Texas Wildflowers by Anita Higman is a collection of four short stories that are all connected by the main characters being sisters.
The four McBride sisters risk their hearts for love in the islands, canyons, mountains and bayous of Texas.
Deserted
at the altar, a devastated Rosy McBride heads back to Galveston Island
and begins working at her mother’s scrapbooking business. Will spending
time with Larson Brookfield help mend her broken heart, or will she
merely wind up pasting away?
Christian counselor Lily
McBride relies on her quirky common sense and God’s wisdom to help her
clients. Will she be successful at her new career or break the most
solemn of counselor/patient vows by falling for the handsome, eccentric,
and impossibly irresistible Rubin McCall while hiking the Palo Dura
Canyon?
In the mountain town of Alpine, Violet McBride
owns Romantic Images, a business that teaches people how to live
romantically. Will Morgan Jones, a geek she meets online, show her the
real meaning of romance and the art of love?
Heather
McBride’s picture-perfect life has unraveled in the bayou. Will the
free-spirited Evan Finch not only reawaken her artistic passion but also
give her the courage to fall in love—without her day-planner?
Will God help give these women the pluck to love the least likely of soul mates?
An Interview with Anita:
Tell us a bit about Texas Wildflowers.
Texas
Wildflowers is a 4-in-1 novella collection through Barbour Publishing.
Each novella is set in an exotic location in Texas. They are
lighthearted romances, and they’re all tied together with the four
McBride sisters.
Which of the four novellas was the most fun to write?
They
were each fun to write in their own way, but my favorite character was
Lily, the counselor, in Forget Me Not Lily. She was quirky and fun,
relatable and loveable. At least that’s what I hope readers will feel.
All these novellas are set in Texas. Are the towns and parks real?
Yes,
in fact one of the novellas is set in Big Bend National Park, where my
husband and I went on vacation. So, when you read about the characters
on certain trails, they’re real, and we hiked them!
Did you have a favorite book when you were a child? I loved fairytales. Cinderella was my favorite.
Do you have a vacation spot you’d love to visit?
I’m
dreaming of Ireland. My husband and I plan to travel there next summer.
Can’t wait! Then I’m going to use the emerald isle as a setting in one
of my novels.
What are 5 things that your readers might not know about you?
1.
While I was in college I tried working in a pillow factory. I was
terrible at it. I got so weary with the repetition I started yakking
with the woman next to me. We got reprimanded over and over until I
quit. I discovered one thing from that college job—talking is something I
excel at.
2. I once won a hog-calling contest at a banquet. I was not embarrassed, but I should have been.
3.
I have a bird phobia, and yet I love birds! (That is, from a distance.)
My house is filled with the fake kind—prints on the walls, statues, and
general bird doodads. Go figure.
4. I keep some interesting
treasures near me when I write—a wooden jewelry box my son made me when
he was in school, a candle from the 1960s, a hat once owned by a famous
mystery writer, the inner parts of a music box, a birthday card that
plays The Twilight Zone theme song, and an old family toy helicopter
that says, “Going up.”
5. Thirty-four years ago I rappelled off a
cliff alongside the man I was dating. We kissed in mid-air while
dangling off that cliff. I ended up marrying that man, and we've
celebrated our 33rd wedding anniversary!
What awards have you won?
I’ve
won two book awards. One of my co-authored books entitled, A Tribute to
Early Texas, won a San Antonio Conservation Society Citation as well as
a Westerners International Book Award. Also, I was given three honors
by readers: I was a Favorite
New Author in the 15th Annual
Heartsong Presents Awards, and my co-authored novel, Castles in the Air,
was a Favorite Contemporary Romance in the 16th Annual Heartsong
Presents Awards. My most recent award is a 2011 RWA Readers Choice Award
(first place) for my novella, Once Upon a Christmas Eve.
When readers finish the last page of Texas Wildflowers, what do you want them to come away with?
I
would love for them to be inspired, challenged, and entertained. If I
accomplished even one of those things I would feel my writing time
wasn’t wasted.
These four short stories are a great little diversion from a busy day. Short enough that they can be read quickly but long enough to get to know the characters and root for the love connections to work out.
Jody
My copy was provided by Cathy Carlton Willis Communications for my honest review.
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