#AuthorInterview: Lynn Cahoon!

Welcome back to the Round Corral, WordWrangler readers! We're super excited to have contemporary romance author Lynn Cahoon with us today to answer our questions and share a bit from her latest novel, The Bull Rider's Keeper. Here we go!

Liz: What woman alive or dead would you want to have dinner with and what would you talk about?

Lynn: Good question.  I don’t mean to be political here, but Jackie Kennedy Onassis.  I’d get down and dirty in the conversation. What kept her going during the Marilyn years? Did she know her husband was cheating?  And how, after the assassination and media, did she pull her life together and find herself.  I believe woman have an internal strength that even they don’t realize until they are tested.  You could add Maria Shriver and or Hillary Clinton to the table as well.

To be able to deal with such a public blow, they had to be iron. How does a person become soft and trusting again?

Yeah, I don’t get invited to many dinner parties.

D'Ann: What was the first seed of an idea you had for your book? How did it develop?

Lynn: The first weekend in May, a little town in Idaho becomes rodeo central.  The party runs from Thursday night to Sunday after the last calf is roped.  I went one year with a guy I was casually dating. (Probably more casual on my part than his.)  We had a blast even though we broke up after the next date.
When I started writing I heard the advice, Write what you know.  I knew small towns. I knew cowboys. And I knew heart break.  So the Bull Rider series was born with my first release –The Bull Rider’s Brother.

This release, The Bull Rider’s Keeper, is the bull rider’s story.  Jesse’s been in all of the books, typically making trouble like all good (and by good, I mean bad) little brothers can do, even years after they are supposed to be all grown up.  Jesse’s character arc in this book shows his true side. But we all know, it takes a good woman. 

Kristina: What is your favorite genre to read?

Lynn: Currently I’m on a horror/thriller/paranormal kick. The master, Stephen King, drew me back in last fall with Doctor Sleep, the most excellent sequel to The Shining. When I found 11/22/63 in the library’s audiobook collection, I grabbed it. (30 cd’s)
I love Heather Graham’s paranormal series and LOVED The Dark Witch by Nora Roberts.

Margie: What is your favorite way to get over a writing block or hurdle?

Lynn: Typically if I’m stalled, it’s because of one of two things. I don’t know where the story is going. Or I made a wrong turn somewhere along the way and it’s actually going to Cleveland, when I wanted to head to Memphis.  Maybe that’s the same thing?

With The Bull Rider’s Manager, I ran into this problem about a third of the way through. It was nice. They’d met. They were being thrown together outside their normal comfort zone. They were getting along.  It was nice. Nice doesn’t build conflict and definitely doesn’t sell books. So I spent a lot of thinking time one morning about why it wasn’t working. And changed up the setting. Instead of going to Casper Wyoming for a rodeo, they wound up in Las Vegas. And that change, made all the difference.

Shawn: How much of you is in your characters?

Lynn: If she likes chocolate, or food, or puppies – that’s me. If you’re talking about the villain who kills people in my mystery series, that’s not me. At least I haven’t been caught yet.

Sometimes I wonder about authors. A small group of us got together at McDonalds one night after a book signing and talked shop.  Subjects ran from the work in progress to the work we wanted to write. From ways to kill to lake monsters. Anyone listening to us would have called the cops.

I think we all write from the knowledge of what we know, or what we could imagine happening.  There’s a kernel of truth that echoes from my past in every character I write. I hope they make better decisions than I did at times and I know they take more risks.


Maybe as authors our imagination is really just a portal into alternate universes – and what we write is what we did in another time or world.  Yes, I did grow up on Twilight Zone reruns. Why do you ask?

WordWranglers: *laughing* Thanks for answering out questions, Lynn, now on to the really good stuff - the excerpt!

All About The Bull Rider's Keeper:  

Jesse Sullivan isn’t afraid of any thing, any man, or any bull. But when he decides to take a chance and carve out a life outside his rodeo career, he’s feeling like he’s walking on shaky ground. In typical Jesse style, he jumps at a chance to purchase Main Street Gallery, a Boise tradition in the art world.

Taylor DeMarco has two goals for the next year. Getting the gallery on sound financial ground to prove to her parents that she can keep her grandfather's legacy alive is the first one. Moving out of the house and into her own condo by the Boise river, is the second. When she finds her folks are selling the gallery to Jesse, she vows to stop the sale, no hands barred.


When sparks fly between Jesse and Taylor, family gets in the way of reason, and they have to decide what is more important, their desires or keeping Main Street Gallery open and successful.

Buy the Book: Amazon   B&N

Excerpt:

Time waits for no man, and as usual, Jesse was late. Peeking in the doorway of the class that was supposed to start any minute, he breathed a sigh of relief. Professor DeMarco wasn’t there. He crossed to the next door that led to her office, knocked quickly, then burst in. “Professor DeMarco, I need to leave early today …” He stopped two steps into the room, glancing at the open door for the name plate. Right office, wrong woman. Instead of the elegant art instructor, a very curvy Venus stood in a black bra and lacy black panties, holding a privacy sheet out from her body like she didn’t quite know what to do with it.
Her eyes widened as she realized he was in the room. “Get out of here!” she shrieked. Then, realizing she still held the sheet at arm’s length, she grabbed it and pressed it against her body.
Jesse could have told her it was a lost cause. What he’d seen couldn’t be unseen and she would be haunting his dreams for a while. Instead, he cast his glance regretfully downward and turned around. “Sorry, I guess I should have waited in the hall.”
He was closing the door behind him when he heard her response.
“Neanderthal.”
 When she entered the classroom a few minutes later as that week’s live model, he saw her gaze stop at his easel for a second. Then she did something that never happened when Jesse met a beautiful woman. She ignored him.
He glanced at his watch: ten to four. He’d promised to be at the airport no later than an hour before his plane left at six. Yet he still sat in front of his easel.
Focusing on the study he’d been working on for the entire class period, he sighed, knowing he’d missed something. The model today was exquisite, a woman who could have been not only Miss Idaho, but also Miss Freaking Universe. Her blond hair fell straight, ending in the middle of a tan, well-defined back. The girl’s body showed a healthy addiction to working out.
He knew the curves that were covered by the privacy sheet, and Jesse felt his body reacting to the view. Not the most professional of reactions for an artist, especially if he wanted to be taken seriously in the art industry someday. He shifted on the stool, his attention falling on her hands. Strong hands that gripped the cloth keeping her covered. The fabric draped around her as if she’d just woken from a night of wild sex. She sat like a goddess in front of the drawing class. Long, slender fingers displayed her nails painted in that weird clear and white thing girls did. He focused on his canvas and, using his pencil, gently added a shadow to the back of the hand.
He tuned into his artist’s eye, noticing the play of light off her straight hair, the gentle curve of her shoulder. Her long, regal neck. Glancing back at his sketchpad, he knew the only things he’d managed to capture from the vitality of this woman were the hands. He’d nailed the hands. A smile curved on his lips as he looked back up at the goddess in front of him to discover her staring back at him.
Heat coursed across the room, his desire hot, his feelings similar to what he often felt when he locked eyes with a gorgeous woman from across a crowded bar. But this, this felt different. His smile faded as hers gently grew. Did she know what he’d been thinking? Hell, he wanted her to know. He wanted to feel those lips against his own, uncover the body only hinted at in the crowded art room. He wanted to possess her. He felt like a teenaged boy looking at his first girlie magazine. No, this was more than youthful attraction. Their gazes locked, and he started to rise from his stool, wanting to introduce himself. To get her name, for God’s sake.
A beeping from his watch broke his focus, and he dropped his gaze for a second. When he looked back, she’d turned her head away, the moment lost.
Jesse sighed and opened his case, putting away supplies. Time to go back into the real world. Time to become Jesse Sullivan, Champion Bull Rider and Professional Bull-Shitter. Eight seconds riding a bull and hours of interviews with reporters wondering why he would risk his life day after day. Wondering who Jesse Sullivan really was underneath that cowboy hat.

All About Lynn: 

Lynn Cahoon’s a multi-published author. An Idaho native, her stories focus around the depth and experience of small town life and love. Lynn’s published in Chicken Soup anthologies, explored controversial stories for the confessional magazines, short stories in Women’s World, and contemporary romantic fiction. Currently, she’s living in a small historic town on the banks of the Mississippi river where her imagination tends to wander. She lives with her husband and four fur babies. 

Follow Lynn Online: Goodreads   Facebook    Twitter    Website   Amazon Author Page

Comments

  1. Great interview, and I'd like to have lunch with those women, too.

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    1. Liz, I just finished 11/22/63 and am in the thinking stage after the book. What if... I love it when a novel does that to me. Jackie's such an interesting character, probably made more fictional as the years and the mythology around the Kennedy years grows.

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  2. *waves to Lynn* Thanks for answering all of our questions this morning!

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  3. Hello again, Lynn! And yes, I know about heartache from infidelity like all the celebs you mentioned on this post. I had to be hard & strong, for myself and my two toddlers after my first hubby took off with someone much, much younger. But, although it took five years, I did become "soft" again when I met a man who was very persistent and who I admired a lot. It grew into a 35 year marriage and I'm still in love with him. So there are second chances and new life after the old is gone. Thanks for the post today. jdh2690@gmail.com

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  4. Janice, his loss. Glad you found your soul mate.

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