I have been in love with stories since I was a child in Tennessee. I’d swing for hours on my swing set, pumping my legs back and forth, dreaming up stories in my head. Even then, I had a flair for romance: creating new love interests and episodes for Star Trek’s Captain Kirk, before moving on to plotting original romantic dramas and adventures in distant lands.
My favorite possession at age nine was a set of author playing cards (a matching game with photos of famous women authors). I wanted to be an author when I grew up and bring stories to life on the written page, stories that would impact my readers.
A visit to a historic home in the Shenandoah Valley in Virginia, when my husband and I were newly married, spurred my love for history and planted the seed for the story of my heart. A few years later, I wrote the novel, then buried it in box in my closet. I returned to college to earn my degree in creative writing along with a minor in American History, a masters in English, and PhD in literature, wondering if I’d ever reconnect with the stories in my head, the ones buried deep in my heart.
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| Me in front of the house that inspired my story |
Then, in the summer of 2019, I fell in love with fiction writing again. It had been years since I’d worked on my story. I pulled the box out and unburied the past. I began to read it. And I fell in love with Daniel and Jenny and the Shenandoah Valley all over again. How could I forsake them? I jumped into their heads, and the story began to unfold, again. Except better, deeper, richer than I’d ever imagined.
And God had done so much in my life in those years in between, both joys and pains. He’d been chipping, molding, and shaping me. It was with a heart that is wizened, scarred, and strengthened that I returned to writing, with eyes that see what the nine or thirty-year-old me could have never seen.
I finished Shenandoah’s Daughter and then began a totally new book set in 1860 Texas, inspired by the true story of the most famous captive of the 19th century that had haunted my heart for two decades.
However, the doors to publication didn’t swing open with the writing of “The End” on either manuscript. I heard a lot of no’s from editors and agents, and I felt like my writing career was on the tortoise track.
One agent recommended that I put my two books aside and write a third book because, although she loved my writing, she felt it wasn’t the right time for a Civil War book and that my Indian story was too risky. She wasn’t the first one to give me such a recommendation.
But God kept whispering "Don't give up" and nudging me through my writing friends to pursue publication now.
I sent proposals to two more traditional publishers. A month later, after decades of dreaming of being a published writer, I had a contract offer for a three-book series. God had finally said Yes! And in a big way, when I least expected it, and totally caught me off guard.
Texas Forsaken, the first book in my Lone Star Redemption series, released in May 2024. Book Two, Texas Divided in March 2025, and Texas Reclaimed in February 2026. I’ve since received a contract for two more books in the series and a novella. The series is set in Texas in the 1860's and 1870's. The prequel novella is a part of the Freed by the Frontier collection and will release June 2026.
The Lord cleared the path for my writing dreams to come true, and for me to be able to share my faith and my love of romance and history with my readers. I especially enjoy writing about the Western frontier and the Civil War and Reconstruction eras. Texas Reclaimed also brings in the beginning years of the large cattle drives. My stories are filled with strong, determined heroines and war-scarred heroes willing to sacrifice for the woman they love.
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