Showing posts with label Romance book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Romance book. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Skater's Waltz, the latest romantic release from Peggy Jaeger



Professional figure skating has always been my dream sport to watch. Peggy Fleming and Dorothy Hamel were my idols as a kid. I never missed a televised event and even had my hair cut in the Hamel wedge when I was a teen. One of the best nights of my life was seeing her perform live at an Ice Capades review. While I never skated any where near Olympic caliber - not even in the same stratosphere! – it was always my little girl dream to one day stand on the center riser while the Star Spangled Banner played in the background, a shiny piece of gold hanging from my neck and a bouquet of flowers in my hand. Tears of pride would cascade down my cheeks from winning for my country.

I never made it to the Olympics. Heck, I never even made it into any kind of skating competition. But I never lost the love of the sport and watch it to this day, enraptured and awed by the athletic prowess of each individual competitor.

My love for romance novels rivals my love of figure skating. I’ve been an avid reader since I was in my early twenties and never miss a new release or an old back issue release from my favorite authors. The world of figure skating hasn’t gotten much play in the romance genre. Ice Castles was the last movie I can remember that dealt with the sport, but not much else in the writing world. I got the inspiration for my new novel, SKATER’SWALTZ, when I realized how under represented the sport has been. And I wondered what it was it must be like for former Olympians once the games are behind them and the competition is over. What do they do? What becomes of their lives? Most of it to date has been spent in training, practicing and competing. What happens when that door closes? How do they go from absolute and ultimate winner to everyday person again? Can they?

My heroine, 2 time Olympic gold medal winner Tiffany Lennox is a fierce competitor on the ice and off. Her first medal came young at the age of 14, the second 4 years later. Now, with her Olympic competing career over at 23, she must face the rest of her life. Her biggest challenge is in getting the man she’s loved for most of it, Cole Greer, to see her not as the kid he remembers but as the woman she’s grown to. A women who wants him in her life, her bed, and her future.

I used parts of my skating knowledge for scenes in the book where Tiffany skates. While writing them, I envisioned each spin and landing, each turn and execution, as it would happen on the ice. I’ll admit that when I was seeing those maneuvers in my mind, it was Dorothy Hamel’s face on top of the skater. It made the moves more believable and realistic to me.

Tiffany is currently, as many Olympic skating stars do, getting ready to open in an ice-capades-like show. She is the star and practice is arduous and time consuming. When Cole comes back after being away on a news assignment for 2 years, she hopes she can get him to stay home this time, despite his wanderlust, and finally face the feelings that have always been between them, just waiting to be set free. It’s a difficult task, but Tiffany focuses on making their relationship a lasting love story with as much dedication and fervor as she commits to her skating.




Skater’s Waltz Blurb:


Figure skater Tiffany Lennox is busy with rehearsals for an upcoming ice show when the only man she’s ever loved comes home after a two-year overseas stint. She needs him to see her for the woman she’s become and not the child he knew to ensure he stays home, this time, for good. With her.

For all his wanderlust and hunger for professional success, Cole Greer comes home wanting nothing more than to rest, relax and recover. He is delighted in being Tiffany’s hero and has a special place in his heart reserved for her. But faced with the oh-so-desirable woman she’s become, he starts questioning his determination to keep their relationship platonic.

When forced by the television network to go back on assignment, Cole - for the first time in his life - is torn between his career and his heart.


Skater’s Waltz Excerpt:


One delicate auburn eyebrow rose almost to her hairline. “Cocky self assurance has always been one of your greatest assets,” she commented dryly.
Cole laughed again and pulled her down into a headlock.
“Snot nosed princess,” he said, knuckle-rubbing her head.
He’d been wrestling with her since she was a child. He’d taught her every subtle move to get the high ground, and in that moment she used the knowledge to her advantage. In one slick move, her arm came out across his neck, forcing his hold to loosen. When it did, she pulled her hand back and pushed forward, expertly flipping him in the seat.
To recover his balance, Cole leaned back into the couch, grabbed what he hoped were her upper arms, and shoved. In a heartbeat, she was lying backward along the length of the couch with him spread out on top of her.
Both were laughing and wriggling, each trying to get the upper hand.
Tiffany squealed, trying to twist her hips out from beneath him. “Let me go!”
“Not a chance. I know how your devious little mind works, and I taught you how to do this. The minute I loosen up, you’ll hip check me over the back of the couch. No, thanks.”
Tiffany burst out laughing. “You rat. That was exactly what I was going to do.”
“You know retreat and surrender are inevitable, Tiff. I outweigh you, and I’ve got the distinct advantage of your injury in my favor. Give?”
“Okay, you win.” She went limp beneath him.
The corners of his eyes narrowed as he smiled down at her. “You must be maturing,” he said. “You never used to give up so easily.”
When he removed one hand from her arm, she reached up to trace the outline of one of his eyes. Her finger moved from the outer canthus to his cheek, smoothing the skin she touched. “You didn’t have these little lines when you left.”
Cole stared down at her face.
Her finger roamed down to the corners of his mouth, outlining them, then on to the small dent in the middle of his chin. An impish grin fanned across her face. “I remember being little and wondering if I smoothed this line away would I be able to see inside you, like it was a door or some kind of opening to your insides. Dumb, huh?”
“Sweet,” he said, softly. “Little girl sweet. Never dumb.”
Her eyes traveled up to his and locked there.
“When I got older I wondered what it would be like to kiss it.”
His breath hitched.
“Would it taste like soap, left over from shaving, or would it be all spiky and nubby because you missed a few hairs. Or would it taste uniquely like you do. I still wonder about that.”
“Tiffany.”
Knowing what he was about to do, and to whom, should have sent him jumping off the couch, running in the other direction. Instead, when his head came down to hers all Cole could think about was how much he wanted to taste her again, how he wanted to lose himself in her, and how both those feelings somehow seemed right, even though he knew they shouldn’t.
Her body tensed as he inched closer. When his lips finally captured hers, she turned fluid under his hands.
Her smooth, small body slackened beneath him as his lips gently moved across hers, tasting them, savoring them. Releasing his grip on her arms, he leaned on his elbows and ran his fingers into her hair, cupping her face while holding fistfuls of the glorious mane.

Author Bio:
Peggy Jaeger’s love of writing began in the third grade when she won her first writing contest with a short story titled THE CLOWN. After that, there was no stopping her. Throughout college and after she became a Registered Nurse, she had several Nursing Journal articles published, in addition to many mystery short stories in Literary Magazines. When her daughter was born, Peggy had an article titled THE VOICES OF ANGELS published and reprinted in several parenting magazines, detailing the birth and the accident that almost turned this wonderful event into a tragedy. She had two children’s books published in 1995 titled THE KINDNESS TALES and EMILY AND THE EASTER EGGS, which were illustrated by her artist mother-in-law. While her daughter grew, Peggy would write age appropriate stories for her to read along with, and finally, to read on her own. Her YA stories are mysteries involving smart and funny 12-13 year old girls and an unusual collection of friends and relatives. They all take place in the 1980’s.

She has a Master’s Degree in Nursing Administration and had several articles published on Alzheimer’s Disease when she ran an Alzheimer’s In Patient care unit during the 1990’s

In 2005 she was thrilled to have an article on motherhood placed in the CHICKEN SOUP FOR EVERY MOTHER’S SOUL edition. She has won several awards in various Writer’s Digest short story and personal article categories over the years. Recently, she has placed first in the Dixie Kane 2013 Memorial Contest in the Short/Long Contemporary romance Category, and in the Single Title Contemporary Category, and third place in the ICO Romance Contest for 2013, and in 2014 she was a finalist in the Put Your heart in a Book contest.

A life-long and avid romance reader and writer, she is a member of RWA and her local New Hampshire RWA Chapter.

Peggy has embraced the techno age and writes for three blogs, all detailing events in her life. One titled, 50 pounds for 50 years is a personal blog about weight loss, one about her life as an EMPTY NESTER and her most recent one MOMENTS FROM MENOPAUSE, a humorous and informative guide through this time in a woman’s life.

She also has her own website http://peggyjaeger.com where she writes about everyday life and how it relates to writing. Twitter is her current obsession, but she is never far from her Facebook pages.

In 2015 she will have her first two contemporary romance novels published by The Wild Rose Press: Skater’s Waltz, book 1 in the MaQuire Women Series, and There’s No Place Like Home, book 2. Four more are in the works for this series, in addition to her Cooking with Kandy series.



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Sunday, August 10, 2014

A Journey to Rota, Spain - The Wedding


This Friday my newest release, Touched by Midas comes out.  You might wonder, why is Brenna mentioning this when the title of her blog is A Journey to Rota, Spain?  Good question.  The answer is Touched by Midas, my book in the SEALs Going Hot series with Desiree Holt, Cerise Deland and Samantha Cayto is set in Rota. 
http://www.wildrosepublishing.com/wildcatalog_v151/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=182&products_id=1002

When our editor first asked the four of us to write another SEALs series, I decided I wanted to bring in as much authenticity to my story as possible.  Aside from actually having dated a Navy SEAL (which I haven't - sigh...), I did marry a Navy man and we spent the first three years of our marriage stationed at Naval Station Rota, Spain.  So what readers read in Touched by Midas comes straight from my memories of living in Rota, working on the base and being with my huge military family.  The blogs for this week will include pics, experiences and information about me and my life in Spain.


The journey begins the summer of 1989.  The Fine Young Cannibal's Good Thing is #1 on the music charts. Batman and Ghost Busters II are playing in the theaters, and Nolan Ryan strikes out his 5,000th batter.  Yes. It's quite a summer.

I arrive in Rota and reconnect with my husband-to-be.  I am 22 and I recently graduated with a degree in History from Southern Illinois University with visions of being a high school history teacher. Our plans are to marry in Gibraltar once my mother and sister arrive.
At the time my husband-to-be is living in a typical Spanish house. Between you and me, the house is a disaster.  There are cat print curtains hung in the windows of his tiny kitchen.  There is a bike in a back room that he has no idea who it belongs to or how it got there. (He later vaguely remembers "borrowing" the bike after getting thoroughly plastered at a local Spanish bar named Zeppelins.) And his dog Mozart, a German Shepard mix, has pooped so many times on the terrace roof-top of his home that it's impossible to make my way across the roof without walking in one of his landmines.  I immediately decree we need to move.

Luckily, we find a brand new apartment we can afford. The truly lucky part of finding this apartment are our landlords, a wonderful Spanish family who will eventually become our second family, as well as my daughter's caregivers.
I wish I had a video or a picture to show our move from my husband-to-be's old house to our new apartment. I guarantee, you'd fall on the floor laughing. The picture I'm posting (which is not of us but the closest I could find) simply doesn't do our situation justice.  Imagine putting a full-sized refrigerator in the trunk of a tiny Fiat then driving several blocks with two guys tagging behind making sure the fridge doesn't fall out.  That would be us. 


Aside from the fridge, we had no furniture in our apartment while we waited for our things to arrive from the states. So for the first few months we got to sleep on floors, eat from a folding table and sit on lawn chairs. These were great times.


But Rota was our playground and we spent little time in our apartment. Our mornings consisted of wandering around the small shops. In the afternoons we lounged on the beach. And we pissed away our evenings in local eateries or bars. 
(Yep. That's me 25 years ago. Skinny, tan and sporting a short haircut.)
One of our favorite places to eat was a little place called Shorty's. It was across the street from a discotecca called La Playa. Those were the days when staying out until 2am was the norm. How we ever managed to get up at 7am and go to work is a mystery.  Oh youth.
The view from our bedroom window. That dome marks the main Spanish market in Rota.

The Rota harbor





Down the street from my husband-to-be's house. You can't see it, but the beach is at the very end.



My sister, our friend Dan, me and hubby-to-be strolling down one of Rota's walking streets.
  
On August 15, 1989 in Gibraltar, I married my Navy man. Twenty-five years ago this week.  I will tell you I took my camera to capture this special day and I took loads of pictures.  After the wedding, I checked to see how many pictures I had left on my film only to discover I hadn't put any film in the camera.  Fortunately our friends had taken a few pics.  This is me on my wedding day 25 years ago.


Tomorrow I'll post more about Rota, Spain and a long excerpt from Touched by Midas.  Until then, ciao!