photo by Jeremy Keith |
Danita Cahill is an award-winning writer and photographer. Besides
running children to and fro and caring for her gardens, critters and family,
Danita stays busy working on magazine assignments and dreaming up love stories
for her next books. Learn more about Danita and her books here.
Danita is sponsoring a Kindle Fire 6" HD
giveaway January 1-7, 2015. Click here to enter for a chance to win!
Why Cowboys?
I didn’t
start out intending to write about cowboy heroes and the cowgirls who steal
their hearts. I started out publishing nonfiction pieces in community
newspapers. Freelancing for 11 different northwest newspapers, I wrote and
published more than 2,100 stories over the years. After a couple of decades of
newspaper writing and photography assignments, I expanded into magazine work,
falling neatly into a niche of writing about all things rural.
Since I’m a
small-town country girl at heart, the rural niche fit well.
I grew up on
a farm where we raised pigs, chickens and beef cattle. We milked a couple of
dairy cows and made our own cheese, butter and delicious homemade ice cream. We
planted an immense organic vegetable garden every year.
From a young
age I’ve had a burning love for horses, and dozens of horses and ponies have
galloped in and out of my life. From 2001-2007, I was a volunteer deputy with
the Linn County Sheriff’s Office Mounted Posse. One of our primary missions was
wilderness search and rescue on horseback. We also rode in parades with the
sheriff, and we did armed security on foot and on horseback at local events. I
still keep a mare named Koko.
But there was
even more than my background pointing me towards writing about cowboys –
chiefly my daughter and her husband. They met through their mutual love of
rodeo when they were both learning to ride bulls. Yes, my beautiful daughter
rode bucking bulls. And yes, I bit my nails to the quick during those two
summers. Yet, I have to admit, my heart swelled with pride when I watched her make
her first eight-second ride, her blonde ponytail bouncing in the dust-filled
sunshine. My daughter and son-in-law now ride in a northwest rodeo circuit –
she’s a barrel racer, he’s a bareback bronc rider.
When I began
writing fiction I always set my stories in small towns. After all, they are
what I know and love best – not only from experiencing small-town living, but
also from my years of covering neighborhood community life for newspapers. My
first published novel, Mist, is set in a small, fictional Oregon
Coastal town. Next, I wrote the first book in my Bellham Romance Series, Love at First Click. It is set in both that same little coastal town, and in Bellham –
a quaint, fictional town in Oregon’s Willamette Valley. Bellham is a quirky,
close-knit farming and ranching community.
Farming and
ranching equals cowboys, right?
Right!
So, I added
the Valley River Rodeo to Bellham’s list of annual events, and cowboys make a
strong appearance in my latest release, First
Cowboy Kiss.
Cowboy
characters were so much fun to write that cowboys will continue to play leading
roles in future Bellham Romances. After all, what romance reader, or writer, can
resist a hot, kind-hearted, yet rough-around-the-edges cowboy? I know I can’t.
“The
best way to cook any part of a rangy ol’ longhorn is to toss it in a pot with a
horseshoe, and when the horseshoe is soft and tender, you can eat the beef.”– Texas Bix Bender
Or you could skip the horseshoe and marinate
the beef before cooking for a tender and tasty main dish:
London
Broil
2 ½ lbs. beef – flank steak, top-round steak
or roast
Marinade:
4 large garlic cloves, minced
4 T. balsamic vinegar
4 T. fresh lemon juice
1-1/2 T. Worcestershire sauce
1 T. soy sauce
1 tsp. dried oregano
1 tsp. dried basil
1 tsp. dried thyme
1/2 tsp. dried red pepper flakes
2/3 cup olive oil
In a bowl, whisk together marinade
ingredients until well combined. Place beef in a plastic, gallon-size freezer
bag and pour marinade over it. Press out excess air and seal bag. Refrigerate
for eight hours, turning bag once or twice. Remove beef. Discard marinade.
Grill meat, or sear under broiler, 7-8 minutes on one side. Flip meat over and
grill or broil for 7-8 minutes more. Do not overcook. Transfer beef to a
cutting board and let stand for 10 minutes. Cut diagonally across the grain
into thin slices. Eat hot. Refrigerate leftovers and use later cold for
sandwiches.
First Cowboy
Kiss
Nothing is Sweeter than
Love’s First Kiss…
First Cowboy
Kiss is a sweet, tender novella of young love.
Bellham Romances all interconnect through characters and location, but
each can easily be read as a stand-alone book.
Meet the
Cowboy…
Mia Donovan is lonely. So, her best friend sets her up to meet a cowboy
at the local Rodeo. But Mia is shy, and it takes all her courage to approach a
good-looking cowboy that may, or may not, be the right one.
Watch the
Cowboy Ride…
Bareback bronc rider, Tanner Michaels, is definitely interested in Mia.
But first he has a bucking horse to ride. He can’t afford to let thoughts of
Mia fill his head until those eight seconds are over.
Mia watches Tanner ride. Her nerves twist in knots when he’s bucked off. How
badly is he hurt?
Get Rescued
by the Cowboy…
Later that day, it’s Tanner’s turn to worry when Mia, who can’t swim, is
knocked into the deep end of a pool. Tanner jumps in and rescues her. But why
isn’t she coming to?
First Cowboy Kiss is available at Amazon as a Kindle
Countdown Deal – only $0.99 January 3-9! Or enjoy it for free through Kindle
Unlimited or Kindle Owners Lending Library.
3 comments:
Thanks so much for hosting today. It's fun to be here!
Danita Cahill
Thanks for the recipe! Best wishes with your new release!!
Thanks so much, Angela. Best in the New Year, and thanks for stopping by!
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