Showing posts with label Cross Country Chaos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cross Country Chaos. Show all posts
Adult Excerpt: "Cross Country Chaos"
at
2:25 PM
Thursday, May 10, 2012
Many of you are familiar with my "wild child" alter ego, Tymber Dalton. Steamy stories that don't sacrifice plot for passion.
I've got more Tymber Dalton stories in the pipe, but if you're anxious to read more of my books while waiting for Tymber's next release, you might want to try "Cross Country Chaos," written under my own name. It was also an EPIC contest finalist!
http://www.bookstrand.com/cross-country-chaos
What do you get when you mix a heroine scared to open up her heart with a hero who's -- literally -- hell on wheels? You get "Cross Country Chaos." As the mom of a boy who is a wheelchair athlete, I got the idea for the book while I really WAS on a "chaotic" cross country trip with my son to get him to his national wheelchair sports competition.
If you like stories with real characters, you'll enjoy this book. It's got passion, humor, and action. Ever see the movie "Murderball?" Well, if you did, you'll love this book. (If you didn't, go put it on your Netflix queue and read this book while you're waiting! *LOL*)
http://www.bookstrand.com/tymber-dalton
Thanks!
Blurb:
Divorced mom Kelly Alexander wants younger son, Denny–in a wheelchair due to spina bifida–to participate in sports. Kelly finds out about the Junior National Disability Games, but they're in Spokane, Washington, a continent away from her Florida home. She's clueless about what to do next.
Mart Rawlings is a single, handsome wheelchair athlete who volunteers to coach Denny and helps him qualify–and falls hard for Kelly. But past heartache over her cheating ex fuels Kelly's reluctance to get personally involved with him.
Kelly must survive a grueling cross country drive to Nationals with her sons and mother, but more importantly, can she make herself take a chance on love?
Cross Country Chaos is a funny, passionate, and at times cringingly honest story of healing broken hearts, rebuilding trust, finding love in unexpected places, and realizing sometimes the greatest disability is between a person's ears, not their body.
---
Excerpt:
They text-messaged back and forth all week and talked several times on the phone. By the time Mart picked Kelly up Friday, she knew how she wanted to spend the night--in his arms.
He took her to an upscale restaurant in downtown Sarasota.
"Have you ever been married?" she asked.
He nodded, taking a sip of his tea. "Once. Just out of college. It didn't work out. We divorced after a year."
"I'm sorry."
He shrugged. "I was traveling a lot with the team. I think she was more in love with the idea of being a caretaker than being my partner. Once we were married, she realized I didn't need her as much as she thought I would. I think it was a blow to her ego. She couldn't understand I wanted her to be my wife, not my nurse."
"Really?"
"I didn't know it then, but there are people who have to take care of someone to feel important about themselves. And there are people attracted to people in chairs because they're in chairs, like some people prefer blondes or breasts or whatever."
"That's creepy."
"Tell me about it. That's one of the things I loved about you from the minute I met you. You don't pity me or feel sorry for me for being in a chair."
"Should I?"
He met her gaze. "No. That's my point." He was quiet for a moment. "It shocked her on our wedding night when I wanted to have sex."
Kelly choked and held her napkin to her mouth to keep from spraying iced tea all over the table.
Mart laughed. "You okay?"
She nodded. "You caught me off guard."
"Which part?"
"The whole comment. It wasn't a conversation you had before the wedding?"
"I wasn't a virgin. She made it clear she didn't believe in premarital sex, and I respected that. I think her problem was she didn't believe in sex at all, and that was one reason she wanted to be with me. She didn't think I could have sex. I assumed we would."
"Again, this wasn't a subject you discussed before you got married?" Kelly had been curious. Well, more than curious. Especially after what she'd felt in his lap the other night.
And considering how she hoped they'd spend the night together.
"I was young. I don't think she realized I was serious. Am I freaking you out?"
She shook her head and took a sip of water to clear her throat. "No. I'll admit, I was wondering."
"Think about Denny's level of function."
Just because some functions were impaired didn't mean others were. Denny's urologist already warned her she'd have normal motherly concerns when Denny hit his teen years. The common misconception was everything from the level of defect or injury down was completely dead. In reality, unless the spinal cord was severed, that was rarely the case.
"I'm nearly the same way," Mart continued, "an incomplete paraplegic. Only when I was injured, it was almost forty years ago. I might have walked with the bracing and technology we have today. But they assumed since I couldn't feel or move my legs, that was it. My spinal cord wasn't severed in the accident. There was a lot of nerve damage, mostly on one side. The damage was limited to motor control and skin sensation from upper thigh down. Any higher, or a more complete injury, I wouldn't have anything. I have no illusions how damned lucky I am. Fortunately, all my plumbing works." He winked.
"Is there a polite way to ask, 'By the way, what can I expect from you in bed tonight?'" she said.
He laughed. "You're the first woman I've met in a long time I feel I can have an honest conversation with."
"Honesty is something I didn't get a lot of in my marriage."
"Okay, so that's the wrong word. I mean I don't have to worry about shocking you. There's always that first awkward dancing around the issue. I tried talking about it on the first date once."
"How'd that work out?"
"It didn't. I think she thought I was a sex fiend. But the women I dated before her, they steered clear of the topic like it was radioactive until I brought it up."
"My ex stopped sleeping with me when he started sleeping with a bunch of other women. He claimed I didn't pay him enough attention. His problem was I didn't wait on him hand and foot after Denny was born."
"He sounds like a stupid man."
"I didn't used to think so. My opinion has changed a lot over the years."
"Did you ever want to have more kids?"
She shook her head. "Not with David." She paused. "I wouldn't have minded having another. Before I found out about him. You?"
He looked down. "I've always wanted to have kids. Up till now, I hadn't found the right woman." He looked at her.
She didn't know how to respond, so she didn't try to fill the silence.
"What are your feelings?" he finally asked.
"I don't know. I hadn't thought about it. After David, I was more worried about being a single mom than a mother-to-be."
"Is that something you might want?"
The room closed in around her, stifling. Not in a bad way, but she was afraid to let her heart get too far ahead of reality. "I don't know. We'd have to discuss it." She talked to the elephant sitting in the corner instead of pretending it wasn't there.
"Is it something you might consider?"
"I can't promise you I'd agree to it." She didn't want to ask but had to know. "Is it a deal-breaker?"
"No. It's just..." He searched for the right words. "I always wanted kids. But that means having a relationship. I'm tired of being alone."
"You might not want to have a relationship with me when you get to know me better."
"I can't imagine that. You're a wonderful woman."
"You haven't seen me first thing in the morning before I've had a cup of coffee."
"See, something else we have in common."
She smiled.
Mart signaled the waiter. "This has been a wonderful evening Kelly. I can't tell you how much fun this was. I really hate to see it end."
"Who says it has to end?"
He studied her for a moment before handing his credit card to the waiter without looking at the check. "I don't want to rush you into anything."
She held Mart's gaze and leaned forward. "So," she whispered, her eyes locked on his, "what can I expect from you tonight?"
He signed the check. They returned to his van in silence. Before he started the engine, he leaned in and kissed her. Something about his kiss was more intense than before, more passionate, barely contained. She returned it, the heat building inside her. It had been a long time since she'd been with anyone.
Too long.
"Where do you want to go?" he gasped as he broke their kiss.
"Let's go back to my place. The boys are at my mom's until tomorrow morning." She took the chance. "You can spend the night."
He nodded. "Okay."
They were halfway to her house when he groaned. "I just remembered something."
"What?"
"I need to stop." He changed lanes and made a turn away from her house.
"What?" she asked again.
He looked at her. "I'm not prepared. Unless you are?"
Something about the look on his face started her giggling. This wasn't a problem she was used to having. "No. I haven't been on the Pill in years."
He found an open drugstore and pulled in.
"Want me to go in?" she asked.
She loved the playful glint in his eyes. "No, I can do it."
"Insert double entendre here."
He paused, then laughed and kissed her again. "Insert something."
Mart was on the lift and out of the van before she could reply. Kelly tried not to let her mind wander too much. So far, he was everything she'd ever wanted in a partner.
Then again, she'd thought that about David.
He was back a few minutes later. She noticed the plastic bag tucked under his chair. He smiled. "You know, I never get tired of that."
"What's that?"
"The clerk was obviously curious and trying not to be obvious about it. You should have seen the look on her face. I was tempted to buy a half-dozen boxes just to see her reaction."
"You're the kind who puts on dark glasses and drives up to a fast food window and asks for a Braille menu, aren't you?"
His smile broadened. "Guilty. It was even funnier when I used to have a German Shepherd, and he'd sit in the passenger seat."
***
She poured them wine while he picked a Thelonius Monk CD from her collection.
"I love this album," he said, taking a glass from her.
She sat on the sofa. "It's one of my favorites."
He turned to her, gently clinked his glass against hers. "Should I quote Bogart?"
"The beginning of a beautiful friendship?"
"Yes."
"I'm hoping it's the beginning of more than that," she admitted.
He took a sip and set the glass on the coffee table before deftly swinging onto the sofa next to her. "Me, too." He took her glass from her and gathered her into his arms. She let him set the pace.
If it was up to her, they'd already be in bed. Take it slow? Hell with that, she wanted him. She could hate herself in the morning.
He held back, and she sensed it. Halfway through the CD, she said, "Let's go somewhere more comfortable."
"Are you sure?"
"You ask me that now?"
"I don't want to screw this up--don't say it," he playfully warned before she could utter a comment.
She led the way, glad she'd made her bed that morning.
Not that it would stay made for long.
He easily transferred to her bed and patted the mattress. "Come here, beautiful." She sat next to him. He gently stroked her cheek. "You okay?"
"I'm out of practice."
He kissed her. "You could have fooled me."
He took his time, tenderly caressing her, making her feel cherished and secure--something David never did.
She cut off that line of thinking. She wanted to focus on Mart and be there with him, not make comparisons to her ex.
Their passion took over. She worked on his shirt buttons while he covered the side of her neck with kisses, melting her. She moaned softly, allowing him to gently push her to the bed while he shrugged his shirt off.
A tattoo encircled his left bicep. "What's that?" Her fingers traced the entwined vines.
"When our sled hockey team made it to the world finals two years ago, we all got them."
Something about it made him seem a little naughty, a hidden bad-boy side. She shivered with anticipation. She closed her eyes, ran her hands over him, felt the firm muscles in his arms as his hands worked under her shirt. Eventually she pulled it off, his bare skin warm against hers.
She held him tightly, not wanting to let go for fear he wouldn't be there when she opened her eyes. He propped himself on one elbow while his other hand worked on her waistband. When his fingers found their way inside, she moaned, loudly, muffled by his mouth on hers.
He sat up and, with her help, removed her pants and underwear. She heard his sharp intake of breath, and he leaned over and trailed kisses down her belly. "You're beautiful."
She twined her fingers in his hair. As he worked his way lower, she closed her eyes and moaned.
Mart took his time, sweet torture, using his lips and tongue on her until she shuddered and cried out at her release. He looked up and smiled.
"No fair going to sleep on me."
She shook her head. "Not on your life."
He shimmied out of his pants. When he tried to reach across her to the bedside table, she intercepted him. "No so fast, buster. I want to have some fun."
It was his turn to enjoy it while she teased him. He hadn't lied--his reaction was normal. She eventually let him push her away.
He kissed her. "You're absolutely amazing, you know that?"
"You're not so bad yourself."
He reached across her for a condom. She nuzzled his neck while he rolled it on.
"What do you want me to do?" she asked.
He kissed her and rolled her on top of him. "Whatever you want."
---
http://www.bookstrand.com/cross-country-chaos
Labels:
adult excerpt
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contemporary
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Cross Country Chaos
,
disabled hero
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Lesli Richardson
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mf
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Last Day: "Cross Country Chaos" at 50% off!
at
8:10 AM
Monday, November 7, 2011
Today is the last day to get my book "Cross Country Chaos" (writing as Lesli Richardson) at a 50% discount from Siren-BookStrand!
http://www.bookstrand.com/cross-country-chaos
Blurb:
Divorced mom Kelly Alexander wants her younger son, Denny, who is in a wheelchair due to spina bifida, to participate in sports. Kelly finds out about the Junior National Disability Games, but they're in Spokane, Washington, a continent away from her Florida home. She's clueless about what to do next.
Mart Rawlings is a single, handsome wheelchair athlete who volunteers to coach Denny and helps him qualify--and falls hard for Kelly. But past heartache over her cheating ex fuels Kelly's reluctance to get personally involved with him.
Kelly must survive a grueling cross country drive to Nationals with her sons and mother, but more importantly, can she make herself take a chance on love?
Cross Country Chaos is a funny, passionate, and at times cringingly honest story of healing broken hearts, rebuilding trust, finding love in unexpected places, and realizing sometimes the greatest disability is between a person's ears, not their body.
You can find all my Siren releases as Tymber Dalton, Macy Largo, and Tessa Monroe on my Siren page at:
http://www.bookstrand.com/tymber-dalton
http://www.bookstrand.com/cross-country-chaos
Blurb:
Divorced mom Kelly Alexander wants her younger son, Denny, who is in a wheelchair due to spina bifida, to participate in sports. Kelly finds out about the Junior National Disability Games, but they're in Spokane, Washington, a continent away from her Florida home. She's clueless about what to do next.
Mart Rawlings is a single, handsome wheelchair athlete who volunteers to coach Denny and helps him qualify--and falls hard for Kelly. But past heartache over her cheating ex fuels Kelly's reluctance to get personally involved with him.
Kelly must survive a grueling cross country drive to Nationals with her sons and mother, but more importantly, can she make herself take a chance on love?
Cross Country Chaos is a funny, passionate, and at times cringingly honest story of healing broken hearts, rebuilding trust, finding love in unexpected places, and realizing sometimes the greatest disability is between a person's ears, not their body.
You can find all my Siren releases as Tymber Dalton, Macy Largo, and Tessa Monroe on my Siren page at:
http://www.bookstrand.com/tymber-dalton
"Cross Country Chaos" on sale!
at
12:04 PM
Monday, October 10, 2011
If you haven't read it yet, Siren-BookStrand has my book "Cross Country Chaos" (writing as Lesli Richardson) on 50% discount until Nov. 7th as a retro release! (It was inspired by a real-life trip I took with my son LOL!)
http://www.bookstrand.com/cross-country-chaos
Blurb:
Divorced mom Kelly Alexander wants her younger son, Denny, who is in a wheelchair due to spina bifida, to participate in sports. Kelly finds out about the Junior National Disability Games, but they're in Spokane, Washington, a continent away from her Florida home. She's clueless about what to do next.
Mart Rawlings is a single, handsome wheelchair athlete who volunteers to coach Denny and helps him qualify--and falls hard for Kelly. But past heartache over her cheating ex fuels Kelly's reluctance to get personally involved with him.
Kelly must survive a grueling cross country drive to Nationals with her sons and mother, but more importantly, can she make herself take a chance on love?
Cross Country Chaos is a funny, passionate, and at times cringingly honest story of healing broken hearts, rebuilding trust, finding love in unexpected places, and realizing sometimes the greatest disability is between a person's ears, not their body.
A BookStrand Mainstream Romance
http://www.bookstrand.com/cross-country-chaos
Blurb:
Divorced mom Kelly Alexander wants her younger son, Denny, who is in a wheelchair due to spina bifida, to participate in sports. Kelly finds out about the Junior National Disability Games, but they're in Spokane, Washington, a continent away from her Florida home. She's clueless about what to do next.
Mart Rawlings is a single, handsome wheelchair athlete who volunteers to coach Denny and helps him qualify--and falls hard for Kelly. But past heartache over her cheating ex fuels Kelly's reluctance to get personally involved with him.
Kelly must survive a grueling cross country drive to Nationals with her sons and mother, but more importantly, can she make herself take a chance on love?
Cross Country Chaos is a funny, passionate, and at times cringingly honest story of healing broken hearts, rebuilding trust, finding love in unexpected places, and realizing sometimes the greatest disability is between a person's ears, not their body.
A BookStrand Mainstream Romance
Interview at The Blackraven's Erotic Cafe today.
at
12:00 PM
Friday, September 18, 2009
"Cross Country Chaos" Now Available!
at
12:31 PM
Thursday, February 5, 2009
Most of you are more familiar with my spicy Tymber Dalton books. My "alter ego" is a bit of a wild child! *LOL*But my newest release with BookStrand (writing under my real name, Lesli Richardson) is a contemporary romance called "Cross Country Chaos."
http://www.bookstrand.com/product-crosscountrychaos-13944-330.html
This is a personal story for me. I'm the mother of a boy with spina bifida, and he's a wheelchair athlete. A trip we took in the summer of 2007 inspired the idea behind "Cross Country Chaos." It's a book I'm proud of because it's a real, funny, passionate, and honest book about relationships and what the true definition of "disabled" is.
Some romance books give disability a fluff or unrealistic or even a glancing treatment. In "Cross Country Chaos" you've got a hunky, sexy hero who's hell on wheels (literally) and not afraid to fight for the woman he loves (literally).
"How did you think of THAT?"
at
8:45 AM
Saturday, January 31, 2009

I get this question a lot. I'm sure other writers do too, probably, but the wide variety of subject matter, themes, and settings I use in my stories probably prompt it quite a bit more often. Let's face it, I write everything from sweet contemporary romance to sci-fi to BDSM erotica, to Stephen King-esque contemporary horror.
That's quite a wide swath of territory to cover.
Sometimes it starts, ironically, with a title springing to mind.
Sometimes, as with "Love and Brimstone," the characters knock on my mental door (or simply burst right through it).
Sometimes, as with "Cross Country Chaos" and "Out of the Darkness," something from my own life experience triggers an idea and I build upon that foundation.
Sometimes, as with the "Good Will Ghost Hunting" series, I see something else that gives me an idea and I run in my own direction with it until the characters take over.
And the characters ALWAYS take over. It's inevitable. I never truly suffer from "writers block." Sometimes the characters settle down for a little while and I have to wait them out. Sometimes, as happened with "The Reluctant Dom," I have to stay with them and write the story until they're ready to let my attention go.
That book took everything I had for several weeks, and it's a rarity because it's the first book in I don't know how long that I actually wrote totally from start to finish instead of my normal jumping around style. It wouldn't let me shove it back into its proper place in my mental queue after a few scenes or chapters, it demanded to be completed. It was emotionally draining and cathartic in many ways to write, but frankly, even though I love all the books I've written (and am in the process of writing) I have to admit it is my favorite even though I still sob when I read it. Which is amazing, because I wrote the thing, you'd think I'd be over it by now. *LOL*
I guess when people ask how I keep it all straight in my head, besides the mechanical logistics of the process (Supernotecard by Mindola software, NAYY) I LIVE with these stories and "people" in my head. I can keep track of the stories the way you can keep track of what your kids are doing or what you have going on at work. I just...can. I currently have several series I'm working on, and in my head (and to a certain extent in my computer) I have at least the rough plot points sketched out. I know what's in store for Taz and Matthias all the way out to book seven (and a potential book eight) of the Brimstone series. I know exactly what's going to happen to Will, Kal, Ryan, and Aidan in the first six books of the Good Will Ghost Hunting series. The next three books of the "Love Slave for Two" series are pretty much written in my head (I'm completing my edits on book two now so I can submit it to my publisher), and ditto the "Deep Space Mission Corps" series. I know the main story arc and next book of the "Triple Trouble" shape-shifter series (the first two are submitted and winding their way through the editing process right now).
Did I forget any? Oh, while not technically a "series," I know what the next three follow-up books to "Cross Country Chaos" (with related characters) will be. And I have three series that are WIPs, mysteries, each with the first book either written or mostly written, one following a newspaper editor, one following a dive shop owner, one following a PI. Then I have some scattered individual manuscripts, either finished and needing serious rewrites before I consider submitting them, or in various stages of WIP-age.
I'll admit that Ryan in the "Good Will Ghost Hunting" series and Tyler from "Love Slave for Two" sometimes get their names mixed up. *LOL* Because I really see those two men nearly identically, except for their eye colors. *LOL* So it's not uncommon for me to bounce things off of the W'sBH(TM) and he'll look at me and say, "Why is Tyler in Will's universe?" *ROTF!* Then of course I say, "No, not Tyler, Ryan." *LOL*
Gotta love that man! At least he usually knows what I mean.
The problem, I guess, isn't how DID I think of THAT, but how do I NOT think of stories? Everything in my life that I experience or read or see or hear is potential fodder for an idea. Whether it's a character or a situation or whatever. In some ways, that's pretty cool. In some ways, it's a blessing...and a curse. (Shout out to all you Adrian Monk fans!)
In one episode we watched last night, Adrian takes the Captain with him to a football game and the Captian asks Monk, "Don't you have an off switch? Everyone has an off switch."
No, we don't. I don't. I'd be willing to bet a lot of writers like me don't have an "off" switch. I go to bed thinking about my stories, and wake up thinking about them. When I'm "wasting" time (ie time I can't physically engage in the act of writing) I'm thinking about my stories and feeling a nearly physical compulsion to get back to the computer to write. (Yes, I'll admit it, I'm addicted to writing and don't you dare try to get me into rehab, either. *LOL* Don't make me sing Amy Winehouse at you!)
To me, writing is like breathing. I just DO it. It's automatic. Telling stories has always been part of my psyche. Breathing life into the voices in my head (haha!) is as natural to me as long division is to a math wiz. (And believe me, I am NO math wiz.)
So when people ask me how I think of "that," it's not a lie to say, "I just write what the voices in my head tell me to write." *LOL* I "see" my stories in my head through my characters. I let them tell the story and I just get the hell out of their way and let them do their thing. The worst thing any writer can do is come up with a "plot" and force their characters to stick to that plot if they don't want to. And I'd be willing to bet a lot of writers block comes from just that problem, when the writer says, "Do THIS!" and the characters stamp their feet and say, "NO!" *LOL* I've never gotten so blocked that I couldn't write a story. Sometimes I need a break emotionally or I get "page blindness" and get tired of looking at a story, or the characters go quiet for a little while, or I have a contract deadline I have to meet so I need to let one drop lower in the mental queue, so I switch to another. But ever since I started adhering to the basic rule of "Let the Characters Tell the Story," I've never, not once, gotten truly "blocked" to the point where I couldn't continue writing the story.
(Lesli writes both as Lesli Richardson and Tymber Dalton and you can find out more info at http://www.leslirichardson.com and http://www.tymberdalton.com )
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Copyright 2008-2014, Lesli Richardson. Unauthorized Duplication Prohibited (Links Welcomed). No snarks were harmed in the making of this blog. (Although a few were mercilessly tickled until they piddled.)


