Monday Mentions It's a Wylder Thing
It's no secret that I love writing for The Wylder West Series published by The Wild Rose Press. From the instant I heard the series details, I was hooked.
Wild west? Old-time western romance? Gunslingers, cowboys, handsome ranchers? Quick-drawing women ready to defend home and hearth, soiled doves, strong widows making lives on the frontier? Yes to all of it! Count me in, I love every bit of this series!
My latest contribution to this amazing series releases next week. Christmas in Wylder is part of a series within a series and centers around the few weeks leading up to Christmas. Everyone in Wylder is dealing with a no-nonsense snowstorm that's sent the Union Pacific train headed to town off the rails. A snowstorm, stranded passengers, and the unique characters in Wylder all come together to make these stories both exciting and heartwarming. Nicole McCaffrey, Laura Strickland, and Kim Turner are the other authors involved in this special Wylder series. Their stories release on December 13, too!
Tate Taylor's waiting on a shipment of explosives for his mining business. When the Union Pacific train carrying them derails, he hightails it to the site, hoping the whole town isn't blown to smithereens.
Just as they find happiness, secrets from both their pasts threaten to tear them apart. Wylder is safe—but are their hearts?
Violet Bloom leaves Charleston to come west as a mail-order bride. But when she steps off the stagecoach, she's greeted by tragic news. She vows to begin anew in Wylder, to lay haunting memories to rest, and find peace.
Former Union soldier Thomas Harvey's dreams of homesteading are crushed, along with his heart, at the passing of his wife. He moves to town and struggles to survive—not for himself, but for his spirited young daughter.
After Thomas rescues Violet during a snowstorm, neither has any thought of romance. But Christmas magic is in the air. It's a time of forgiveness and new beginnings—even for lost souls.
Theodore Harvey longs for a wife and family to chase away the loneliness of frontier living. His gardens and sturdy home are stunning but there should be footsteps other than his to bring the place alive.
Can a southern belle find happiness amidst the grit of the wild west?
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