Author: Linda Laughlin (Page 5 of 11)

Linda Laughlin spent her early childhood in Eastern Oklahoma and most of her adult life in historical Fort Smith, Arkansas. Her first career consisted of raising two fantastic children and her second was in banking. In addition to having published two novels to date, she recently started writing a biweekly column on regional authors for the Fort Smith, Arkansas newspaper, the Times Record. She loves hearing from her readers.

Spanish Gold!

I grew up in Oklahoma. Apparently there are a lot of stories of lost gold, but the one my grandfather told me involved Spaniards looking for the fountain of youth.  In the 21 century we are still looking, but we’ve decided that it comes in a jar of cream or a pill we can swallow. Everyone wants an easy answer… but back to my grandfather.

He told of the Spanish coming from South America, up into the part of the United States that is now Oklahoma. They were camped out on the plains just south of what is now Poteau when a group of Indians came into camp loaded down with meat and furs from a successful hunt.  Since there was a language barrier, the Spanish tried to bargain for the meat and furs as best they could. They were running low on supplies and badly needed the meat, but the Indians didn’t understand. The shiny round disks the strange men seemed to be trying to give them were pretty, but they had hungry people to feed back at the village and no need for round, flat rocks, no matter how they gleamed.  Soon, tempers flared and shots were fired. In the end the Spanish, who out gunned and out numbered the Indians, had killed all but one of the mighty red men. That one Indian, though badly wounded, escaped into the night.

The next morning, the Spanish were breaking camp when a mighty cry erupted  from all around them. They were completely surrounded by Indians, ready to avenge their brothers’ death. The Spanish fought, but this time they were the ones outnumbered. Eventually, a few Spaniards broke away from the camp and rode toward a nearby mountain. If they could just get away and hide out for a while, then they could reunite with any of others who survived the fight. Soon, the men reached the foothills; they were safe now  and all they had to do was find a place to hide. As they rode into a valley they spotted an opening about half way up a rocky hillside. Deciding that this cave was the perfect place to hide, they took the pack of gold off the mule they had escaped with and drug it up to the entrance. Beyond the mouth of the cave was a hole big enough for a man leading back into the mountain, so they explored it. The cave ended about 200 feet in, but to one side was a hole in the rock floor deep enough that you couldn’t see the bottom. They had to hide the gold, so two of the men dropped a braided rawhide  rope into the opening and the third one climbed down.  When the man climbed back out, he reported it was the perfect place to hide their treasure. They threw the bags of gold into the hole before noticing a boulder off to the side. Why not tie the rope to the boulder and leave it to mark the spot? Hiding the gold didn’t help the men however, because upon exiting the cave they found the Indians had tracked them and were waiting to take their lives.

Many years later, Oklahoma became part of the United States and families came to eke out a living in a very poor part of the state. The mountain everyone called Cavanal was now free range grazing for the community.  Anyone could brand their cattle and turn them loose on the mountain to graze for the summer. Without the cattle eating it, the little farms could allow their own grass to grow and have it to feed their herd through the rough winters.  This meant poor farmers didn’t have to buy grain. As the story goes, my grandpa turned his cattle loose on the mountain to spend the summer. In the fall, all the farmers got together for the yearly roundup. They would herd all the cattle down from the mountain and  separate them according to brands, making sure all the cows they collected didn’t get separated from the calves that had been born during the summer. Calves could be sold in the Fort Smith stockyard and were a good part of their income.

It was on this roundup that Grandpa saw a calf wander into a hole in the mountain and got off his horse to retrieve it.  Way back in the cave, Grandpa found the straggler and shooed him back toward the opening.  That’s when he noticed the hole. Stopping to investigate, he saw the rope,  hard and dried out from age. He didn’t dare use the rotten rope to climb down, and besides, it was getting late and he had to get the cattle down the mountain. He would come back another day, he promised himself. As things tend to go on a farm though, one thing or another kept him from riding out to explore the cave. The years went by and Grandpa got old. He couldn’t ride that old red horse back up on the mountain, or chase cattle anymore for that matter. He decided to run sheep because they didn’t require as much pasture land, but Grandpa knew there was gold on that mountain, he just knew it.

Well, that’s the story and the subject of my third book. (My second one is ready to go to the printers!) You will visit two cousins, loosely based on my cousin and myself. (Very loosely!) Oklahoma was a wonderful place to grow up; we were poor as church mice but rich on love. As another cousin once commented, “We had all we wanted to eat and no idea we were poor because everyone was in the same boat.” Our clothes were patched but they were clean and ironed, my mama saw to that. We may not have had money, but pride was abundant.

Take care and happy reading, Linda

“Return to Tara” A Short Story by Linda Laughlin

Return to Tara

(a short story)

By

Linda Laughlin

  Charlotte was driving down the road with “Boo-boo Kitty’s” top down and the radio blaring, she really loved her yellow Volkswagen convertible. She didn’t come this way often, but it was a beautiful day and she was enjoying the warm sun. Suddenly there it was, sitting on a large lot, her dream come true: “Tara”. It wasn’t exactly like the Tara in the movie because the exterior was of rose colored brick. Everything else was the same however, including the two-story porch and large columns. Charlotte’s heart raced at the sight, and then she saw the realtors’ sign; the property was for sale.

  Charlotte’s mother had taken her to see “Gone With The Wind” in 1954 when she was nine years old. It was then that she had fallen in love with the grandeur and beauty of the old south.  Charlotte could still remember the music and Vivian Leigh, so beautiful in the long gowns with hooped skirts.  She had gone back to see it when the film was re-released in 1965 as a twenty-two year old. She still loved the majestic homes and the beautiful clothes, but at as an adult she was more impressed by Clark Gable’s portrayal of Rhett Butler. Why Scarlett would look twice at Ashley Wilkes was beyond Charlotte’s comprehension.

  Charlotte turned the car around and went back to see if it was a dream, or if Tara was sitting there on what looked like around eight acres. It wasn’t exactly a plantation, but close enough for Charlotte. As she drove, she grabbed her phone to call the realtor’s office despite the logic her brain kept trying to point out. She was too old for this and couldn’t afford to even think of buying such a place. The realtor would take one look at her and realize it on the spot, but oh how she wanted to see inside.

  “Hello, this is Alma Realty, how can I help you?”  a feminine voice answered, interrupting Charlotte’s thoughts.

 “I wanted to inquire about a house you have listed,” Charlotte said and then gave the woman a brief description of the property.   

   When Charlotte finished, the woman on the other end of the phone asked her to please hold. Within a matter of seconds her call was transferred.

 “That’s a beautiful home with four bedrooms and four baths.” Mr. Smith said when he picked up the phone. “May I ask who I’m speaking with?”

  “My name is Charlotte Miller.”

  “Well Ms. Miller, that’s certainly a prime piece of property. Do you have a large family?”

   “Mr. Smith, I’m an older lady and have no business wanting such a large house, but it’s a dream come true for me and I would love to see the inside. I guess if I bought the property, I’d turn it into a Bed and Breakfast. I certainly don’t need that much space for just myself at my age. Do you think there would be a problem with zoning?” Charlotte asked.

   “The property isn’t within the city limits so that wouldn’t be a problem. When would you like to see it?” Mr. Smith said.

   Charlotte laughed. “I’m trying to be sensible, but what I would like is to see it right this minute. When would it be practical to make an appointment and see the inside?”

   “Where are you now?”

   “I’m sitting down the road from it, in my car. I was driving by when I spotted your sign.”

   “Let me make a call and see if we can take a look at it now,” Mr. Smith replied. He knew when he had someone who was really interested and that house was in a price range that would be hard to sell in sleepy, little Alma, Arkansas.

   Charlotte sat in the car thinking as she waited. Why was she doing this? She couldn’t afford this house in a million years. Why put someone through all the trouble of showing it? As her phone rang, Charlotte realized that if it was possible to see inside of the home in front of her, she had to do it. She needed to know if it lived up to her dream.

  “Ms. Miller?” the realtor’s voice came over the line. “The owners are out of town and I can be there in fifteen minutes if you want to see the house.”

   “I’ll be waiting, Mr. Smith.”

   Charlotte turned her car around and pulled into the circular driveway of her version of Tara. How perfect, there were two magnolia trees in the front and what a wonderful  spot it would be for a gazebo, maybe with azaleas planted around it.  Getting out to look around, she realized that there was a lot of room for parking. Maybe a Bed and Breakfast wasn’t so far-fetched an idea after all.  She could imagine what a good landscaper would do with the yard. Just then another car pulled in, interrupting her thoughts.

    Charlotte decided she was going insane; maybe she even had early onset dementia. Still, she spent the next half hour going through the house she thought of as Tara with the realtor. She didn’t have that kind of money but she sure wished she could find it. If there was a way to come up with the funds, she could buy this beautiful home and turn it into a business. Then she could live here in her own version of Tara.  Yes, Alma was a quiet little town, but it was close to Fort Smith and growing  Northwest Arkansas.  She could offer it as a wedding destination and it would be perfect for small ceremonies. Charlotte could just see a bride walking down the beautiful staircase and through the big double doors. Weddings could be held in the gazebo on bright, sunny days, or in the living room in front of the ornate fireplace in bad weather. Charlotte smiled to herself; a bride and groom wouldn’t care where they honeymooned as long as the bridal suite was private, and soundproof.

    “What do you think Charlotte?” Allen Smith asked.

   “I love this home and I have some ideas, but I’ll be honest, I would need to line up some investors to be able to afford it. Let me see what I can do and I’ll get back to you.” Charlotte extended her hand to Allen. “It was a pleasure to meet you.”

   Charlotte was back in the car and driving toward the interstate that would take her to Fort Smith as she laid out her plan. She would see if she could get the investment she needed, starting with her best friend.  Sammi was a professional photographer, although she wasn’t currently working. A fire had totaled her studio and she hadn’t replaced her equipment, or found a new place to work. They could turn one of the garage bays into a new studio. How perfect would it be to have a photographer on site?  Charlotte smiled as she pushed the button to wake up her phone.

  “Suri, phone Sammi!“

   It didn’t take long to get to Sammi and Don’s house. Once they had taken a seat in the living room, Sammi politely waited until she had heard Charlotte out before proceeding to burst her beautiful bubble.

    “Yes, I have some insurance money, but not enough to do what you’re thinking. I know you have your retirement income, but are you willing to risk that? I just can’t see any way we could make this work.”  

Samantha Steele was a seasoned business woman and she knew they would need a lot of capital to do what Charlotte was proposing.

  “Come on, Sam, no rich relatives you can get to invest?” Charlotte teased. “I knew it was a long shot, but I just had to ask. I can just see it in my mind, there’s even enough room in the attic to make two more bedrooms with private baths. If it went over like I hope, we could build cottages as we grow.”

   “Wait a minute,” Sammi interrupted. “Don has a great aunt who has been wanting to move somewhere close to us. Aunt Melanie doesn’t need to be alone; she almost burned down the house last week while trying to cook her breakfast oatmeal. A cottage connected to a Bed and Breakfast would be perfect. She would have someone to fix her meals and she could visit with the other guests. Did I mention that Aunt Melanie is a little eccentric, and very loaded? Maybe I do know someone who would like to invest.”

    Nine months later, Charlotte pulled into the circular drive of what had become her dream come true.  The landscaper had done wonders, with not one, but three gazebos gracing the grounds. It was spring and the azaleas were in bloom. Later, the guests would be able to enjoy the roses, as well as the clematis climbing the posts that made up the gazebos. There were three cottages planned and one had already been completed for Aunt Melanie. How perfect was that? They could name the three new cottages Scarlett, Melanie and Careen, after the characters in “Gone With The Wind”. Eccentric Aunt Melanie had already nicknamed her cottage “PittyPat Manor”.

   Charlotte turned to see the newly erected sign. “Welcome to Tara” was printed in large, gold letters and hand painted, red roses were intertwined around the border. Below the lettering was a picture of a horse held by a boy dressed in English riding togs.  At the bottom was the message “Tara Bed and Breakfast” with the hours and phone number. They had ads in all of the Bed and Breakfast magazines and reservations were pouring in. It would be awhile before they could count Charlotte’s dream as a success, but things were looking good. Charlotte went inside and opened the door that led to her private space. It was a small room, but the perfect place in which to dream another dream.

   Dreams are important, they help us to grow. There is a home for sale in Alma, Arkansas and if it was mine, this would be my dream. Unfortunately I no longer have the energy to make it happen. As you age, your body no longer does what you want it to do, but your mind continues to be active and nothing can stop the dreams.

Happy reading, Linda

  

 

What the authors we read tells us about ourselves!

I have always felt that if you live on this earth long enough and keep an open mind, you will learn a lot about yourself and the world around you. Then, God sent me E. ( Now if you don’t believe in God, this is the first and the last time I will mention him so you are free to continue reading.) E. came into my life from another state and she has  me examining my thoughts and  values. She teases me about liking feel-good books! This I am guilty of; one of my favorite authors is Debbie Macomber and we all know from the Hallmark Channel how many of her books have been made into feel good movies.

 It was at this point that I got to feeling a little defensive. I am not overly educated, with part of my learning coming from college and part from the school of hard knocks, so maybe I’m being a little sensitive. I  started  thinking however,  what do the books we read tell us about ourselves? I like feel-good books, comedies, and a good mystery. I definitely prefer fiction to an autobiography and I’m not particularly fond of history,  unless it’s wrapped around a good story line. Maybe growing up not feeling a lot of love affected my psyche and therefore, I love a feel good book with a lot of love and people not afraid to show it.  I have an insatiable curiosity and can’t wait to see what’s going to happen next, so I guess that accounts for the mystery! I love life,  excitement and people so I’m just too busy living my life to read about others, so that accounts for my dislike of autobiographies.  Maybe you CAN tell a lot about yourself from the books you read after all.

You see, I have it in my mind that authors pretty much follow a formula. If they are successful and a genre works for them, they continue to write along the same line. Their story telling improves with experience but the genre remains the same.  I am sure that each of you could probably point out an exception to that rule, but that’s something for another time. All I know is, reading within my favorite genres is a habit that I can’t break  and I really have no desire to try. There is nothing like a good book to take your mind off your troubles,  You can travel around the world and meet the most fascinating people, while never leaving home.  I never laughed as much as when I read Janet Chapman’s “From a Kiss to a Queen”.  When I feel the need for a good mystery, then Linda Howard and Catherine Coulter come to mind. There are so many great authors out there, and I am striving to add my name to the list.

Go out and find a good book!

Happy reading, Linda

What to do with the cords for your electronic devices?

I had this idea that I thought was great at the time.  I had these cords for my phone, iPad and e-reader, but what to do with them? For a while, I stored them in a drawer and had to dig through the mess to find the right one. I went to the local hobby store and bought one of those boxes that looks like a book. You know the ones, they are hollowed out on the inside to put your keepsakes in.  I selected a book large enough to hold an electrical strip with a place to plug in several  devices.

 

Next, I bought a small power strip and checked out to make sure it didn’t get hot, then used double stick tape to secure it in the book where the spine  would have been. After cutting a large hole in the back where the plug  was to exit, I had completed step one.  Three smaller holes and I was ready to  plug my devices in. ( Note: you may want to turn the strip off when not charging something!) I now had a charging station where I could charge my devices and hide the cords at the same time.

 

This was where my daughter came along and burst my artistic bubble.

“What if we get a power surge and the box catches on fire?” She said.

“Isn’t that what the surge protector inside the power stripe is for?” I ask.

“You know you could get a empty cookie tin and not have that problem?” she told me.

” But I am a writer and I want a book! ” I argued.

 

 

Disclaimer:  No one under 18 years old should try this.  No one over 18 should try this unless you are of sound mind. (Apparently I am not because I am keeping the book!)

Now you know the pros and cons, are you going to make one?

Happy reading, Linda

                                

 

 

Come join me for a new kind of book club!

Chapters On MainMost book clubs have a reading list and you have to read the book of choice. Well I am not always interested in the book of choice, so I got to thinking about how it would work if you studied the author rather than the book. My reasoning was that most writers who had more than five books in print would have at least one book that would be of interest.  In discussing the author, you would tell everyone about the book you read and you would get an idea of what each author had to offer the reader.

With this concept in mind, I have organized a book club for Chapters on Main. I have written on this site before about this book store where they sell both new and used books. They have a coffee shop in the back, so if your dream includes coffee and a book they can make it happen for you. Come join in the fun for the first meeting of Chapters on Main Book Club! Since everyone knows my favorite author is Nora Roberts, that is who we will discuss this month. If you attend the first meeting then you can put your favorite author in the suggestion box and we will discuss him or her.

Come join the fun!

Chapters on Main Book Club

January 12th at 6 o’clock

816 Main Street

Van Buren, AR

479-471-9315

Happy reading, Linda

How to Write a Book – My Way! (Part 3)

    I have self published a book. I am an Indie (aka independent) Author and can take my book “Run For Your Life!” and hold it in my hand.  Now it is time to put on my marketing hat and learn how to sell books. Writing it was a breeze compared to marketing it. After a lot more research here is my plan of action. 

Start a web page. Search Author Linda Laughlin to see mine, although if you are reading this you have found my web page or my Facebook page. 

  Speaking of Facebook, set up an author page!

Learn to tweet. (I now have a twitter account.)

Print out business cards and posters! (I made bookmarks instead of business cards.)

If you have a friend that owns a business, get them to let you have a book signing. If there’s an  independent book store in your area, forge a relationship with them. Maybe they will put your book on their shelf and let you do a book signing in their store.

   Get on every web site you can think of to get your name out there in front of the public.

   Bribe, beg, do anything you can think of to get a review for your book.  This has been the hardest  thing for me. I gave away five books and the only thing I asked for was a book review on Amazon, I didn’t get a single one. (Amazon can tell by the IP address where the book review comes from, so don’t try to make up your own reviews!)

  I am still looking for ideas to promote my book. It isn’t easy. I have finished my second book and I am looking into a traditional publisher! I met a lady who spent a big portion of her career in New York and she is now working for a regional publishing house. I gave her a copy of “Run For Your Life!” and the first three chapters of my latest book! I have decided I am not made for marketing so I will feel blessed if she decides to represent me. My fondest wish is for her to ask me to take the first book so she can re-publish it. I still feel that it is a good book and I would like to see it get a chance at a bigger market. 

Happy reading, Linda

 

 

 

How to Write a Book – My Way! (Part 2)

  I had my book, “Run For Your Life!” written and ready to go, now all I needed was a publisher! Let me say here that I had read everything I could get my hands on and I just knew that this was a good book. It was fast paced, like I preferred to read, and it started off with a murder, just like Hawaii Five-O. (Why didn’t I write a TV show instead?) 

Suddenly, I was the one doing the research. I found several articles telling me that a publisher would not talk to you without an agent. I found out later that this applied to the larger publishers, the smaller regional publishers will welcome your query letters. I found a list of agents listed in New York and information on what type of books they were interested in as well as how to submit a book to them. Some wanted only a letter and some wanted a letter and the first few chapters; each publish their own rules on how to submit to their web sites. Everything is electronic, no snail mail, so I started to submit letters. At first I checked all the thank you notes and dedications in my favorite books, thinking to query my favorite authors’ agents. ( No news is good news, they don’t know what they are missing.) Next, I started randomly sending out queries. In the end, I had submitted thirty to forty letters. I got some form letters and they all explained that they were not taking clients at this time. (At least they hadn’t told me I sucked at writing.)

Run For Your Life! CoverI could not give up, I just felt all the way to my bones that this book was good, so what next?  I found an article on self publishing. I have already told you in part one that I was poor but I wasn’t stupid. I never considered those publishers who charge you to publish your book. Maybe that works, I don’t know, but since I didn’t have the money to spend I decided to check into Amazon. In the end, I decided to publish through both their ebook and physical copy programs. Now my daughter became my computer guru. She put my manuscript in the correct formats and helped me design my book cover. I was convinced I could take a picture and we could do the graphics. (I thought it turned out pretty good. Someone I have met that works for a real, live publisher has told me it is awful!) Once finished, I was able to go to Amazon and see my book advertised for sale. A local store also offered to let me do a book signing and you can not imagine my pleasure when I unpacked the box containing my book. To be able to pick up MY book and hold it in my hand, it was a dream come true! 

(Watch for part 3 – How to promote yourself.)

Happy reading, Linda

How to Write a Book – My Way! (Part 1)

 books-books I retired from banking and decided to write a book. Now this wasn’t as sudden as it seems, because this idea had been floating around in my head for several years. So I sat down and wrote a story line and then started the book. Dialog posed a problem until I figured out that you talk to yourself, then answer yourself, then write it down. Soon, you have a whole conversation flowing across the page. 

I was writing away and about half way through the story when I noticed a course on “Writing a Book” given at the local college. Now I didn’t know this at the time, but the person teaching the course had never written a book. He had a book in progress and was about half way through. (Sound familiar?)  He said he had been working on it for about five years and would be ready to submit in about five more years. It immediately occurred to me that if it took me that long, I could be dead before I finished. The course was in the college’s adult education series and did not cost much, but then, it did not teach me much. 

On finishing the book, I started thinking about an editor. I talked to a friend who taught English on the college level and asked her to read a few chapters then tell me what she thought. (A retired person can not afford to pay an editor!) Needless to say, that didn’t work out at all. She wanted to change all my sentences to proper english, not considering most people don’t speak proper English. (At least I don’t talk to myself in proper english.) It was time for another idea and I found it in my daughter. Here was someone who had inherited my love of books and reading. She made excellent grades, when she bothered to turn in her homework, and would work for free. Perfect! 

Now I don’t consider myself a lucky person, but this time I got lucky. My “New Editor” loved to research and she found out what I needed to do in order to submit my book. In short order she had corrected the manuscript, made sure the sentiences were written in the correct tense and had it formatted for a publisher to read. 

Now all I had to do was find a publisher! (Watch for Part 2 – How to Find a Publisher?)

Happy reading, Linda

 The Brands Who Came for Christmas - Maggie ShayneThe Brands Who Came For Christmas” is a story as old as time. A story of an unplanned pregnancy, but Maggie Shayne gives it a twist that keeps you on the edge of your seat. 

Maya Brand was trying to earn the respect of the community. She didn’t run around and she went to church on Sunday. She was everything her scandalous family was not. What Maya wanted most was to be considered respectable. Tomorrow is Maya’s birthday, she will be thirty years and still a virgin. Then she looks up and to see a man enter her mother’s bar and her world turns upside down. Here is a man she has only dreamed of and he is looking straight at her.

   Cain Caleb Montgomery the third had been groomed from birth to become a Senator from the State of Oklahoma. His father was a Senator and his grandfather was a Senator. Caleb had never questioned that he would become a Senator as well, until during a planning session the group started talking about the perfect wife for him. She should be blond because blonds had a slight edge over brunettes and redheads and she should be smart but not better educated that he. Of course she would be pretty, but not too pretty because they didn’t want any backlash. At that, Caleb left the room without a word. He changed into jeans, borrowed the gardener’s old pickup and just started to drive. Fate in the form of a rainstorm and a flat tire stopped him in a little no name town in Oklahoma. 

Cain and Maya have one magic night before a phone call sends Cain rushing home. His father has had a stroke and by the time he is out of the hospital, Cain has convinced himself that he and Maya would never work.  Maya is convinced that Cain was just using her and she is better off without him when she goes into the doctor’s office. There, she discovers that forgetting Cain is going to be harder than she imagined and being respectable just became almost impossible.

   A fun story you won’t want to miss.

   Happy Reading, Linda 

Author – What’s in a name?

  Those of us who love to read have probably belonged to a book club. I have spent many an hour involved in a discussion of a most loved, maybe just liked, or couldn’t stand book. At one point I asked myself the question, “Do I want to continue to do this?” That question came after two or three of the “I can’t stand” books. 

the-thinkerI have come up with a new concept, study the author rather than the book. I started one book club with this thought in mind and it has been a lot of fun. My club has decided that a lot of authors write fantastic books that only get better as the author hones their skills. We have also decided that some of our favorite authors seem to be running out of ideas! When you read different stories by the same author it gives you a whole different outlook on their writing. 

Sherryl Woods is an author I like to read. Her story line is woven around small town life. I grew up in a small town in Oklahoma, but my town was not as interesting as Miss Woods’ towns. In her Chesapeake Shores books you feel like you get to know the whole town. The stories are all different but the small town feel is there. I would have loved to have a grandfather like Mick O’Brien, except when he was interfering in my love life. 

Robyn Carr is another one of those authors who introduce you to small town life. I searched my map trying to figure out the town in northern California she patterned the Virgin River Series after. I feel as if I know the whole town from her books and would move there in a minute if I could only find the town. Does that tell you I get too involved in the story line?  I love to read, it is like a disease that I hope no one finds a cure for.

   My favorite author of all time is Nora Roberts. She writes such varied story lines that you are sure to find something you like. One time it is a mystery that keeps you on the edge of your seat and the next one weaves the folk stories of Ireland into the story line. That doesn’t count her stories penned as J.D. Robb where she writes a futuristic detective story.  Roarke and Dallas are my favorite couple.

   I am going to visit a lady after Thanksgiving who wants me to organize a book club for her book store. How much fun will that be? So if you like the idea of a club that studies the author instead of the book, I may have a club for you. I will give you all the information as soon as we work out the details. 

   As always,

   Happy reading, Linda 

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