Kristin Holt
USA Today Bestselling Author
I recall the winter of my first grade year, basking in the
heat from our fireplace in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Dad read aloud Madeline
L'Engle's A WRINKLE IN TIME and Mom peeled orange segments for us to enjoy. That
was the definitive moment I fell in love with fiction.
I write frequent articles (or view recent posts easily
on my Home Page, scroll down) about the nineteenth century
American West–every subject of possible interest to readers, amateur
historians, authors…as all of these tidbits surfaced while researching for my
books. I also blog monthly at Sweet Romance Reads, Sweet Americana
Sweethearts, and Romancing the
Genres.
I love to hear from readers! Please drop me a note. Or find me on Facebook.
I enjoy connecting with
readers. Please stop by for a visit
Connect with the Author here:
His worst mistake was letting her go.
His second-worst mistake? Bringing her home.
Pleasance is back to reclaim her rightful
place at Jacob’s side. One way or another she’ll remind him theirs is a match
made in heaven…once the shock wears off. The teensy-weensy problem? Jacob
doesn’t know that she—his first love—is
his catalog bride..
Q&A With the Author
1. Describe
yourself in 50 words or less.
I'm a wife, mother,
daughter, sister, and friend. I believe kindness matters, people matter, and "nice matters". Mail
Order Bride Collection: A Timeless Romance Anthology recently made the USA Today Bestseller's List--I'm
honored! I'm a Christian who writes secular
Sweet (clean) Victorian Westerns, Romance Appropriate For All Audiences.
2.
What do you love most in the world?
Outside of
incomparable, irreplaceable individuals and my relationships with them, I'd
have to say I love quality fiction most in the world. I love to immerse myself in reading.
3.
What do you fear most?
Is it acceptable to
admit I genuinely don't fear? Sure, I'd rather not find myself a (relatively)
young widow. I'd rather not experience another allergic reaction to bees. But
in the big perspective, my faith in God is the antidote of fear.
4.
What is your largest unfulfilled dream, and what are you doing to reach it?
I had to think
about this one for a good long while. For so many years, seeing my books in
print and enjoyed by people outside my immediate circle of family and friends
would have been my largest unfulfilled dream. Now that I've achieved that
benchmark, (and the pleasure of the USA
Today Bestseller list) I guess, as of today, my largest unfulfilled dream
is to make the NYT Bestseller list.
In order to reach it, I simply need to keep writing, keep learning the craft of
fiction, continue working hard, and refuse to settle for anything but my
personal best.
5.
What is the hardest thing you've ever done?
I've conquered
a personal "Mount
Everest"...or three: I lost 70 pounds and kept it off for many years, I
survived the deliveries of my four children (including one C-section), and many
highly personal and emotional catastrophes. More important than the difficulty
quotient or what, precisely, I did, are the lessons learned: I am more
resilient than I believed possible, and my faith in God is never misplaced.
6.
Now that we've gotten to know each other, tell me a story. It can be long or
short. From your childhood or last week. Funny, sad, or somewhere in between.
Just make sure it's yours. What's your story?
Once upon a time, a
woman lived in the Rocky Mountains of the West. She was neither old nor young,
fat nor thin, stylish nor plain. She loved to sew, to make everything from
dresses to suits to men's shirts to tote bags for books.
One day this lady
went to the local fabric store to buy more fabric. She'd heard that She Who Dies With The Most Fabric Wins.
Though she had no idea what prize the champion would win, she determined to
attempt to take her cloth-buying hobby to
infinity and beyond.
In her desire to
save a few dollars, thus increasing her capacity to purchase more cloth and
notions, the woman brought her adult daughter along on the shopping trip. This
daughter, a high school math teacher, was the proud owner of a perpetual 15%
off discount at the fabric and craft store. This magical discount was available
to all in the teacher's household, as long as the teacher was present.
At the check-out,
the lady's adult daughter presented her teacher's discount card to obtain the
much-desired discount.
The clerk--a girl
who was definitely more young than old--took one look at the lady who must have
appeared more old than young with her hair of silver and white and gray and
with a great deal of confusion announced, "But she gets 20% off today."
The silver-haired
lady (in constant pursuit of more fabric, zippers, thread, and buttons) had no
idea what the young clerk meant. The lady shared a surprised moment with her
daughter the math teacher, hoping the math somehow made sense to one who
thought in numbers rather than English. 15%? 20%?
The mysterious 5%
made no sense to the lady until in the heat of the parking lot where it
suddenly made a great deal of sense. The silver-haired lady laughed. "The
clerk thinks I qualify for the Senior Discount!"
That shopping day
happened to be a Wednesday, the one day when Senior Citizens received a 20%
discount, just for being old. "She didn't bother to check my I.D. or she'd
see I'm only forty-nine. Six years too young to qualify--if and only if (a math term) Seniors, in her world, are 55 and not
65."
That day, the
silver-and-gray haired lady decided she could be cranky that the young clerk
misjudged her age or she could laugh about the extra 5% savings. Neither young
nor old, the lady with the gray hair decided to laugh and smile and share her
story.
Just like fabric, a
lady can never have too much laughter. So the lady decided, too, that the
ageless advice should go like this, instead: She Who Dies With The Most Laughter Wins.
And the
silver-haired lady lived, happily ever
after.
THE END
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