created by Elena Ray & purchased at CanStock
Before I get to the gist of this blog, I have to say, relating to Iran and nuclear weapons-- I believe that given their current regime, they should be blocked from such weapons. I do not know if the recent attack on their facilities will do that, knowing there can be suitcase nukes, I do not know if that can be stopped. I know the US, nor other nations have not used these bombs since WWII. I think most nations who had them felt it would be destructive to all humankind to use them. If nukes become part of modern warfare, I think we as a human race are done for. Let's hope others value life more than killing. Sadly, not sure that's true...
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If you are a creative person, who takes the work seriously, seeing it as a career, you already understand how the marketing of it goes. If you have had success whether in what are called the fine arts or writing, you've seen the pressure to keep doing what you saw working through sales or praise.
Why mention this now? Because I have a set of contemporary romances that have had a hard time getting even readers, ones who liked my historicals, to give these a try. I guess they didn't see the danger, intensity, relationship problems could be as strong in a set of characters living ordinary lives and then beset with black swan events that changes everything.
When I got the website, I did not feel the covers for these contemporaries, some with connecting characters, and some without, suited the stories with various dynamics to what each character was experiencing. Once I got the covers right, we asked the website creators to add this series at the bottom. After a few confusions of terms, we got what was wanted and I like it a lot. While the website gives the general idea, I think, the list of books is better.
What I intend to write in the blogs for a while will be why contemporary stories were of interest to me. Maybe they won't bring with them original fans of earlier historicals books, but maybe new readers. Either way, succeed or not, I believe in them. Each offers challenges for characters and readers. It starts with Moon Dust.
The book begins with a woman facing divorce-- not exactly romance territory but can be part of relationships where they no longer seem to be working.
She sees no hope for a solution since her husband, a high school principal in inner city schools, avoids emotional confrontations.
He is facing his own set or problems with those wanting their way where it comes to teaching. He is blindsided by his wife wanting a divorce and this is where this romance begins. Two people, still in love but cannot meet each other's needs.
Who would think a high school principal would be a hero, but most doubting that have no idea of the complex problems faced in,
especially, inner cities.
As the couple work through their difficulties, with the heroine an interior decorator, there are secondary complications like a youth leader who has been brainwashing the youths he wants to use as an army to change the culture.
Moon dust comes into the story as a kind of fairy tale of how culture can also be changed but by love and attention to others-- sometimes just hearing what they say.
Romances might seem simple stories; but in reality, they can deal with many often complex emotional needs. Maybe that's not appealing to all readers, but when it is, meet the challenge to learn maybe something more as to what others face. Often, not what we expected.
Currently only available on Amazon: