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Showing posts with label Andrea Downing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrea Downing. Show all posts

Monday, June 19, 2017

Summer Member News

AWARDS



Nancy Oswald's latest, TROUBLE RETURNS, was a 2017 WWA Spur Award Winner. 










 FINDING DOROTHY SCOTT, LETTERS OF A WASP PILOT, by Sarah Byrn Rickman, was awarded the Sarton Women's Book Award.

http://sarahbyrnrickman.com/ 








Barbara Marriot's “PAINT 'N SPURS: THE MEN WHO FOUNDED THE COWBOY ARTISTS OF AMERICAS” a biography of the founding members of the Cowboy Artists of America was announced a finalist in the International Book Awards. 
www.bsrbramasrriott.com 

Published by Fireship Press 

Amazon




 NEW RELEASES


BAD BOY, BIG HEART by Andrea Downing

When New Yorker K.C. Daniels heads to Wyoming for a summer job, she wants nothing more than to fit in with the staff of the Lazy S Ranch. Yearning to be independent of her mom and dad, and have a taste of the west before she starts her Master's degree, getting involved with a cowboy is the last thing on her mind—especially when she’s greeted with warnings about ‘Bad Boy’ Chay Ridgway.

High school dropout Chay Ridgway sees summer as his time to be a rodeo star and win a girl in his life, while facing the responsibilities he has for his father. Although working to bring in cash to help his dad, he's never had a problem finding a woman who's happy to be that summer love—until K.C. Daniels appears on the scene.

As two different worlds collide in a season that will end all too soon, is this going to be another summer romance or a love that will last for years?

Link:  https://www.amazon.com/Bad-Boy-Big-Heart-Book-ebook/dp/B072MKG48B/



Andrea also has a story, CITY BOY, COUNTRY HEART in the collection COME LOVE A COWBOY

Don’t miss this great collection from USA Today, Amazon Bestselling, and Award-Winning authors!! 

Available at https://www.amazon.com/Cowboy-Keep-Contemporary-Western-Collection-ebook/dp/B072869SGV/




THE GIRL WHO WOULDN'T DIE
by Randall Platt
publisher - Skypony


They call her the Arab of Warsaw.
Some say she’s Jewish. A few know she’s a girl.
Most agree she’s high on the Nazis’ hit list.
One person believes she could become a hero.

Poland, 1939. Arab knows that looking out for anyone but herself is as good as painting a target on her own back. So she plans to survive the Nazi occupation the way she always has: disguise herself as a boy, lead her street gang, and refuse to get involved.

But though Arab starts the war with just one goal–staying alive–others have different ideas for her. And when a stranger who claims to work with the resistance tries to recruit Arab for a rescue mission, she has to make a choice. Acting like a hero is a surefire way to get killed. But is she doesn’t do it, who will?

Available at your local independent bookstore, or at Amazon

The trade paperback of Randall's previous book, INCOMMUNICADO, is also now available. Learn more at http://www.plattbooks.com.



Ordinary Skin: Essays from Willow Springs
by Amy Hale Auker, previous WILLA winner
published by Texas Tech University Press


www.amyhaleauker.com
Book may be purchased from author website or all major booksellers
Amazon

Amy Hale Auker's first book of essays, Rightful Place, was the story of a woman finding beauty in her place, the Llano Estacado. Her new collection of creative non-fiction, Ordinary Skin, explores her mid-life transition with prose poems and essays that illustrate a new terrain as well as new ways of being in the world. Touching on faith and body image and belonging, these essays explore our role in deciding what is favorable or unfavorable, as well as where we someday want to dwell, and who came before us. In that touching, they feel their way with observations about current affairs, drought, mystery, and the hard decisions that face us all as we continue to move toward more questions with fewer answers. This exploration is informed and softened by hummingbirds, Gila monsters, bats, foxes, bears, wildflowers, and hidden seep springs where life goes on whether we are there to see it or not. It is about work in a wild and wilderness environment. In the end, even as life changes drastically around us, we are better off for knowing that the ugly mud bug turns into a jewel-toned dragonfly.


Susan Matley's story, THE AUDITOR is included in a new anthology, Incarceration (WolfSinger Publications). “The Auditor” is a horror story set in near-future China, inspired by the 2008 Sichuan earthquake. It’s more eastern than western. The publisher, however, is in Colorado! The details:

The publisher:
http://www.wolfsingerpubs.com/OurBooks.html

Susan Matley's website, Home page:
https://www.susandmatley.com/

Website, with “buy” link:
https://www.susandmatley.com/anthology/


 

Wednesday, August 24, 2016

August Member News



Nancy Fine’s poem, “Waiting for Sunlight has been published in a persona poetry collection Bearing the Mask. The poem, speaks from George McJunkin’s perspective. Mr. McJunkin—a black ranch foreman in the late 1800s/early 1900s—discovered the first Folsom point site. Although he tried repeatedly to persuade experts to visit the site, it wasn’t until after his death the site was investigated. The point—which became a pivotal discovery—ultimately moved man’s early presence in North America back 7,000 years.  
 
Ann Parker What Gold Buys: A Silver Rush Mystery (Poisoned Pen Press)  It’s autumn of 1880, and saloon-owner Inez Stannert returns to the high Rocky Mountain silver boomtown of Leadville, Colorado, only to stumble over the body of fortuneteller Drina Gizzi in the dark of Stillborn Alley. While Inez’s charming but conniving husband tries to derail her plans for divorce, Inez and Drina's young daughter, Antonia, join forces to uncover the truth behind Drina’s death. They unearth rumors of resurrectionists, white-hot revenge, and rampant greed in a town where some believe gold buys love, others, justice, and yet others, a new life… but for Inez and Antonia, it may just buy final passage into an unmarked grave.

S. D. Matley Big-G City (sequel to 2015 release “Small-g City”). Veronica Zeta, youngest child of Zeus and Hera, has at last succeeded Zeus as CEO of Olympus, Inc. She embarks on an ambitious program of corporate reform, but, when best business practices fall short, deploys a top-secret power passed on to her by Zeus. Veronica soon discovers The Power comes with a brutal price. Will Veronica survive her dream job? Can Zeus, Ex-Lord of the Universe, cope with his reduced status? And what of Ralph, retired from his structureling duties in Seattle’s Alaskan Way Viaduct? The answers lie in the City of Mount Olympus, capital city of the immortals known as Big-G City.

Andrea Downing’s short story “Long a Ghost, and Far Away” is included in the anthology, The Good,The Bad and The Ghostly. What do you get when you mix cowboys with ghosts? A collection of eight (stand-alone) amazing stories from the Old West with haunts of every variety.Ghosts are restless souls, and Lizzie Adams is one of them.  How many lives will she get to find the perfect love? 
    
Louise Wallace’s novel originally titled Days of Eternity has now been reprinted by All Things That Matter Press with the title Length of Days.  Set against the backdrop of the Civil War, it is the first book in the story of the Edwards and Michaels families that is continued in Day Unto Day and Children of the Day. Zane and Larissa Edwards, rearing their children Mac and Rose on the family farm, foresee the future spinning out as contentedly as their past. Civil War erupts, shattering their lives and dreams.

Linda Womack, Murder in the Mile High City: The First 100 Years, describes forty-two of riveting murder cases that made headlines during Denver’s first century. The cases range from the married socialite who was the cause of the death of one of two of her lovers neither of whom was her husband to man who planted a bomb on the United Airlines plane carrying his mother, giving him the dubious distinction of being responsible for the first airborne terror attack. Wommack also examines the role played by Denver newspapers in the prosecution of the accused. 



Julie Weston, Basque Moon Nellie Burns, photographer, travels to Stanley Basin of central Idaho to photograph scenes for a railroad’s brochures. When they arrive at the sheep camp, they discover the current herder is dead.  Nellie’s curiosity and photography lead her to a moonshine still and then a dash up a forested mountain. Nellie and her dog Moonshine confront the greatest challenges yet to their courage and ingenuity when they face a range war and a ruthless killer.







AWARDS
Congratulations to our 2016 WILLA Winners!

Contemporary Fiction
Winner: Firebreak—Tricia Fields (Minetaur Books/St Martin’s Press)
Finalist: Ana of California—Andi Teran (Penguin Random House)
Finalis: Chasm—Susan Cummins Miller (Texas Tech Univ Press)

Original Softcover (Trade or Mass Market)
Winner: Hidden Shadows—Linda Lucretia Shuler (Twilight Times Books)
Finalist: Women and Thieves of Two Pan—B.K. Froman (Morning West Publishing)
Finalist: Rough Patches—Deanna Dickenson McCall (The Frontier Project, INC)

Historical
Winner: The Bookseller—Cynthia Swanson (HarperCollins)
Finalist: The Last Midwife—Sandra Dallas (St. Martin’s Press)
Finalist: Shelterbelts—Candace Simar ( NorthStar Press)

Scholarly Nonfiction
Winner: Ladies of the Canyons: A League of Extraordinary Women and Their Adventures in the American Southwest—Lesley Poling-Kempes (University of Arizona Press)
Finalist: Shaping the Public Good: Women Making History in the Pacific Northwest—Sue Armitage (Oregon State University Press)
Finalist: Amada’s Blessing from the Peyote Gardens of South Texas—Stacy B. Schaefer (University of New Mexico Press)

Creative Nonfiction
Winner: American Ghost: A Families Haunted Past in the Desert Southwest—Hannah Nordhaus (Harper/Harper Collins)
Finalist: HOWL of Woman and Wolf—Susan Imhoff Bird (Torrey House Press)
Finalist: Mysteries of Love and Grief: Reflections of a Plainswoman’s Life—Sandra Scofield (Texas Tech Univ Press)

Children’s/Young Adult Fiction & Nonfiction
Winner: Shadow of the Hawk—K.S. Jones (Clean Reads)
Finalist: Anywhere but Paradise—Anne Bustard (Egmont USA)
Finalist: Teresa of the New World—Sharman Apt Russell (Yucca Publishing/Skyhouse Publishing)

Poetry
Winner: Report to the Department of the Interior—Diane Glancy (University of New Mexico Press)
Finalist: Skeena—Sarah de Leeuw (Caitlin Press)

*****
Heidi M. Thomas, Cowgirl Up! A History of Rodeo Women is winner of the Global E-bookAwards in the nonfiction-history category. When someone says "Cowgirl Up!" it means rise to the occasion, don't give up, and do it all without whining or complaining. And the cowgirls of the early twentieth century did it all, just like the men, only wearing skirts and sometimes with a baby waiting behind the chutes. Cowgirl Up! is the history of these cowgirls, their courage, and their accomplishments.

Deanna Dickinson McCall, RoughPatches, has been nominated for a Will Rogers Medallion Award, and as a finalist for the Western Music Assoc. Female Poet of the Year. This is a collection of short stories centered on women in the historical and contemporary American West. Shaped by challenging circumstances as well as the equally demanding landscapes they inhabit, the characters exhibit a brand of strength instantly recognizable to readers fortunate enough to know true "women of the West." Against long odds, the protagonists courageously stare down adversity - sexism, illness and the unimaginable dangers of both the frontier era and modern-day ranch country.