Showing posts with label Quinter Brides. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Quinter Brides. Show all posts

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Wildcat Bride, Quinter Brides Book 5, by Lauri Robinson



Wildcat BrideWestern Romance

I have been reading the Quinter Bride series since the first book, Shotgun Bride came out and Wildcat Bride was on the list of books I was looking forward to in 2011.  The wait ended this week when I received a free copy of Wildcat Bride from Wild Rose Press.

 There has been a different twist to each book in the series and Wildcat Bride is no exception. Unlike the previous Quinter sons and their brides there will be no shotgun wedding for these two.

I first met Bug and Eva in Shotgun Bride and they have been present in all the previous books.  They are in love but have not been together for several years. Bug’s big love is oil and Eva’s is painting.  During the last three years Bug has been in Pennsylvania learning the oil business while Eva has become a rising star in the art world with her western theme painting.   When they meet in New York sparks fly and not all the good kind.  Both return to Kansas and when they try to get married Ma uses her shotgun to prevent their wedding. Both Bug and Eva must adjust to the way each has changed in the last three years. What follows is a wonderful story filled with many different forms of love.

Lauri Robinson writes wonderful romantic stories and Wildcat Bride is no exception.  Her well-drawn characters are people you would invite into your homes and your hearts.  They face challenges with grace and humor, are loyal to a fault, admit their mistakes and act out of love. The villains get their just desserts and the good guys come out on top.

In some ways I hated to finish the book because Bug was the last Quinter son to find a bride.  However, there is a hint of romance for Ma.  Will Ma get her own story?  I guess I will just have to wait and see.  (I did an interview with Lauri in December.  Follow the link to see what she had to say about Ma). 


Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Interview with Lauri Robinson author of the Quinter Bride Series








I am a big fan of the Quinter Bride Series by Lauri Robinson and if you have been keeping up with the blog you know I recommended the first three books.  For me the series just keeps getting better and book four, The Guardian Bride, continues that trend.  Today Laui Robinson is here to answer some of my questions about the series. 

Laui, Welcome to Mixed Book Bag.  Lets get right to the questions.



Jo:  Driving to Denver down Interstate 70 I was surprised to see a sign for Quinter, Kansas.  Do you have any connection to Quinter and did you use any of the actual history of Quinter, KS in the Quinter Bride series?

Lauri:  That's funny, Jo. Recently a friend of mine was traveling on 1-70 and detoured into Quinter just to take a picture of the Welcome to Quinter sign and texted it to me. Though I was born in and now live in Minnesota, I 'grew up' in Southwestern Kansas. Scott City, or Nixon as it was first known, is the original setting for the Quinter Bride books, and where I resided. I've been to Quinter, as well as the Badlands, Dodge City, and many of the other places mentioned in the books. I use much of the actual area history in the stories. In Badland Bride, I elude the town of Quinter may have been named after one of the brothers, but the town was actually named by the Post Master General in Washington D.C. when the post office was incorporated, which is how many towns got their names. Quinter was first known as Me-lo-te Switch.  I can't tell you exactly how I chose to use Quinter as their last name, it just came to me.



Jo:  When I started the second book I thought that Fictionwise had put another book with your title.  I kept reading and realized that you had mixed time travel with historical fiction.  You did a small mix of the paranormal in The Guardian Bride.  Both were a great mix and added new dimensions to the series.  What prompted you to make that mix?

Lauri:  I've actually had the wrong blurb put with my titles, so that does happen!  I'm a fan of time-travel romances, and have always said if I could travel into the past it would be to Dodge City in the midst of the cattle drive days. I was excited to incorporate time-traveling within in Badland Bride.

It's one of the many perks of being an author, writing what you love. The same is true with Guardian Bride. I believe in Guardian Angles and I think we all have them, whether we ever come to recognize them or not.

The characters prompted the time-travel and paranormal aspects. For Badland Bride, I knew it would take a very unique woman to fall in love with Skeeter. As soon as I sat down to write that story, Lila in her red Mustang came to me. For Guardian Bride, I knew their father would be in this story but didn't know exactly how. My outline for that story was very different and the beginning title had been Garden Bride. Once Summer formed in my head it took the 'guardian' route and everything fell into place.


Jo:  I am fascinated by the craft of writing and the different approaches authors take.  How do you structure your novels and what is you typical writing day like?

Each novel takes a different route for me. Some I know the characters before I begin, some I only know the settings, or perhaps a bit of history I want to build a story around. With each one, I try to create an outline, but the story rarely pans out to coincide with the outline. Once the characters take hold, they simply 'tell' me their story, and I type, and type, and type.

Sometimes the first draft only takes a month or so to get on paper, other times its six months. The first chapter usually takes the longest, since it really is the set up for the rest of the tale to fall into place.

Shotgun Bride, the first book in the series, started out as a stand alone story, it wasn't until I sent it to my editor that the series was born. The fifth book, Wild Cat Bride will be released April 1, 2011.

I work four days a week for my local United Way, so my writing days vary.  Monday-Thursday I try to get in two hours of writing each evening, if I don't have family, work, or volunteer commitments. Fridays I try to get in a full eight hours. Saturday and Sundays usually provide another four to six hours, but again it all depends on what else is going on, and a lot depends on the book. If it's really flowing, I've been known to stay up until 3 or 4am writing, and then get back up by 7am to make it to the day job. I'm lucky in the fact I can write about anywhere. In the car, in the living room, on the patio, up north at the cabin, etc. When a story is flowing, I just need my laptop and I'm set.

Thank you so much for inviting me to stop by your blog today. I sincerely appreciate the opportunity, but more than that, I appreciate you for being a reader. You are the reason I write, and I'm so glad you've enjoyed my stories.

Jo:  Lauri , it was great to have you stop by today and answer my questions.  I’m looking forward to Wild Cat Bride in April.  It is always a little sad when a series ends.  Be sure it let me know what comes after the Quinter Brides.  I do think it will be hard to top Ma.  The more I read the more I liked her.


Lauri:  It's funny you mentioned Ma Quinter.  I've loved writing the Quinter Brides books and lately have been wondering if Ma needs her own story.   


Jo:  Oh yes!!  I would love for Ma to get her own book.  She deserves her own HEA after all the work she did to get her sons married.   


The Wild Rose Press published Guardian Bride by Lauri Robinson in 2010. 


You can purchase Guardian Bride and the other Quinter Bride books from The Wild Rose Press, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Borders,  and  Fictionwise as ebooks.  They are also available in print.

Click on the title to see my recommendation for: Shotgun Bride;  Badland Bride; and Boot Hill Bride




Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Guardian Bride by Lauri Robinson

Historical Romance


The Quinter Bride series is one of my favorites and Guardian Bride, the next book in the series, has just been published.   This time it is Snake’s story but before he is married at gunpoint he is shot and not by Ma.  All of this is happening because he sat in on a poker game in Dodge, a stupid poker game, where he threw in the winning hand because July Austin had thrown his daughter, Summer, into the pot.  Snake did not think it was right to win a person.  That should have been the end of it but of course it was not.  When Snake threw that hand in he caused complications.

Guardian Bride has a touch of the paranormal, hidden danger, a really bad bad man, a great part for one of my favorite characters, Buffalo Killer, some great new characters and of course romance.  Lauri Robinson has given each of the Quinter Bride’s a unique wedding and Snake and Summer’s wedding is no exception.  Now there is only one Quinter brother left without a bride.  I think I may have seen a hint of foreshadowing about Bug's bride in the Guardian Bride.  I will have to wait for Wild Cat Bride due out in April to see if I am right.

Want to know more!!  Lauri will be here tomorrow for an interview.  Among other things find out what I spotted on a trip down Interstate 70.


Wild Rose Press published Guardian Bride by Lauri Robinson in 2010.

I purchased Guardian Bride as an ebook from Fictionwise.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Boot Hill Bride by Lauri Robinson



Western Romance

The Quinter Brides continue to face Ma and her shotgun. In Boot Hill Bride it is Hog (Howard Quinter) who faces a shotgun and a preacher when he wakes up in his tent with Randi, an uninvited roommate. Of course, Ma and two of his brothers arrive in time to find them waking up in the same bed. Ma has them married before they have a chance to explain what happened. Randi (Howard’s new bride) comes with some very large baggage. Her father is running for Governor on the Populist Party ticket and he is not a good man. Randi and Hog have some hurdles to overcome before they can find true happiness.

Lauri Robinson continues to write well crafted, entertaining stories filled with humor, danger, and romance. Howard is a wonderful character and Randi is a perfect match for him. Ma and the rest of the Quinters are there to offer a love filled family ready to accept new members. Boot Hill Bride is the third book in the Quinter Bride series. There are still two unmarried bothers. I am looking forward to reading how they get married. Will Ma and her shotgun strike again?

Wild Rose Press published Boot Hill Bride by Lauri Robinson in 2010.

I purchased Boot Hill Bride from Fictionwise.

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Badland Bride, Book 2 of the Quinter Brides by Lauri Robinson



Historical Romance

With Badland Bride Lauri Robinson has once again written a wonderful engaging romance. There is something old and something new is the story. Ma Quinter has again gotten out her shotgun, tied the prospective bride and groom to chairs and called for the preacher. This time the bride is from the future, a victim of date rape and pregnant. The groom is willing but the bride does not plan to stay in the past. . It does not sound like the best start to the marriage. Throw in few Indians, some bone hunters and an enemy from the future and things stay interesting

Badland Bride does a great job of moving the series forward. I am looking forward to the next book about the Quinter Brides. The first book in the series is Shotgun Bride. Look for Boot Hill Bride, Book 3 in the Quinter Brides in July of 2010.

Wild Rose Press published Badland Bride by Lauri Robinson in 2009.

I purchased Badland Bride from Fictionwise. If you would like a 10% discount on Badland Bride leave me your email address in the comments section.