Tag Archives: #Dickensholidayromance

NOT a #tuesdaytease…well, sorta 9.24.24

I didn’t have time to write a REAL teaser for today because the last 5 days have been such a whirlwind. I’m back home now and will start up my routine again, but for now, today’s NOT a teaser is just to remind you all that A CHEF’S CHRISTMAS is available for PREORDER over on Amazon for just #99cents. The drop date is 11.11.24.

I’ve got a goal of 1000 copies preorders (I know!!), and I’m standing at 35 right now. That’s a looooooong-ass way for me to go to get to my goal, so….help a girl out??!!

LOL.

And remember, the 99 cents price is a limited-time offer. Once the book goes live live live, the price goes up. So take advantage of it now.

Thanks, and bless you all.

And I promise things will get back to normal on this page from now on…

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#tuesdaytease 9.17.2024

Since A CHEF’S KISS CHRISTMAS is up for preorder right now, I figured I do another tease from the book.

If you’ve read any of my Dickens Holiday Romance stories, you know FIXING CHRISTMAS is the story of Abracadabra Charles, alias A.B. Cards. Abra’s got a prickly personality burned in snark-speak and wit that underlines a basic inferiority complex due to her being abandoned by her birth mother and left on Amy’s doorstep on Christmas morning.

Abra’s grumpiness is evident through Fixing Christmas, Sasha’s Secret Santa, Don’t Mess with the Mistletoe and now A Chef’s Kiss Christmas.

In this tease, it is New Year’s Day and her interrogation skills are getting a workout on Portia…

“’Morning.” Portia yawned as she came into the kitchen. “Happy New Year.”

Abra, still in pjs, was feeding Amelia a bottle while Colton was busy breaking up a croissant for Stevie.

Colton repeated the sentiment to her.

“Did you guys make it to midnight?” she asked as she poured a cup of coffee from the carafe on the counter.

Abra’s laugh reminded her of a wheezing dog’s bark. “Not even close. We both passed out at nine. Luckily this one,” she kissed the top of the nursing baby’s head, “gave us a respite and didn’t wake us until two-thirty and then six.”

“Longest stretch of uninterrupted sleep I think we’ve gotten in almost 2 years,” Colt said, grinning. “Felt like I slept a week.”

“A week would be nice.” Abra slanted a glare at her agent. “What time did you get in?”

“I don’t even know. Late. Or early, depending on how you look at it.” Portia couldn’t outright lie because the thought Abra might have been awake and heard the car door close was a possibility. Even though she’d been extremely quiet about it.

Finished, Abra began burping Amelia.

“Did you have a good time?” Colt asked.

Phenomenal was on the tip of her tongue, but there was no way she could tell them that and then not explain why. They still thought she’d gone to Antonelli’s for the party.

“It was good.”

“See anyone you know?” Abra asked.

There was a world of suspicion in that question and Portia knew it. If she lied and mentioned a name, she could be assured Abra would find out from the person she’d named, personally.

“Not really. I didn’t stay long. I went out to Grovesnor’s Pond to watch the fireworks from my car.”

This was a lie, but she knew it couldn’t be verified because Amy had been the one to tell her most of the town came out to see the awesome display when it went off at midnight.

“And then?” Abra pressed.

With a shrug, Portia said, “I stayed for a while and just…thought about things.”

“Like what?”

“Abra.” Colton’s voice hadn’t risen a notch and yet Portia could hear the warning in his tone.

“What?” his wife asked, eyes wide, all innocence.

Bless the man. He may not have known his wife as long as Portia had, but he was attuned to all her quirks and traits liked he’d grown up with, and been with her, every day of their lives.

With a crooked pull of his mouth to one side, he shook his head. “Stop with the third degree. Save it for when Stevie and Amelia are teenagers.  You’ll need those C.I.A.-like interrogation skills of yours then. But cut her,” he nodded his head at Portia, “some slack. Okay?”

Abra’s pout rivaled anything her three-year-old could pull off. She nodded, sighed, then said, “What are your plans for today?” as she put the now sleeping baby in her Moses cradle.

With a shrug, Portia sipped her coffee. “Just some client reading. Not yours,” she added with a meaningful glance.

“It’s coming. It’s coming.”

“Speaking of coming, I just heard the paper hit the porch,” Colton said.

“I’ll get it.” Abra rose and when she passed by him, Colt reached out, grabbed one of her hands and with that same sexy crooked grin, kissed her knuckles.

Abra shook her head, then planted a kiss on the top of his head. “It’s a good thing you’re handsome,” she said with a sniff.

Colton’s lips split into a cocky, all-teeth smile.

Intrigued? I hope so, LOL!

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#tuesdayTease 9/10/24

Since I’m still promoting the preorders for my upcoming 6th Dickens Holiday Romance, A CHEF’S KISS CHRISTMAS, i figured another little tidbit about food was a good idea today.

Portia Avon is no cook. Not even close. She has one go-to item she can cook, though, and makes it for Tony when she discovers he hasn’t eaten anything in almost 14 hours. She makes him a simple ham and cheese grilled sandwich, and he thinks it’s the best thing he’s eaten in a while.

ANother little tidbit in the book that concerns eating is all the sauces Tony makes taste even better with different spices and ways of cooking them.

Food and cooking play heavy in this book and serve to show Tony the reasons why he should rejoin the “land of the living and walking around,” again.

You’ll understand that quote once you read the book. Oh, and looks: it’s up for preorder right now, here:

https://amzn.to/4g83ATZ

And it you read and review on Booksprout, you can borrow it here: https://bit.ly/47a4LOP

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#tuesdaytease 8.27.24

Another little peek at A CHEF’S KISS CHRISTMAS cover.

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#tuesdaytease

So, the cover for my 2024 addition to the DICKENS HOLIDAY ROMANCE series, A CHEF’S KISS CHRISTMAS, will be revealed on our Dickens Facebook page during the Labor Day weekend. But…

Here’s a little from the story, which is in galleys right now, getting ready for preorder.

“What’s that?” Tony thrust his chin toward the bundle in her arms when she got in the car.

She turned to him and with her eyes wide, chin dropped a hair so she could zero in on him, she said, “A freshly cut tabletop tree. It’s barely thirty-six inches tall.”

Glaring at her, his own eyes narrowing, he said, “For Abra?”

“Nope.”

She popped the P with a flare.

“Portia.” She’d have to have a hearing deficit to mistake the warning in his voice.

“Anton,” she said back, using the same tone.

“Don’t call me that.” For some reason, he rolled his head right and left.

“We’re in your car, silly. No one can hear us. And before you have a conniption,” she held up one hand, effectively silencing him, “It’s a gift.”

“A gift?”

She nodded and said, “There you go, repeating everything again, but yes. It’s a thank you for helping me today.”

“I didn’t help you at all,” he countered. “When you called me, and then we wound up at the tree farm, I thought it meant you needed help with cutting one down.”

“Initially, that was my thought. But it seemed easier, once we got here, to have the farm hands do it. They’ll do a great job and deliver it, too. But you came with me, gave up your one free afternoon, and because of that, I wanted to say thank you, and getting you this tree is my way of doing it.”

He could argue, but he’d look like a real loser if he refused the offer of the gift.

But… “I don’t have anything to decorate it with, and like I said, I’m not investing in a bunch of things that I won’t be taking with me when I leave.”

“No worries.” She pulled out her phone and gave him the directions to the town’s secondhand store, Curious Curios.

“And we’re going there, why?” he asked, pulling onto the county road.

“Because they have a package waiting for me that I need to pick up. They don’t deliver. And before you say a package, in that deep, smokey, sexy voice,“ he clamped his mouth shut because he’d been about to do just that, “Yes, a package. It’s filled with used ornaments and tree trimmings the owner picked out for me.”

“When?” was all he could think to ask.

“What?”

“Not what. When?”

“When, what?”

The force and breadth of the sigh he expelled fogged up the front windshield. “I feel like I’m in a bad Yogi Berra movie and it’s déjà vu all over again.” Another exhale, this one followed by a cleansing inhale meant to calm him. “When did you arrange for a box of ornaments to be filled for you?”

The banter between these two centers a great deal on his inability to be anything more than monosyllabic most days and her chattiness. You can probably surmise from this quick scene, this is a grumpy/sunshine tropey-book. LOL.

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A Dickens Holiday Romance takeover! 7.27.24

Starting today, I’ll be taking over the CHRISTMAS COMES TO DICKENS Facebook page for my turn at CHRISTMAS IN JULY.

All weekend long, I’ll be posting about my books in the Dickens series, the new 2024 arrival just in time for the holiday season, and giving away prizes to new members of the group.

Come and join me for a fun-filled weekend of all things Dickens, Christmas, and romance!

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#tuesdaytease 7.2.24

Today, instead of a snippet from a WIP, I’m teasing the cover for my upcoming DICKENS HOLIDAY ROMANCE – A CHEF’S KISS CHRISTMAS.

Successful Chef Anton Saparosa had the perfect life. Great marriage; beautiful and adoring wife; trendy, SoCal restaurant frequented by celebrities – many of them his friends.

Then Covid hit.

Anton’s perfect life dissolved before his eyes. With nothing left to keep him in California, he starts an itinerant cross-country journey searching for something to give his life meaning again.

Happenstance lands him in the tiny town of Dickens just as Dorrit’s Diner is thrown into chaos.

Literary Agent Portia Avon needs a rest. A messy divorce has her craving quiet and the company of her friend and client A.B. Cards, nee Abra Bree. She comes from the western heat of California to the eastern cold of Dickens and plans to do nothing but rest, relax, and read during her holiday stay.

When Portia spots a familiar face in Dorrit’s, she’s confused. Why is Anton Saparosa, one of the most recognizable chefs in California, working as a fry cook in Abra’s mom’s diner, and going by the name Tony Smith?

A question Portia wants an answer to, but one Tony isn’t willing to share, especially with a woman he can’t stop thinking about.

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#fridayfive 6.28.24

So today’s #fridayfive is 5 things about my newest Dickens Holiday Romance book, A CHEF’S KISS CHRISTMAS which will be released on 11.11.24

  1. smalltown romance ( Dickens!)
  2. holiday romance
  3. Dorrit’s Diner
  4. finding love again after a loss
  5. Cover reveal next week!

Here’s the blurb:

Successful Chef Anton Saparosa had the perfect life. Great marriage; beautiful and adoring wife; trendy, SoCal restaurant frequented by celebrities – many of them his friends.

Then Covid hit.

Anton’s perfect life dissolved before his eyes. With nothing left to keep him in California, he starts an itinerant cross-country journey searching for something to give his life meaning again.

Happenstance lands him in the tiny town of Dickens just as Dorrit’s Diner is thrown into chaos.

Literary Agent Portia Avon needs a rest. A messy divorce has her craving quiet and the company of her friend and client A.B. Cards, nee Abra Bree. She comes from the western heat of California to the eastern cold of Dickens and plans to do nothing but rest, relax, and read during her holiday stay.

When Portia spots a familiar face in Dorrit’s, she’s confused. Why is Anton Saparosa, one of the most recognizable chefs in California, working as a fry cook in Abra’s mom’s diner, and going by the name Tony Smith?

A question Portia wants an answer to, but one Tony isn’t willing to share, especially with a woman he can’t stop thinking about.

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#tuesdaytease 6.25.25

I’ll be teasing the cover reveal for my newest Dicken’s book in July,but for now, here’s a little something about my 2024 Dickens book, A CHEF’S KISS CHRISTMAS. In this scene, Portia and Tony go Christmas Tree shopping for the diner’s tree. He has no idea it’s a ruse Portia is using to get him out and about…

“I knew this tree would look perfect on this table,” Portia said two hours later while she affixed the last ornament.

Tony lifted his head from his position at the stove, stared across the room at her, then shook his head.

Three times.

Three times now she’d all but bamboozled him into doing something he thought he’d never do or sworn not to.

By the time they arrived at the office to give the clerk the tag for the diner tree, he’d forgotten all about her prompt that he get his own holiday tree, instead, his thoughts turned to food. He’d been playing with the idea of deconstructing an alfredo sauce and using it on poached eggs. Maybe he could take a few hours tonight and whip up a few samples. The idea had come to him earlier in the week when a customer had praised the new tangy Alfredo he’d been using in the diner. Amy had relayed the customer’s compliment and he’d begun thinking of alternate ways to use the sauce.

While Portia had paid, he’d gone to bring the car around from the packed lot. When she emerged from the office ten minutes later, she had a wrapped bundle in her arms and was wearing a smile that more than hinted at a Cheshire cat vibe.

“What’s that?” he thrust his chin toward the bundle when she got in the car.

She turned to him and with her eyes wide, chin dropped a hair so she could zero in on him, she said, “A freshly cut tabletop tree. It’s barely thirty-six inches.”

Glaring at her, his own eyes narrowing, he said, “For Abra?”

“Nope.”

She popped the P with a flare.

“Portia.” She’d have to have a hearing loss to mistake the warning in his voice.

“Anton,” she said back, using the same tone.

“Don’t call me that.” For some reason, he rolled his head right and left.

“We’re in your car, silly. No one can hear us. And before you have a conniption,” she held up one hand, effectively silencing him, “It’s a gift.”

“A gift?”

She nodded and said, “There you go repeating everything again, but yes. It’s a thank you for helping me today.”

“I didn’t help you at all,” he countered. “When you called me and then we wound up at the tree farm, I thought it meant you needed help with cutting one down.”

“Initially, that was my thought. But it seemed easier, once we got here, to have the farm hands to it. They’ll do a great job and deliver it, too. But you came with me, gave up your one free afternoon, and because of that I wanted to say thank you, and getting you this tree is my way of doing it.”

He could argue, but he’d look like a real loser if he refused the offer of the gift.

But… “I don’t have anything to decorate it with and like I said, I’m not investing in a bunch of things that I won’t be taking with me when I leave.”

“No worries.” She pulled out her phone and gave him the directions to the town’s secondhand store, Curious Curios.

“And we’re going there, why?” he asked, pulling onto the county road.

“Because they have a package waiting for me that I need to pick up. They don’t deliver. And before you say a package, in that deep, smokey, sexy voice,” he clamped his mouth shut because he’d been about to do just that, “Yes, a package. It’s filled with used ornaments and tree trimmings the owner picked out for me.”

“When?” was all he could think to ask.

“What?”

“Not what. When?”

“When, what?”

The force and breadth of the sigh he expelled fogged up the front windshield. “I feel like I’m in a bad Yogi Berra movie and it’s déjà vu all over again.” Another exhale, this one followed by a cleansing inhale meant to calm him. “When did you arrange for a box of ornaments to be filled for you?”

For the first time in all their interactions, awkwardness descended upon her face and body. Shoulders slumped under her coat; mouth pinched in one corner as if lost in thought; brows flirting with one another, a delicate crease bifurcating them; even her color heightened a bit as her cheeks pinked.

“Portia?”

She closed her eyes, took a deep breath, then opened them again. “I spoke with her on the phone this morning. Told her what I needed and then trusted her to get everything ready for pick up.”

He digested that for the time it took to wait for the traffic light they were stopped at to turn back to green. As he pushed down on the gas pedal he said, “You planned this whole thing, didn’t you? This outing to the tree farm. Me going with you. Getting me that tree. Heck, you were probably even the one who convinced Amy to get a real tree for the diner.” He tossed her a quick glance before concentrating back on the road. “I’m right, aren’t I?”

She stayed silent for an entire block. Then, slowly, she began to nod, until a weak, “Yes,” escaped from between her lips.

“Why? Why did you go to all that trouble? Just for me to have a…holiday tree?” He shook his head. “That makes no sense.”

She turned to him then, and from the corner of his eye he could tell she was nervous.

About what? Him figuring out what she’d done? Her doing it? This was all just crazy.

You’ll have to read the book to find out why she’s so invested in getting him out of the house…

Release day is 11.11.24

Cover reveal starting July !

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#Tuesdaytease 6.4.2024

So, I am currently working on my 2024 addition to the DICKEN HOLIDAY ROMANCE SERIES. My book this year is called A CHEF’S KISS CHRISTMAS. I haven’t done a blurb yet, but the story involves a chef-on-the-run-from-life and a literary agent.

Of course it takes place mostly in Dorrit’s Diner, and the story is sprinkled with many glimpses of Amy and her family. This will be my last Dickens book (don’t cry!) and I wanted to make it a goodie. I like what I’ve got so far, so here’s a little glimpse into the first chapter. The cover reveal is coming in July so stick around by following me if you don’t.

Here ya go… the setup = Amy’s cook Winston has had an accident and can’t work. Amy is in dire straights looking for a chef. Enter…our hero.

Crap on cracker.” Amy slammed her fists on her almost non-existent hips. “He was my one hope to take over for Winnie. I need a cook, asap. I can’t feed all these people,” she swept her hand across the room, “manage this place and serve at the same time.”

Something in her tone hit Tony deep in his chest. Part exasperated, part worried, and with a little fear thrown in, she sounded much like his Aunt Connie had when his uncle had his first heart attack and was unable to run their business. Tony had stepped up and never once regretted his decision. His aunt had been eternally grateful, and Tony learned a valuable lesson: helping people is its own reward.

That had to be the reason he did what he did next because he hadn’t felt like helping anyone in a long, long time.

Two years, three months, and eight days to be precise.

“Need help?” he asked Amy.

She narrowed her gaze toward him. “What I need is someone who can cook and run my kitchen, so my customers don’t revolt. Can you do that?”

“As a matter of fact, I can.”

Those narrowed eyes now widened.

“I grew up in a diner. Managed it for years.” He wiped his mouth with a napkin, then rose. “I can give you a hand this morning until things settle down if you’d like.”

Amy’s discerning eye raked across his face, probing, measuring.

He knew what she saw: a forty-something guy with hair in need of at least two inches chopped off, six days of lazy stubble on his cheeks and jaw and a body that could use a minimum of ten pounds back of the thirty it’d lost in the past two years. A smile hadn’t met his lips in quite a while and he rarely – if ever- struck up a conversation with anyone.

None of those traits exuded trustworthiness and he figured Amy was wary of him because of it.

“Come with me,” she said after a moment’s reflection.

He chugged the remainder of his coffee and followed her through the dining room.

Just beyond the swing doors, chaos ruled.

The two paramedics who’d responded to the 9-1-1 call were trying to load a screaming gent onto the gurney. The cook may be tiny but he more than made up for the lack of height with the volume of his wails.

To him, Amy said, “Wait here a minute.”

She made her way to the gurney, grasped her cook’s hand, leaned down close and said something that quieted him. Then she placed a kiss on his forehead and told the paramedics to break some speed limits getting to the hospital.

Two of the older waitresses surrounded Amy, speaking at once, and questioning how they were going to continue serving if they didn’t have a cook. Amy shooed them away telling them she was taking care of it.

They didn’t look all that convinced, but nonetheless went back out to the dining room with the instructions she’d given them to tell the customers their orders were going to be a few minutes more.

Then she lit on him.

For some crazy reason, he threw his shoulders back and stood straighter.

“Know your way around a kitchen, do ya?”

“Blindfolded,” he replied, surprising himself with his candor.

That piercing glare shot his way again. She reached into a tabletop drawer and pulled out a hair elastic.

“Board’a health rules.” She handed it to him and he pulled his hair up into a man bun.

“I’m gonna get a few of these orders ready,” she said, washing her hands at the sink. “While I do, make me an omelet.”

Like he knew his way around a kitchen blindfolded, he could make a simple omelet in his sleep.

“Any particular kind?” he asked as he moved to the sink, doffed his jacket, then mimicked her handwashing motions.

Amy popped six pieces of bread into the industrial toaster with one hand while the other poured pancake batter onto the griddle in six perfect little rounds. “Surprise me,” she said over her shoulder.

He nodded, then, spotting an apron on a peg by the office door, donned it, scoping the layout of the griddle and its surroundings as he did.

A sense of anticipation pushed him to pull three eggs from the industrial refrigerator along with a container of shredded cheese. Opening it, he recognized the woodsy aroma of Swiss. Onehanded, he cracked the eggs, whisked them, then tossed them onto the griddle while he poured a handful of the grated cheese on top. While that settled, he pulled bacon from the warmer and crushed two pieces between a pair of paper towels then tossed the crumbles on top of the setting eggs. From the spice rack he pulled nutmeg and salt, added them then topped it all off with a pinch of pepper.

When the eggs set to the point they were no longer runny, muscle memory pushed him to take a spatula and fold one third toward the center, then the opposite side until the omelet was folded to perfection. Sliding the spatula underneath it, he flipped it over. Instinct told him the exact moment to remove it, which he did, placing it on a clean plate.

While he did, Amy had been a study in motion, never once stopping while she cooked then plated orders. The waitresses all lined back into the kitchen when Amy dinged the ready bell, took their orders while tossing him a quizzical eye.

Once they were alone again, Amy turned, dragged in a huge breath, and said, “Show me what ya got.”

He handed her the plated omelet and a fork.

Amy inspected it as if she were a general inspecting her standing-at-attention troops. First, her gaze raked over the perfectly pale yellow mixture. Then she raised the plate to her face, took a whiff, one eyebrow lifting.

Zeroing in on him she said, “Bacon?”

“I didn’t have enough time to slice that ham I saw in the fridge. The bacon’s maple flavored.”

She nodded. “Only kind I use. Something else in here. Something…earthy.”

“A dash of nutmeg.”

Now her brows lifted to her hairline. Without a word, she forked a section and said as she lifted it to her mouth, “Color’s perfect.”

Since he knew it was, he kept silent. The very first thing he’d ever learned to cook had been an omelet. It had taken him almost of month of daily practice to know the precise second to remove it from the heat, when it was the best moment to fold it, how the only number of eggs to use would always be three.

He watched her face and identified exactly when the nutmeg and bacon hit her tastebuds. Her eyes went wide, then to half-closed as the combined spice and pork bits sent a savory river of deliciousness across them.

Amy swallowed then shook her head. “You know how to cook anything else aside from this?”

“Name a dish.”

“How are you with pancakes? Sausages? French toast?”

“Just as good as that.” He ticked his chin toward the plate she held. And since he knew his own worth, added, “Maybe better.”

“You know how to do a breakfast run? It’s not easy. In fact, it’s damn stressful.”

He nodded. “I do.”

“I think I’m gonna give you a chance to prove that.” She put the plate down. “If you’re serious about helping out, that is. For today – now – at least. Just to get me through to lunch.”

He had nowhere to be, nothing pressing him for his time.

And, most surprising of all, he realized he wanted to help.

He nodded. “I can do that.”

Julia pushed through the swing doors and waddled to a stop. “Dining room’s getting loud, Ames. How we doing with orders? Should I put up the closed sign?”

The diner owner looked from her daughter-in-law, then back to him, a corner of her lip tucked between her teeth. Then, “No need. We’re gonna be fine.” She stretched out a hand for the orders in Julia’s hand.

The younger woman didn’t look all that convinced, but handed them over then grabbed a clean coffee carafe from the dishwasher.

After reading through the orders, Amy divided them in half.  Handing them to him she said, “Okay, son. Appreciate the help.”

Without even glancing down at them he nodded.

“My name’s Tony, by the way,” he said.

“I know.” She smiled for the first time since he’d come into the kitchen with her. “This is Dickens, son. There’s not much that goes on or happens that gets passed me, including newcomers, even when they’re close-mouthed. Once we get through breakfast we can have a little chat. For now, Tony-by-the-way, I got customers to feed.”

Small towns, he thought, shaking his head.

He didn’t give it another thought as he started the first order in his hand.

And that’s just the beginning. Thoughts, kids?

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