It's almost here - release day for my first full length historical romance, In The Shadow of War! It's coming May 17, next Thursday from Rebel Ink Press. Although all my novels are dear to my heart (almost like children), this one is, well, special. For one thing, it's a story set right in my own backyard in Neosho, Missouri where I now live. It has elements hearkening back to all the family stories I heard about my grandfathers who served in World War I and World War II (I have five grandfathers, another story for another time but I loved them all), tales my uncles who served told, childhood rememberances of the era from my parents and more. I attended my first two years of college at the community college on the site where Camp Crowder once dominated the landscape. And it's set in the "real" Camp Swampy, the one Mort Walker made famous (or infamous) in his
Beetle Bailey comic strip.
And Private Benjamin Levy is very special to me too.
I adore this cover (but then I love all the covers Carl J. Franklin has done for me - the man is simply amazing!)
Beetle Bailey comic strip.
And Private Benjamin Levy is very special to me too.
I adore this cover (but then I love all the covers Carl J. Franklin has done for me - the man is simply amazing!)
Here’s
the blurb and a short excerpt:
Her great-granddaughter wants to
know if Bette remembers World War II for a school project and her questions
revive old memories….
Small
town school teacher Bette Sullivan's life was interrupted when the Japanese
bomb Pearl Harbor on December 7th 1941 but her world changed forever when she
met Private Benny Levy, a soldier from the Flatbush neighborhood in Brooklyn,
New York stationed at Camp Crowder, the local Army base.
Their
attraction is immediate and mutual but as their relationship grows their love
and lives are shadowed by World War II. As the future looms uncertain the
couple comes together with almost desperate need and a powerful love they hope
can weather anything, including the war.
Excerpt:
“I missed you, doll,” he said
afterward. “God, I missed you.”
Warmth blossomed within her chest and she
smiled at him. “I missed you too, Benny. Saturday seemed so long and I didn’t
know if you could come this morning. I worried you might not make it.”
“Me, too,” he said. “I almost
missed the bus anyhow because the company sergeant griped us out because the
barracks weren’t neat enough to suit him.
Yesterday turned out lousy, all day.”
“Why?” she asked. “What
happened?”
“What didn’t?” he said. “Jeez,
they made us go on a long hike through the back country, for hours in the heat. I picked up every tick and chigger in the
world, I think, got mosquito bit, and worn out.
Two of the guys fell out with heat exhaustion and ended up at the post
hospital. My feet and ankles itched me
like crazy. Even the darn Army boots didn’t help me from getting eaten by the
insects. I swear the buggers crawled
into my boots.”
“Aw, honey, I’m sorry,” Bette
said, using the endearment for the first time. “Do the bites still itch?”
“Not so bad,” he said. “Back in
barracks, some of the guys said to soak my feet in bleach water so we begged
some from the laundry. It helped. Then after dinner they called me over to the
motor pool to fix a jeep and I got to bed late just before final lights
out. I’m beat and that’s a fact.”
Bette paused and faced him.
“Would you rather go rest or something?”
“Naw, sugar, I’m fine. I need some Joe and I’m hungry, too. I just got a couple of hours so let’s go eat
and spend a little time together, okay?”
“It’s fine with me,” she said.
They ate at a different café and
she introduced him to biscuits and gravy, something he vowed he’d never eaten
before but said he liked. Afterward,
with time passing too fast, he suggested they walk down to Big Spring Park
again but she had another idea.
“You look so tired,” Bette said. He did with dark smudges beneath both eyes.
“If you want we can go sit in the porch swing at Aunt Virgie’s or in the front
room.”
Benny shook his head. “I’ll
catch a nap later this afternoon, if I’m lucky.
I’d like a few more kisses and I doubt your parents would like us
spooning out on the porch.”
“I forgot they’re there,” she
replied. “So, okay, let’s go to the park.”
Another couple beat them to the
grotto, so they wandered around the park until they found a vacant bench in the
shade. A few kids played on the
teeter-totter and swings, their happy babble setting a bright mood. Benny put his arm around her and Bette
snuggled against him with a contented sigh.
For a few minutes they sat, comfortable with the pose and content with
each other. She’d already come to
associate his scent with security and she inhaled it, saving it up for when
she’d be alone. As they rested in easy
silence she savored the harmony and as they lingered Bette noticed their breath
came in tandem, in and out with the same rhythm as if they were one, not two.
Just as she opened her mouth to
remark on it Benny took her face and turned it toward him. With slow deliberation he kissed her,
unhurried with such sweetness she forgot to breathe for a few seconds. His lips caressed her mouth with a fine light
touch, as soft as hair blown across her face with a gentle breeze. Such tenderness evoked the same within and
yet triggered desire, too. Benny
cherished her mouth with his, his lips sending shivers through her body despite
the hot day, little spirals of chill strong enough to make goose pimples erupt
on her flesh.
Bette responded with her mouth,
a hankering for something deeper and more intimate rising in her with the force
of a rising wind. She sensed how great
it would be to lose her consciousness by drowning in her senses, by molding her
body into his. Bette, virgin as the
mother of God, ached now for the pleasures of the flesh. Every old wives tale ever heard about sex
being dirty or painful or nasty evaporated faster than snow in March and for
the first time in her life, she decided sex could be wonderful.
His kisses stirred Bette’s body
even as they induced emotion, too sweet to be sinful. Her body responded to his mouth the way a
good corn crop ripened beneath the sun’s warmth. As her limbs relaxed she leaned into him, one
hand holding tight to his arm so she wouldn’t lose balance to tumble from the
park bench onto the grass. The kiss
lasted forever, but not quite long enough when Benny paused so they could both
breathe again.
“Oh,” she said with wonder.
“Benny, that’s nice.”
“Nice, she says,” he responded
with mock outrage. “Just nice? I call it splendid, fantastic, superb, supreme…”
In The Shadow of War will be available at all the online romance
retailers including All Romance Ebooks, Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble,
Bookstrand, and more.
Find me at my blogs;
A Page In The Life http://leeannsontheimermurphywriterauthor.blogspot.com
A Page In The Life http://leeannsontheimermurphywriterauthor.blogspot.com
Rebel Writer: Lee
Ann Sontheimer Murphy
On Facebook: Lee Ann
Sontheimer Murphy
Twitter:
@leeannwriter

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