Linda, tell us about how you arrived at writing this series:
I’ve been asked whether I was
ever in the rodeo or ever rode a bull. No, the history behind the Circle Bar
Ranch series is far more mundane than that. I got the idea from
television. Two shows, both on Country Music Television (CMT).
Cowboy U was a reality show that aired from 2003 to 2007. It
featured eight city slickers who had to learn all about ranch life. The first
thing that happened when the contestants arrived at the ranch-of-the-season was
their luggage was exchanged for cowboy duds. That meant the women had to do
without their nail polish and electric hair dryers.
Activities—aside from adjusting
to a more rustic lifestyle and learning to ride a horse—included
calf-scrambling, steer wrestling, barrel racing, and yes, bull riding. Even the
women had to learn, which gave me the idea for Patricia Talbert, my heroine.
Later, Ty Murray, founding
member of Professional Bull Riders, Inc. (PBR), stepped to the chute. Ty
hosted some stars from TV, movies, and sports on his 2000-acre
ranch right close to Stephenville, Texas. Since my family once owned a
ranch out there, I put my imaginary Circle Bar
Ranch in the area. Of course, I took a little license with some of the
rodeo arenas in my story, but the location is the same.
Some of the folks
involved in Ty Murray's Celebrity Bull Riding were musician Vanilla Ice,
actor Stephen Baldwin, Ultimate Fighter Josh Haynes. These guys and several
others got the full bull-riding experience—thrown, hooked, stomped; broken
arms, cracked ribs. By the time they graduated from Ty’s school, they rode an
1800-pound bull in a live PBR rodeo. Compared to the real riding professionals
though, they looked a bit like cyclists with training wheels.
Both shows were fun for the same
reason it's fun to watch anyone adjust to being out of their element. Take your
fish-out-of-water comedy and throw some animals into the mix, and
you'll get a few giggles. Of course, I got more than that. I got a spark to my
imagination.
That spark carried over to three
novels, Give the Lady a Ride, The Final Ride, and Ride to the Altar—the last in the Circle Bar Ranch series, which
tells of Talon Carlson’s and Patricia Talbert’s romance from meeting to
wedding.
In Ride
to the Altar, I throw overwhelming hurdles into Patricia and Talon’s path
to wedlock. A past love, murdered years ago and now only a file in an unsolved
case, returns to haunt Talon. A long-held grudge demands release, yet Patricia
has no idea how very deep it runs until she confronts her mother. An attack
against the Circle Bar Ranch itself leaves cattle dead and one of its hands
injured.
Different from the other novels
in this series, Ride to the Altar
forces the two to face their pasts individually before they can face the future
together.
*
Linda is offering a giveaway
prize to one lucky entrant! As
pictured, the prize includes a signed print version of the series, a 16-ounce
Christian cowboy mug, a horseshoe picture frame, a Ph. 4:13 stretch bracelet, a
cute set of magnetic page markers, and a Texas Rubiks cube just for fun. All
you have to do to enter is to leave a comment.CHECK OUT THE GIVEAWAY! YEEHAW!
Tomorrow’s blog will be Jody
Bailey Day’s Love Colored Glasses.
Don’t miss it!
The winner will be announced
Monday, August 6, on Linda's blog, 777 Peppermint
Place.
Good luck!
Thanks so much for joining me here. And that giveaway looks awesome. Don't miss out, folks! Once her blog tour rides to an end, she'll hop outta the saddle, and lasso a name. Once she's wrangled a winner, she'll post the name as stated above. DON'T MISS YOUR CHANCE!
Thanks again, Linda, for visiting!