historical events and people, while incorporating technology and modern ways of phrasing things.  

No matter how many books I write–– Ghost Ship’s Dark Spell is number twenty-four–– I encounter something new. In this book, I wrote my first car chase. Not your typical car chase for Fiona is pursued by three vehicles driven by hybrid vampires on a windy road near several cliffs. Lorcan is following and trying to figure out how to help her without making things worse. 

I’m presently writing the fifth and last book in this series, Druids’ Dark Curse. I’m tying up converging and progressing storylines while also including a new adventure for Lorcan and Fiona. I look forward to being back on the Tule blog in March/25  to discuss that story. 

Magical wishes,
Leigh Ann


About the Author.

Leigh Ann Edwards writes smoking hot romantic fantasy with badass heroines, alpha heroes, history, castles, and magic. She believes love is love, that villains should get their comeuppance (sometimes with a stake through the heart), that pleasure is NOT a four-letter word, and that “dog” is another word for “joy.”

Don’t let her gentle appearance fool you; this grandmother of four ditched a sad story and is now enjoying her happily-ever-after with the love of her life in north central Alberta, Canada. Her heroines don’t need to be rescued but they’ll gladly work with a competent partner to right the wrongs of whatever world they inhabit.


Enjoy an excerpt from Ghost Ship’s Dark Spell. 

Fiona coughed and sputtered as she flew through the time portal at LAMB headquarters and scudded first across the platform holding the portal, then down the seven stairs, her body battered with each step.

She sat up, heart pounding, and dashed water from her eyes. “Lorcan?”

His tool kit filled with items used for dealing with supernatural beings was beside her, but he wasn’t.

Panic rose inside her. Had something gone wrong? Had he been left behind with whatever evil was on that ship? She had to go back.

But before she got to her feet, another surge of seawater appeared and he landed next to her, gasping for air.

She squeezed his hand, weak with relief, and lay back on the floor trying to calm down. The ground shuddered beneath her. With shock, she saw the massive solid-silver time portal teetering above them. If it fell, it would crush them both. She whipped out her hands and used a blast of magic to steady it.

Lorcan leapt up, and with Herculean strength, pushed it to an upright position then collapsed again beside her. They stared at each other wordlessly.

“I was terrified I’d lost you,” she said telepathically.

Lorcan exhaled shakily. “Yeah, you gave me a bloody scare when we got separated, too, Boomer.”

Ringo—who seldom left the compound housing the time portal on the day of a time jump, raced across the room, then skidded to a halt, dumbfounded at the scene in front of him. The Dewey-Ringo scientist duo, who were either identical twins or clones—she hadn’t yet received a straight answer on that—had helped design the multimillion-dollar portal presently sitting off-kilter.

The young man pushed up his thick dark-rimmed eyeglasses, as usual held together with electrician’s tape, and shook his head. “Why did that wave come through the portal? Occasionally undesired MBs have latched on to agents, but nothing like that—” he pointed “—has happened while I’ve been with LAMB.”

“I’m not sure why is the question we need answered, Ringmaster.” Lorcan had a nickname for nearly everyone. “You might want to ask how a bloody tidal wave from ancient Greece could follow us to the twenty-first century.”

Fiona stood on rubbery legs and Lorcan clutched her elbow to steady her. Judging by the emotion in his eyes he wanted to hold her and oh, how she yearned for the comfort of his arms. Instead, she patted his hand. Assuming Dewey hadn’t shared what he’d heard over the communication device, they needed to maintain their professional distance.

“I’m fine, partner.” She removed a sprig of seaweed from his hair. “Glad you are, too.”

Nodding, he put his arm around her shoulder. “I’m damn relieved your ghost ship didn’t follow us along with the wave.”

“It’s hardly my ghost ship.” She blinked. “Wait. You saw it too, then?”

He shook his head. “Not even a glimpse this time. Do you suppose it has something to do with that colossal wave nearly drowning us? Or the hydra and the gorgon acting so uncharacteristically?”

“Possibly. The ship gave off dark energy.” She shivered and rubbed her arms, the chilled wet fabric of her clothing sticking to her skin.

Lorcan glanced at her tunic and lifted his eyebrows. “You’re freezing, Boomer. Better get changed. You could win a wet T-shirt contest.”

She slammed her forearms over her chest, feeling her nipples poking through the drenched garment. Ringo flushed and turned away but not before he’d taken a good look. Evidently even his presently defunct portal was second to male desire.

She hugged herself. “Don’t be such an arse, Junior! Have you forgotten you’re stark naked?” She sent her gaze skyward. “Looks like you’re freezing, too.”

He snorted but made no move to cover himself. “Demons are hot-blooded. Are you suggesting that the cold water has caused certain…shrinkage?”

Like the rest of his six-foot-four, gloriously formed body, he was masculinely blessed. And he knew it.

Ringo, shy and small of stature, glanced reverently at Lorcan, then handed them each a lab coat. Fiona draped hers over her shoulders while Lorcan wrapped it around his waist and tied it at the side.

Suddenly, with a grinding metallic groan, the portal began to spark. “Oh no!” Ringo shrieked, his face drained of color. “The time machine…it’s shorting out.”

Lorcan tossed Fiona over his shoulder and dashed away from the water. Ringo raced to the control panel and slammed a lever to cut the power. A moment later, the grinding sounds slowed and the machine stopped sparking. Ringo wiped his brow.

Just then, an authoritative voice came through the wireless intercom. “Agents Wright and Maguire,” said Minerva, LAMB’s militant part-werewolf vice-chief, “report immediately for debriefing, medical examinations and completing reports.”

Fiona stuck out her tongue.

Just wait till she finds out about the time portal, Fiona thought.

 


Hello Fall and hello September releases from Tule!

GIVEAWAY: Because who doesn’t love FREE books?

We will pick ONE winner to receive a digital book of their choice from the September romance releases. Comment down below saying which book you’re looking most forward to reading! Giveaway is open INTERNATIONALLY. The winner will be randomly selected and announced at the end of the month.

Good luck and happy reading!


Check out our new romance releases for September!

The Cowboy’s Baby Surprise by Kaz Delaney
The Halligans of Montana, Book 1
Montana Born | Releases: September 3, 2024


The Cowboy’s Forbidden Bride by Megan Crane
The Careys of Cowboy Point, Book 2
Montana Born | Releases: September 5, 2024


The Undercover Cowboy by Jamie K. Schmidt
Sweethearts of the Rodeo, Book 3
Texas Born | Releases: September 10, 2024


The Prodigal Brother Returns by Susan Lute
Strawberry Ridge, Book 1
Montana Born | Releases: September 12, 2024


Sworn to Serve by Charlee James
Sworn Navy SEALs, Book 4
American Heart | Releases: September 17, 2024


A Baby at Bramble House by CJ Carmichael
Bramble House Chronicles, Book 3
Montana Born | Releases: September 18, 2024


Cowboy Don’t Go by Barbara Ankrum
The Hardestys of Montana, Book 2
Montana Born | Releases: September 19, 2024


Making a Texas Cowboy by Justine Davis
Home at Last Texas, Book 1
Texas Born | Releases: September 24, 2024


Ghost Ship’s Dark Spell by Leigh Ann Edwards
Witch and Demon Hunter, Book 4
Muse | Releases: September 25, 2024


The Frog Prince (20th Anniversary Edition) by Jane Porter
American Heart | Releases: September 27, 2024


Taco ‘Bout Love by Candice Y. Johnson
Taco Truck Romance, Book 1
American Heart | Releases: September 30, 2024


Summer Romance Releases for Hot July Summertime Reads (Plus a Giveaway!).

GIVEAWAY: We will pick ONE winner to receive a digital book of their choice from the July romance releases. Comment down below saying which book you’re looking most forward to reading! Giveaway is open INTERNATIONALLY. The winner will be randomly selected and announced at the end of the month.

Check out our new romance releases for July!

Summer Heat: A Sexy, Steamy Summer Romance Anthology
Texas Forged by Eve Gaddy | Hot Mess by Amy Andrews | Nursing the Flame by Shelli Stevens | Her Texas Ex by Katherine Garbera |Strictly Off Limits by Stella Holt | Catch Me by Michele Arris
Release Date: July 2, 2024

Rumors, Ruin and the Duke by Karla Kratovil
The Lost Lords, Book 1
July 11, 2024

Forgiving Her First Love by Dani Collins
Raven’s Cove, Book 2
July 16, 2024

One Lucky Cowboy by Kristine Lynn
Marshall Brothers Ranching, Book 2
July 23, 2024

Hot, Hard and Impossible Cowboys: Anthology
Most Dangerous Cowboy by Megan Crane, A Doctor for the Cowboy by Amy Andrews, The Cowboy’s Redemption by Paula Altenburg, The Rebel and the Cowboy by Sarah Mayberry, Her Cowboy Baby Daddy by Jeannie Watt, The Cowboy Doctor by Leah Vale
July 29, 2024

Sworn to Defend by Charlee James
Sworn Navy SEALs, Book 3
July 30, 2024

Bear’s Heart by Jane Porter
The Calhouns & Campbells of Cold Canyon Ranch, book 2
July 31


World building and character evolution play large roles in Leigh Ann Edwards’ latest installment in her Witch and Demon Hunter series.

I’m happy to be on the Tule blog today to talk about Dark Knight’s Kiss, book three in my Witch and Demon Hunter series. I’ve been working toward meeting a deadline for the fourth book in this series and finally submitted the manuscript after having to get an extension. Phew! Now I wait to hear what my developmental editor thinks. No matter how many books an author writes (this is book 24 for me) that’s somewhat nerve-wracking. An editor can love it and think your manuscript requires minimal edits. But on occasion there are problems and major editing is necessary. 

I very much appreciated a quick Q&A topic for this blog. I have a definite case of what I call book-brain. (Where your mind has been maxed out and it’s sometimes hard to form full thoughts much less be creative.) 

What inspired the new direction or themes explored in this latest installment of your series?

I’m not sure it was an inspiration, but I’ve always loved Halloween. As a child, my mum made some great costumes for me and my three siblings. I was excited to carve pumpkins into jack-o-lanterns and go trick-or-treating in the town where I lived. It was so small. How small was it? Small enough you could go to every house in about an hour and that was back when people made you sing before you got the treat. Those popcorn balls and caramel apples were so worth it. Yes, I’m that old. 

I enjoyed hosting Halloween parties with my daughters when they were young. We decorated the whole house––even the bathroom. When they were teenagers we made the decorations and games a lot spookier. I still look forward to handing out treats, and seeing my grandchildren in their Halloween costumes. I don’t make anyone sing, but I also don’t make popcorn balls or caramel apples. 

Although Dark Knight’s Kiss isn’t being released in October, or a Halloween themed book per se, I thought it would be fun for Fiona and Lorcan, the main characters, to attend a company Halloween party. 

LAMB, the agency they work for (locating and assessing magical beings), employs people with supernatural abilities, thus everyone had to know it wouldn’t be a typical Halloween celebration. Especially during the night when the veil between worlds is thinnest and Fiona, a witch, and Lorcan, a half-demon, can both see ghosts. I haven’t even mentioned the venue is a remote historic inn near an old burial ground. 

Dark Knight’s Kiss begins at the Halloween party. They’re also celebrating Lorcan’s birthday. It turns out to be an interesting night and what happens there forms the plotlines for the entire story. 

Can you share any insights into the world-building process for this book? Were there any particular challenges or exciting discoveries along the way?

Because this is the third book in the series, a lot of the world-building has already been established. The main characters and most secondary characters have been introduced, with a few new people or magical beings added in each installment. 

Fiona and Lorcan also live in modern day Boston making it’s easier for readers to envision the world they live in. However, because they’re time travelers, I enjoy creating the places and times they visit. For this book some research regarding knights was required–– their armor, weapons and history. I also had to learn a little about medieval/gothic architecture.

One part of the story was particularly intriguing for me as Lorcan and Fiona journey to Camelot and meet Merlin, the magician. I wish I’d been able to write a longer storyline in Camelot but staying within allotted word count is always a struggle for me. 

How do the characters evolve or face new challenges in this book compared to previous instalments?

That’s a great question. One, that I’m trying to figure out how to answer without giving too much away. In book one, Dark Irish Demon, Fiona and Lorcan initially adamantly oppose being forced into a partnership. In book two, Highland Dark Magic, after a few bumps, they learn to work together. They’re now LAMB’s best team. Although they’re complete opposites in nearly every way imaginable (Fiona is more stand-offish and Lorcan’s the in-your-face type for starters) they’ve become close friends. 

Something happens in this book that turns everything around changing and challenging every aspect of their relationship. But it also moves it forward. 

In this instalment, readers also meet, or for those who’ve read my Witches of Time series, they are reunited with Cal and Ainsley, Fiona’s son and daughter-in-law. Fiona and Lorcan journey back to post Civil-War Boston where Cal, Ainsley and family live. 

Fiona is shocked to learn Cal and Lorcan have history and they are not on friendly terms. Since her family isn’t even aware Fiona works for LAMB (they think she runs an apothecary shop in twenty-first century Boston) a lot of secrets are revealed that create drama and more conflict. 

Are there any key plot points or character arcs in this book that you’re particularly proud of or excited for readers to experience?

Wow! Is that a loaded question and also one I have to tip-toe around not to give spoilers. I would never want to downplay the previous books in the series in any way, because they’re great stories and vital to how everything plays out, but the plot points and character arcs in this book are pivotal. 

I’m super excited for readers to experience what happens in this installment. ARC readers have been reaching out telling me their thoughts which is always rewarding to an author. I’m dying to say more, but I can’t. 

As far as character arcs, the hero and heroine have changed a lot, but Lorcan more noticeably. They grow immensely in Dark Knight’s Kiss, but I’m particularly proud of Lorcan’s character arc. 

Without giving away spoilers, can you tease any upcoming developments or hints about the future direction of the series that readers can look forward to?

I’ve struggled with possible spoilers in the previous questions so that might be a challenge. I’ll just say, Lorcan and Fiona’s relationship is constantly changing and will continue to surprise readers. 

It even surprised me, right from the beginning. I don’t believe I’ve ever written characters who simply ran with the storyline. I feel like I’m mostly just along for the ride. 

That said, I had to reel them in a little in the next book. Having magical abilities, going back in time, and dealing with often monstrous creatures is never smooth-sailing. But in Ghost Ship’s Dark Spell, Fiona and Lorcan are in for some rough seas. Is that enough of a tease?

I’m looking forward to being back here in September to talk more about book four and the Witch and Demon Hunter series. Until then have a wonderful summer making memories.

Magical wishes,

Leigh Ann


About the Author.

Leigh Ann Edwards’ fascination with history, romance, magic, fantasy, time-travel and Ireland sparked her interest in creating the Irish Witch Series and her growing collection of published novels. Growing up in a very small Manitoban village on the Canadian prairies left a lot of time to create stories and let her imagination soar.

An author for nearly thirty years, Leigh Ann has almost completed writing her fourth series with Tule Publishing and will soon begin a fifth. Besides writing, Leigh Ann loves spending time with her four grandchildren, reading, traveling, doing intuitive readings and reiki. Leigh Ann and her husband, their two cats, one large dog and their Boston Terrier puppy, live near Edmonton Alberta, Canada.


Tule Author Kate Moore shares a snippet of her Tule debut with The Lady and the Thief

Hello Tule Friends!

If we haven’t met, I’m Kate Moore, a new-to-Tule author of sweet historical romances set in England. Thanks for stopping by.

Today, I’m celebrating my first release from Tule, The Lady and the Thief, Book 1 of the Duke’s Men Series. The series follows three former ‘lost boys’ of London as they discover their true identities and become the men they were meant to be with a little help (that is love) from three strong, independent women. As boys, they lived on the rooftops of a dark London rookery until their leader, Kit Jones, reunited with his family, and assumed his true place in the world as the Duke of Wenlocke. 

In this series I’ve loved playing with unlikely lovers from contrasting worlds, orphans finding unexpected fortune, and plans interrupted by disaster. Plus, writing these books has been yet another excuse for me to dive into London’s layers of history, starting with the spectacular fire of October, 1834 that burned down the old Houses of Parliament and paved the way for the iconic building we now see. You can see what the aftermath of the fire looked like at my website. 

The Lady and the Thief begins when fearless Viv Bradish, an aspiring writer, tries to take on a pickpocket in a scandalous London street. Here’s a snippet:

London, April 1835

Lark ducked into a shadowy by-street off the Strand. A narrow slit of fading blue to the west where the street rejoined the main thoroughfare told him the shops would not close for an hour or more. He fingered the ring in his pocket. He had expected the ring to trigger a memory of his mother, but the experiment failed. Now, as he had promised, he was to meet his former partner, Rook, at the meeting place Rook chose.

Babylon Street, as infamous for the display of erotic prints in its shop windows as for the grime on its cobbles, was a street where the clumsiest of pickpockets could do a prig. Even coppers stopped to stare at print shop windows, the target of all the proper souls of London’s Anti-Vice Society. As Lark slipped into a doorway to wait for Rook, his gaze caught on a chunk of clear ethereal-blue sky, where no sky should be, on the dirty stones in front of Number 36.

The days when he and Rook and all of the lost boys had roamed the rooftops of London under the sky with Boy, their leader, were long gone. Lark and Rook had stayed firmly on the ground for years, never speaking of old days or old friends. Even now when Lark had ended their partnership. For Rook, London offered an endless supply of gulls, unwary or distracted enough to give up the contents of their pockets. But Lark had investments now and money in Hammersley’s Bank, and a new set of rooms not far from Regent’s Park.

Lark shook off the unwanted recollections of his old companions. Ten years had passed since he’d left them behind. What appeared to be a piece of sky was merely a woman in a fashionable blue dress. In Babylon Street that dress made her a mark.

The mark stretched out one feminine gloved hand over the display of dusty books in front of Number 36. A bag in rich blue velvet dangled from her wrist on thin gold cords. From the tautness of the cords, Lark put the bag’s weight at two pounds. The lady had come prepared to shop, and the titles on the sagging shelf above the pavement appeared to engross her. Lark should warn her that she was tempting fate. Rook made a pass behind her, close enough to brush against her skirts. She never broke her trance-like concentration. Rook would pass again. He glanced at Lark for a signal, which Lark refused to give. He was there to persuade Rook to quit the game and take up some legitimate enterprise.

Lark looked up and down the street, assessing the scene. The usual mix of London’s citizens passed by, tradesmen and gentlemen, ladies and drabs. People who knew the neighborhood used the by-street to go about their business more quickly than the crowded Strand permitted. Other persons, the ones Rook watched for, came into the street drawn by its reputation for radical politics and erotic prints. The mark remained absorbed in her book. No doubt Rook pegged her as an easy prig.

Lark had his doubts. In the past, his job had been to read the mark and signal a yes or no to Rook. He gave the woman a more thorough scrutiny. The vivid freshness of her appearance in the grimy street was a mystery. She was more fit for Regent Street than for her sordid surroundings. Her gown of figured blue silk had the nipped waist and full skirts of the current fashion. A short dove-colored cape covered her from shoulder to waist. A plain close-fitting bonnet concealed her face, and made it impossible to guess her age. His mind rapidly calculated the sums she must have paid for fabric and dressmaker, shoes, and petticoats. Unlike the other women in the street, she appeared to be alone. He didn’t like it. Going unaccompanied to one of London’s most infamous streets spoke of bold independence.

A sign above Number 36 read SCHOOL BOOKS. Lark wondered whether the lady’s eyes had widened as she read the actual titles of the volumes on that hanging shelf. He knew them well. She tipped a book free of its neighbors and held it open in one palm. With the movement of her arm, the heavy purse slid into the crook of her elbow. That bag bothered Lark. The bend in her arm would make Rook’s job harder, but the temptation was great, especially as the lady’s concentration on her book was deep. With her free hand she turned the pages.

Lark glanced up and down the street again. Nothing looked amiss. He did not see any other fellows on the game. A girl passed with a tray of flowers on her head, and a barefoot boy teased a dog with a stick. The blue of the mark’s dress and the memories she stirred were reason enough to warn Rook off. Lark caught Rook’s eye and shook his head.

Rook went into his act anyway. Rook saw only a pigeon, and pigeons were made to be plucked. Coming along the pavement from the north, he pulled a bottle from his patched greasy coat, took a swig, and lurched forward. His boots, caked in river muck gave off a noxious stench that made people swerve into the street to avoid him. This time when he reached the mark, he slammed into her with his left shoulder, spinning her round. She dropped the book with a startled cry, stumbling back against the hanging shelves and flinging out a hand to catch hold of something. The purse slid down to her wrist. Rook snagged it and staggered on, bent low to the ground, dropping his bottle.

The dropped bottle was Lark’s old cue to enter the scene. He stepped out of the doorway and strode forward. “Miss, may I help? You look …” His voice faltered as he caught sight of her face. Nothing had prepared him for the effect of large, startled dark eyes above cheeks of pearl and roses.

Her dark glance flicked his way and swung back to Rook’s retreating figure. Her expression changed. She righted herself and reached under her short cape.

“Miss?” Lark needed to draw her attention to him. “Has something overset you?”

“No, thank you, I’ve got this.” From under her cape, she drew out a small pistol and pointed it toward Rook. Lark stared at the short-barreled gun, his thoughts scattering like dry leaves in a breeze. It was a Toby, a muff pistol with silver and gold chasings, expensive like everything about the mark. He’d seen such a gun in a shop on Snow Hill, but never in a lady’s hand.

“Stop, thief!” She leveled the barrel at Rook with a steady hand. “I’ll shoot,” she cried, cocking the firing pin with her thumb.

Lark stepped into her line of sight as an approaching cab pulled up beside him. The rumble of iron wheels on cobbles filled his ears. Her finger squeezed the trigger. A hot searing pain bloomed on his right side, and he pressed a gloved hand to his ribs. He had been right to distrust the lay. The lady was not the mark she appeared to be.

“Oh dear.” The woman, not much more than a girl really, lowered the gun. Lark doubted that she was a day over twenty. Her eyes were the deep brown of Turkish coffee, he thought irrelevantly. “How bad is it?” she asked. “Did the bullet lodge? Are you bleeding much?”

“Hard to tell,” he said. It cost him a sharp twinge to speak. “What were you thinking?”

“I might ask you the same. I meant to shoot the thief, not you.” She tucked the pistol away under her cape, and stepped forward. “Why did you come between us?”

“To be of assistance. I could have …” He couldn’t feel blood, just the burning sensation in his side, the sting of burned powder in his nose, and an unaccountable wobbliness in his legs.

“Chased him? I doubt it. I’m sure he’s disappeared across the Strand by now.” Her eyes had a look of disappointment. Something she wanted had eluded her.

A sudden spurt of anger heated him. He suspected that the heavy purse had been a decoy, and he didn’t know whether he was angrier at her or at Rook. “Are you mad?” he demanded. “What lady fires a pistol in a public street? Even the Peelers don’t shoot a man.”

She shot him a glare. “I came prepared. Never mind. Let me see what’s happened to you.” She stepped right up to him and gently lifted his hand away from his side. He caught the fragrance of her, something fresh and floral.

“You are bleeding,” she said. Her eyes were earnest now, full of concern.

Lark suddenly knew what verse-writing saps meant about drowning in a pair of eyes.

“I know someone who can help.”

“A good tailor, I hope. You’ve likely ruined my favorite coat.”

“A surgeon. Let me take you to him. That’s my cab, you see.”

He had the oddest feeling that he had been played, that she had seen Rook coming and laid a trap. He couldn’t think clearly, and he had no way to reach Rook. He did want a surgeon, and no questions asked. The only sawbones in this neighborhood had shaking hands and wiped them on his filthy linen. Lark should play out the scene. He couldn’t help Rook now. Rook would wonder where he’d got to, but he’d explain later. “Don’t you want your book?”

“The Spanish Brothers?” She bent down, scooped it from the pavement, and piled it back on the shelf. “No. I don’t need it anymore. Will you tell me your name?”

“Lark…in,” he said. “Edward Larkin.” It was the name he planned to use in his new life, if his old life didn’t do him in first.

She nodded. “Vivian Bradish.”

Today, I’ll be giving away two e-Book copies of The Lady and the Thief to two lucky commenters below. Do you have a favorite city? Or a favorite neighborhood in a city? What do you love–the people, the food, the vibe? Winners will be chosen on June 15. Please check back to see if you’ve won.


About the Author.

Kate Moore writes romance set in Regency England or coastal California for readers who want the lift that sweet, triumphant romance gives when clear-headed heroines bring edgy loners into a circle of love and family. Her stories offer the heady rush of finding oneself unexpectedly falling in love and conquering all the odds against happily-ever-after with kindness, courage, and wit. A Golden Heart, Golden Crown, and Book Buyers Best award winner and three-time RITA finalist, Kate lives north of San Francisco with her surfer husband, their yellow Lab, toys for visiting grandkids, and miles of crowded bookshelves.


The Perfect Summer Romance Releases for the Month! (Plus a Giveaway!)

GIVEAWAY: We will pick ONE winner to receive a digital book of their choice from the May romance releases. Comment down below saying which book you’re looking most forward to reading! Giveaway is open INTERNATIONALLY. The winner will be randomly selected and announced at the end of the month.

Check out our new romance releases for June!

Celebrating Fathers: An Anthology featuring Jamie K. Schmidt, Kelly Hunter, Anne McAllister, Justine Davis, Nicole Flockton, and Sapna Srinivasan
Release Date: June 3, 2024


The Cowboy’s Untamed Heart by Jamie K. Schmidt
Sweethearts of the Rodeo | Book 2
Release Date: June 4, 2024

 

The Wedding Crush by Mia Heintzelman
The Fortemani Family series | Book 2
Release Date: June 11, 2024

 

The Lady and the Thief by Kate Moore
The Duke’s Men | Book 1
Release Date: June 13, 2024

 

The Cowboy’s Claim by Sinclair Jayne
The Coyote Cowboys of Montana | Book 5
Release Date: June 18, 2024

 

The Maguire Family Anthology by Stella Holt
Legacy of the Maguires | Books 1-4
Release Date: June 20, 2024

 

Dark Knight’s Kiss by Leigh Ann Edwards
Witch and Demon Hunter | Book 3
Release Date: June 25, 2024

 

Adopting with the Doctor by Patricia W. Fischer
Marietta Medical | Book 4
Release Date: June 26, 2024

 

Last Dance with the Texas Bull Rider by Rebecca Crowley
The Stars of Texas | Book 3
Release Date: June 27, 2024

 

Summer Lovin: A Sweet Romance Anthology featuring stories by Barbara Dunlop, Jami Rogers, Jamie K. Schmidt, Sarah Fischer & Kelsey McKnight, Joan Kilby and Robyn Neeley
Release Date: June 28, 2024