Hi everyone,
I’m thrill to share with you more information about
the box set so asked the other authors to tell us a little about the ghost in their stories?
Keta Diablo said:
My
story lands on the more ‘serious’ side of spectrum when it comes to theme. My
ghost is a man who met with an unfortunate accident and passed on, leaving a
widow and a young son behind. Ranch life in the late 1800s was tough,
especially for a woman alone in this vast wilderness. The ghost realizes the
huge dilemma she now faces and is determined to help her through the trials and
tribulations looming on the horizon.
Anita
Philmar said:
Nettie
McKee is the great, great grandmother of Konnor McKee. He is the oldest son and
pushing thirty. Nettie wants to see him married to the right girl.
Unfortunately, he brings home the wrong girl and Nettie has to set things
straight.
Blaire Edens said:
My ghost haunts the best saloon in Reno, The Blade. The saloon is the
center of a lot of the action in 1880s Reno and the ghost is causing so much
fear that the employees have walked out and refuse to come back until the
horrible ghostly sounds stop. Every night, at exactly the same time, a terrible
keening, shrill and eerie, fills the place. The owner of the saloon, Katherine
Busbee, is a business woman and she knows that if the ghost stays, the saloon
will have to close. She hires Agent Cole Swansby to get rid of the ghost before
Preston Asbury, the President of Midas Mines, shows up in Reno. He’s a big
spender and she can’t afford to lose his business. It will take every tool Cole
has to get to the bottom of the ghostly mystery.
Charlene
Radddon said:
That would ruin the surprise for the reader.
Patty Sherry-Crews said:
Well, I some surprises
so I’m going to keep some things to myself. I can tell you a little bit though.
Healy has been called in on this case because a rancher, Abbott Foster, can’t
consummate his marriage to his new mail-order bride because every time he tries
a menacing spirit appears.
The ghost in my story is
Abbott’s first wife, Cora. The couple moved to Arizona from Texas as young
newlyweds. Healy can see and talk to Cora but nobody else can. Again, that’s
all I can say on the subject of Cora because I don’t want to give too much
away.
Margo Collins said:
In
the 1880s, the term poltergeist (for "noisy ghost") had only recently
been coined in Germany—and these German settlers bring not only the term with
them, but also an actual poltergeist!
Erin Hayes said:
Hattie
sees quite a few ghosts in her travels. In fact, they can’t seem to leave her
alone. But there is a big problem brewing in Carolina City.
Andrea Downing said:
As
I said, Lizzie, my heroine, is the ghost.
She finds she has time traveled back from contemporary St. Louis to
1800s Wyoming. She discovers that, in a
former life, she was murdered during a robbery on her husband’s ranch. She’s returned there due to unfinished
business but always rather longs to get back to her real life, despite the fact
she was married to a hot cowboy/rancher.
Check out this
Exciting New Box Set with 8 Other
|
Margo Bond Collins Keta Diablo Andrea Downing Blaire Edens | Erin Hayes Anita Philmar Charlene Raddon Patti Sherry-Crews |
Warning - this is a sweet to sensual western, historical box set. Now Up for PreOrder on Amazon What do you get when you mix cowboys with ghosts? A collection of eight (stand-alone) amazing stories from the Old West with haunts of every variety. Get your love of alpha cowboys on and feed your addiction for the bizarre (and sometimes spooky) world when you download The Good, The Bad and The Ghostly. Bestselling and Award-winning authors are pleased to save you more than 75% on this fantastic boxed set! (Price if books sold separately) Check out the Sample Book, which includes recipes and tidbits about stories locations Download Sample Book Or Watch the Trailer Hope you enjoy, Anita |
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