Tuesday, December 24, 2024

*Book Tour & Giveaway* Montuak Romances-GUEST POST

 


Sizzling attractions and romance on the sands of Montauk


Jingle Bell Love

A Montuak Romance Book 2

By P.C. Zick

Genre: Contemporary Romance 



A man in mourning for his dead wife. A woman unable to trust the opposite sex. Blind date fiascos until they discover one another.

Denny’s wife—the only woman he’s ever loved—died the year before and his friends are intent on finding him a new love. Jill’s first experience with love in college left her skeptical that she would ever be able to find love. Both the widower and the bachelorette hope for a second chance at love.

When Denny and Jill find themselves lustfully drawn to one another, they’re ashamed of their secret encounters. When friends suspect there might be something between them, they disapprove. Unsure of how they feel about one another, the attraction continues. To keep things on the downlow, they hatch a pact to be friends with secret benefits and embark on a hot sexy romance. When those benefits explode into something more than primal urges, one of them breaks the pact, and the whole affair and friendship ends up unraveling as the holiday season approaches. This steamy romance jingles all the bells for the Christmas season.

Denny, a contractor with a desire to become an architect, designs a home with Jill foremost in his mind. Their love ebbs and flows in this Hamptons romance.

Jingle Bell Love is the second novel in the Montauk Romance series, which feature novels filled with steamy passion, and always, everlasting love.

Buy your copy of Jingle Bell Love to begin reading about the sexy men and beautiful women who seek meaningful relationships beyond lust at first sight.

 

Amazon * Bookbub * Goodreads


Love On the Wind

A Montuak Romance Book 2 



An uptight builder. A quirky reality TV travel show host. An explosive passion that surprises them both in this sexy Hamptons romance.

Six years of traveling for her reality TV series has left Kiley Nelson, a dedicated career woman, longing for a place to call her own. Spending a weekend at her girlfriend’s beach house is the perfect reprieve, especially when she purchases property to finally settle down. But her peaceful escape is shaken when she smashes into a car containing the sinfully sexy and infuriated passenger, Jeff Hammond, who immediately melts her heart.

Jeff, staying at his friend’s Montauk home to relax after a trying week of building a home for a spoiled diva, doesn’t count on sharing his weekend with the flaky, yet incredibly sexy, Kiley. He agrees to build her house, despite the tug on his heart as Kiley turns him on in every delicious way.

Passionate weekends and shared dreams begin to shape the house they start to build together as Jeff begins to realize his dream of becoming an architect. As their relationship deepens, so do the wounds from past hurts, rousing ghosts from Jeff’s traumatic past when his fiancé cheated on him with his brother. When a summer storm rolls in at the nearly complete house, they’re forced to deal with the past before it shakes and cracks the very foundation they’ve built.

Misunderstanding and stubborn personalities threaten to rip apart the fledgling relationship until both Kiley and Jeff learn to trust one another and are given a second chance at love.

Love on the Wind is the first novel in the  Montauk Romance series, which feature novels filled with steamy passion, and always, everlasting love.

Buy your copy of Love on the Wind to begin reading about the sexy men and beautiful women who seek meaningful relationships beyond lust at first sight.

 

**On Sale for Only .99cents!**

Amazon * Bookbub * Goodreads


 

P.C. Zick describes herself as a storyteller no matter what she writes. And she writes in a variety of genres, including romance, contemporary fiction, and creative nonfiction. She's won various awards for her essays, columns, editorials, articles, and novels.

Zick offers a variety of nonfiction books, which include a book on vegetable gardening, a compilation of her essays and short stories from her decades-long career as a writer, and a primer for writers on taking an idea and turning it into a published book. She has also published and annotated the journal of her great-grandfather based on his experiences as a Union soldier during the Civil War.

Her novels contain elements of romance with strong female characters, handsome heroes, and descriptive settings. And all of her works express her philosophy of living lightly upon this earth with love, laughter, and passion.

She and her husband live in Tallahassee, Florida, where they enjoy gardening, kayaking, golfing, hiking, and traveling.

 

Website * Facebook * Instagram * Bluesky * Bookbub * Amazon * Goodreads

GUEST POST

Writing Advice

My inspiration to begin the journey myself came from the leader of my writer’s group more than two decades ago. His words delivered me from the desire to tell my story to the creation of a book. He kicked me in the seat of my pants, and I landed in front of my computer where I spent every spare moment finishing a novel that had languished in a file cabinet drawer for fifteen years. How did he do it? He yelled at our writers’ group when none of us had brought the assigned writing practice from the month before. We all had excuses, just like the ones we’d used at the previous meeting. At the time, I was teaching high school English, so my excuse was particularly adept—my students had taught me well. No matter. He let it rip.

“Either you’re a writer or you’re not. Stop making excuses. Writers write, and if you don’t do that, you’re not a writer.” He slammed some papers on the table in front of him and left the room. The others exited the meeting, vowing never to return. Despite my shock, I heard him, and I went home and began to write. Within six months, I had finished the novel, and within another six months, a small publisher made my dream come true with the publication of my first book.

Writers write. Simple. Precise. And so very true.


Writing Advice to My Younger Self

I would tell my younger self to be patient with the process and keep expectations reasonable. The Oprah dream really derailed me for a few years. I was perpetually disappointed and would have to pull my chin off the floor and sit my rear end back in the chair and start all over again. I have no such illusions today. I write for myself. I would also tell my younger self to write about things that inspire me or fascinate me. Good writing always results.


A Writer on Reading

Folks often tell me they want to write a book, too. They have a story to tell. I ask questions about what they like to read. If they tell me they like horror stories but want to write romances, I tell them to start reading romances. Study the genre of what you want to write. 

But then there are those who tell me they don’t read but they want to write a book. I firmly believe that writers must first and foremost must be readers. Study the craft. Read the masters. Even a poorly written book can be instructive.

I started out as an avid reader. My father used to accuse me of faking the flu whenever I wanted to finish a book rather than go to school. He’s probably right. And I most likely learned more form that book than I ever did a full day in school.

Do your family and friends support your career as a writer? 

I credit my daughter, an artist, for giving me the courage to leave my teaching career to write fulltime. When I was first considering the leap, she was a freshman in college. She told me to have faith because I knew how to survive know matter what happened.

My husband loves everything I write and reads my books with great interest, but with a critical eye. A few friends and a family member here and there are loyal fans. The rest just ignore me. I think they’re under the impression this is just a hobby like refinishing furniture. So, I don’t say much. Every once in a while one of them surprises me by telling me they enjoyed something I wrote. 


What surprised me the most about becoming a writer

I discovered early in my life as a novelist that I loved doing research. It’s so much fun to learn new things, and then incorporate real events or facts into a work of fiction. However, beginning writers must be careful. It’s too tempting to do “research dumps” in books thinking the readers need to know everything you’ve learned. Not so. The writer needs the information to create the mood, tone, characters, and conflict to make it believable and interesting to the reader, but not all of that needs to literally make its way onto the page.


Follow the tour HERE for special content and a giveaway!

$10 Amazon 

a Rafflecopter giveaway

No comments:

Post a Comment