Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Kindle Love Stories Weekly Deals



My dogs, Ethel Merman and Ella Fitzgerald, are thrilled that they are once again in the PUParazzi's sites since the book they cover modeled for, Everything But a Dog, and the first book in the Everything But series, Everything But a Groom, are Kindle Love Stories Weekly Deals! 

They're only $1.99

PS Nana Vancy makes a cameo in October's new release, Christmas in Cupid Falls!!

Teaser Tuesday, Christmas in Cupid Falls





‪#‎TeaserTuesday‬: In Christmas in Cupid Falls, the heroine has a collection of books on the shelves that were her comfort reads growing up. 
"She dusted and couldn’t help but run her fingers along old favorites. They were all old hardbacks. Grace Livingston Hill was Aunt Betty’s favorite. The copies were old and the slipcovers were yellow, but she remembered reading The Spicebox and Miranda. L. M. Montgomery’s Green Gables books. Louisa May Alcott. Gene Stratton-Porter. She pulled out A Girl of the Limberlost. Oh, how she’d loved that book."

Do you have a comfort read? I know you're shocked, but a lot of her comfort reads are mine!

Holly

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Christmas in Cupid Falls, by Holly Jacobs



Welcome to Cupid Falls, Pennsylvania…well, actually, this is Waterford, PA.  But it's where my October release, Christmas in Cupid Falls opens.  In Waterford.

Excerpt:

The Legend of Cupid Falls, Pennsylvania

To the south of Erie, Pennsylvania—south of the Great Lake that shares a name with the city—is Falls Creek. It is bigger than most creeks, but not quite large enough to be considered a river. It runs through field and forest to a ridge, carved millennia ago by a glacier. There, it plunges over the edge, falling to a hollowed-out swimming hole before becoming a creek again and meandering on its way.

Local legend has it that when George Washington visited the nearby town of Waterford in 1753, one of his retinue was touring the area. The locals took him to the falls, and there he met a farmer’s daughter. He married her later that same year and they settled near the creek. Years later, their daughter went to the falls with a group of friends and noticed that one of the boys in the group might be more than a friend. They married later that same year. And so it went, year after year, decade after decade, couple after couple, until the small waterfall, which in actuality was little more than a creek tumbling over a small cliff, became known as Cupid’s Falls.

When a town grew up a few miles away, the residents named it Cupid Falls as an homage to their waterfall.

And to this day, it is said that when two people meet at the falls and declare their love, they are destined for a long, happy romance . . .

Even if that’s not what they went to the falls looking for.

As for the movie…well, I'm sure Spielberg isn't worried! LOL But I hope it gives you a taste of what small town Pennsylvania is like!

Holly


Saturday, September 20, 2014

Lake Erie, PA





My dh took me out to a couple North East Wineries, then to dinner at Freeport Restaurant. Of course, we had to go down to the lake.



I'm still playing with videos (and I'm working on one for Christmas in Cupid Falls' release!).  So, here's a short clip.  It doesn't matter what season it is, or what time of day…Lake Erie is beautiful!


Tuesday, September 09, 2014

Christmas in Cupid Falls, Holly Jacobs



‪#‎TeaserTuesday‬ Christmas in Cupid Falls, Holly Jacobs, 10/14
“Arf, arf,” Clarence Harding barked as he entered Kennedy Anderson’s shop minutes after she’d opened for the day. He pulled off his thick knit cap and exposed an ice-grey head of hair. “Mornin’, Mayor.”
“Good morning, Clarence. And it’s Cupid’s Bowquet. Bo—long O. Bow, like bow and arrow—Cupid’s bow and arrow. It’s not bow, short O, like powwow.”
For more than three decades, Kennedy’s aunt had owned the flower shop and it had been Betty’s Flowers. But Aunt Betty had been gone three years. This was Kennedy’s shop now, and she thought it was a great marketing strategy to play off the town’s name. Last year she’d realized that when you lived in Cupid Falls, Pennsylvania, Cupid’s Bowquet was a perfect name for a flower shop.
“It’s a dumb name, Mayor, if you don’t mind me saying.”
Kennedy did mind, but she was enough of a businesswoman not to say so. “What brings you in today, Clarence?”
“Seems I’ll be needing to send the old ball and chain some flowers. I got in late and ran over her new frog.”
Joan Harding collected frogs. Lots of frogs. They were everywhere inside and outside of her house. She even had some plastic bullfrogs she’d nailed into her giant maple tree and proudly told everyone they were tree frogs.
Clarence pulled off his gloves and stuffed them in his heavy winter coat’s pocket. “Course, I don’t know how she could tell I ran one over. I hid the pieces and there must be about a million frogs around now. Plus we’ve got all this snow . . .” He shrugged, as if figuring out the mystery of his wife was too much for him.
Clarence was a regular. It seemed he was always doing one thing or another to annoy Joan, but crushing a frog called for more than just some flowers. “It just so happens I might have something to get you out of the doghouse.”
“Froghouse is how I put it,” he grumbled. “And I seem to be in it more than any man should be.”
Despite his less-than-endearing endearment ball and chain, Kennedy had seen Clarence and Joan together. She knew they fit. They worked. Clarence might get in trouble for running over frogs, but the Hardings were one of those couples that no one could imagine not being together.
She liked to think her small flower shop helped to keep them that way . . . together.
“One of the vendors I order from had these, and I thought of you when I ordered it.” Kennedy reached under the counter and pulled out a small box and slid it across the counter toward the elderly gentleman.
Clarence opened the lid and pulled out a frog planter. “Now, this is just the ticket. The perfect thing to get me out of trouble. You’ll stick some plant or something in it for her?”
“Definitely,” Kennedy assured him. Clarence was the kind of customer she liked to think of as job security. “Do you have anything in mind?”
He handed her the planter. “Whatever you want, Mayor. Bill me, okay?”
“Sure thing, Clarence. I’ll deliver it this afternoon.”
“Maybe I’ll be out of the froghouse before dinner then. See ya later,
Mayor.”
Christmas in Cupid Falls, coming in October!
Contest to celebrate its release at: