Winter Blogfest: Marianne Arkins

This post is part of Long and Short Reviews’ Winter Blogfest. Leave a comment for a chance to win a $5 Amazon gift card. 

 

Christmas Traditions

I love traditions.  Growing up we had them for every holiday. For Christmas Eve we were allowed to open one package, and it was always new pajamas (that we then wore for sleeping and Christmas morning, of course). We also always got one ornament from my mom, and then when we turned 18, our ornament box was turned over to us so we could have stuff for our own trees in our own homes.

I’ve tried to continue some of those traditions with my own daughter, though her father had some say in things, so it wasn’t always possible.  That said, she always got to open one gift on Christmas Eve and she always got one ornament (still does, actually, even though she’s 24 years-old).

And it’s always ham for Christmas. Period. Never turkey or prime rib or any other type of meat.  Ham.  I put my foot down on that choice.  For me it’s not Christmas without a ham. And potatoes.  My dad used to make his famous (to me, at least) Portuguese stuffing, but my mom and I were the only ones who liked it and, though I tried making it my first Christmas after I was married, it just wasn’t a hit.  I haven’t made it in years…it’s probably the chicken gizzards (yes, really) that folks had an issue with, lol.

Some of the traditions have fallen by the wayside these days.  But we still open a gift on Christmas Eve.  And we still have ham.  Even when it’s just my adult daughter and I celebrating.  It just wouldn’t be Christmas without it.

What are some of your holiday traditions?

Liv is out to prove her high society fiancé is cheating on her. Can she do it without breaking a nail—or falling in love with Mike, the mechanic?

Olivia “Liv” Leigh, wealthy socialite and spa owner, suspects her fiancé of cheating on her. Drastic steps are required to discover whether appearances are deceiving. And if those steps require a bit of stalking, a change of appearance, a hippo-sized dog named Spike, and sacrificing her manicure to clean house for a sexy-but-sloppy man whose neighbor is determined to break several of the strangest Guinness World Records, why should that be a problem?

Mike Peck, a happily single auto mechanic, is more than content sharing his bachelor pad with piles of laundry, dirty dishes, and a sneaky ferret. But when a half-crazed woman in a bad wig shows up on his doorstep, what’s a nice guy to do?

Why, invite her in, unknowingly help her in her search for the truth and, in the process, fall head over heels with a woman who’s never been less his type.

Marianne is originally from California but currently living in New Mexico with her daughter, two dogs and two cats. She can’t imagine a world without romance or not having stories rattling around in her brain. There are nights when she dreams a complete story and watches it acted out in her head. Those are the times she wakes up and grabs for a notepad to jot down the important parts – without turning on the light – and hopes it’s coherent in the morning.

 

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Winter Blogfest: Wendi Zwaduk

This post is part of Long and Short Reviews’ Winter Blogfest. Leave a comment for a chance to win a necklace made by the author. 

My Christmas Playlist

I thought I’d pull together a list of my favorite Christmas songs. I’m kind of picky about what I like at Christmas. I’m not wild about much of the newest versions of the old songs. Here are some of my favorites (in no particular order)

“Jingle Bell Rock” ~ Bobby Helms – It’s just classic.

“I’ll Be Home for Christmas” ~ Bing Crosby – this one makes me sad and think about the people in my life that aren’t there any longer. But it also makes me glad I knew them.

“Have a Holly Jolly Christmas” ~ Burl Ives – now that I know he was blacklisted, I love it even more.

“Here Comes Santa Claus (Right Down Santa Claus Lane)” ~ Gene Autry – we sang this song at school. It reminds me of being in the first grade.

“Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree” ~ Brenda Lee – doesn’t she have the best Christmas songs? Besides, how can you not love it and not think of Home Alone?

“Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” ~ Judy Garland – makes me sad, yet Christmassy, too.

“White Christmas” ~ Bing Crosby – it’s just a classic

“Santa Claus is Comin’ to Town” ~ Bruce Springsteen – okay, I love how he asks how many have behaved and when he gets a poor response, he says, ah…not many, not many. Cracks me up.

“Santa Baby” ~ Eartha Kitt – she makes Christmas sexy 😊

“The Chipmunk Song” ~ How can you not like the Chipmunks at Christmas?

“Little Saint Nick” ~ The Beach Boys – I learned the Muppets version of this song and love both versions.

“When the River Meets the Sea” ~ Paul Williams, but sung by Robin the Frog and Denver with the Muppets

And….

“The Peace Carol” ~ Traditional ~ John Denver and Scooter with the Muppets

I know I left off the Drifters, Otis Redding and Darlene Love among others. They’re on the longer list. What are your favorite Christmas songs? Do you lean classic or contemporary? I’d love to know.

 

Are second chances possible? They can be in North Bend.

Alex West left North Bend behind and became the famous author RR Taylor. He’s happy with his jet-setting lifestyle, until a book signing brings him to North Bend. Surrounded by the beauty of the small town and the closeness of the community, he starts to rethink his reasons for leaving. Seeing his high-school flame, Molly Adams, brings all the old feelings back into focus. He wants to make her Christmas bright and win her heart, too.

Can he convince her to believe in the magic of Christmas and their second chance, or is the blossoming romance destined to melt with the holiday snow?

 

Wendi Zwaduk is a multi-published, award-winning author of more than one-hundred short stories and novels. She’s been writing since 2008 and published since 2009. Her stories range from the contemporary and paranormal to BDSM and LGBTQ themes. No matter what the length, her works are always hot, but with a lot of heart. She enjoys giving her characters a second chance at love, no matter what the form. She’s been the runner up in the Kink Category at Love Romances Café as well as nominated at the LRC for best contemporary, best ménage and best anthology. Her books have made it to the bestseller lists on Amazon.com and the former AllRomance Ebooks. She also writes under the name of Megan Slayer.

When she’s not writing, she spends time with her partner and son as well as three dogs and three cats. She enjoys art, music and racing, but football is her sport of choice. 

You can find out more about Wendi on her website or on her blog. You can also find her on Instagram, Bookbub and Amazon.

 

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Buy the book at First For Romance.

Winter Blogfest: Jessica Coulter Smith

This post is part of Long and Short Reviews’ Winter Blogfest. Leave a comment for a chance to win ebook copies of Ashton Grove Werewolves books 1-3 (gifted via BookFunnel). 

Things I Love Most About Christmas

Christmas has always felt like a season that slows the world just enough to let the good things shine. No matter how busy life gets, there are a few traditions and feelings that pull me right back into the heart of the season every year.

One of my favorite parts of Christmas is the tree. There’s something magical about dragging it into the house, fluffing the branches, and turning decorating into a family event instead of a chore. Ornaments come out of boxes that only see the light of day once a year—some handmade, some sentimental, some a little ridiculous—and every one of them carries a memory. Decorating the tree together always turns into laughter, storytelling, and the kind of moments that feel small at the time but become the ones you remember most.

Another tradition I love is driving around to look at Christmas lights. It’s simple, but it never gets old. Houses glow in every color imaginable, trees sparkle like they’re straight out of a holiday movie, and for a little while, the world feels softer. Even sitting in the car, bundled up, sipping something warm, feels like part of the magic. Those quiet drives remind me to slow down and enjoy the season instead of rushing through it.

I also love the cold weather—especially the possibility of snow. It doesn’t happen often where I live, which makes it feel even more special. Cold air, cozy blankets, warm drinks, and the hope that I might wake up to a white morning all add to the magic. Even without snow, winter has a way of making home feel warmer and more inviting.

But more than anything, I love how Christmas brings out the best in people. During this time of year, kindness feels easier. People seem more willing to help, to give, to show patience and compassion. It’s a reminder of how powerful small acts of generosity can be—and how much better the world feels when we choose to care for one another.

That’s what Christmas means to me: warmth, connection, hope, and a little extra kindness when it’s needed most. If only we remembered to be so kind throughout the entire year. Even a smile or a simple compliment can be enough to brighten someone’s day.

Escape to Christmas Cove, a cozy small town where magic, shifters, and holiday romance collide.

After a painful breakup, Riley is ready for a fresh start in Christmas Cove. All she wants is a peaceful life for herself and her two-year-old daughter, Sabrina. Love isn’t on her holiday wish list. When she’s stuck in a blizzard, help arrives in the form of Alex Conors — a protective, brooding werewolf.

Snowed in with a grumpy shifter and a crackling fire, Riley begins to see the gentle heart behind Alex’s fierce exterior… and Alex finds himself falling for the brave single mom who awakens something he thought he lost long ago.

Hot cocoa and toddler giggles turn strangers into something more. But when Riley’s past resurfaces and threatens the safety she’s found, Alex will have to prove that loyalty, love — and pack — are forever.

A warm, emotional holiday romance filled with shifter charm, second chances, and the magic of Christmas. Ideal for fans of protective alphas, found family, and heartfelt happily-ever-afters.

 

Jessica Coulter Smith is an acclaimed romance writer with a passion for storytelling. Her works showcase the power of love and its ability to transcend boundaries, capturing the hearts of audiences worldwide. With a unique writing style and perspective, Jessica continues to inspire and entertain readers from all walks of life.

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Winter Blogfest: Jennifer Patricia O’Keeffe

This post is part of Long and Short Reviews’ Winter Blogfest. Leave a comment for a chance to win a signed copy of Winter’s Embrace, which I have two stories in.

 

Christmas and the Single Gal

Even Santa knows what I want for Christmas. Yep, its me a single girl living in a big city in an apartment with a cat and a job that isnt what I went to college for. My job is fine. My apartment is small and adequate. My cat is feisty and a great companion, but maybe just maybe this year, Santa will bring me a man for Christmas.

It doesnt have to be a forever man. It can be a temporary man one to spoil me, make spiced eggnog for me, maybe give me a back massage while watching romantic comedies and laughing at all the right moments. He can come dressed in a bow where that bow is placed is entirely up to Santa Claus.

Okay Im not really that man-starved, but let me tell you, spending Christmas alone every year gets tiring. Ive had boyfriends. A couple were serious, but most were not. Everyone knows the life of a writer is a life of insanity. After all, we sit at our computers having conversations with imaginary people while trying to help navigate their lives for them. I was once told I cared more about my characters than I did a former boyfriend, but that isnt fully true. First, my boyfriend at the time was probably the worst Id ever had worked all day, came by after to sit in front of the television and watch ballgames or trivia shows, and would raid my fridge and then just fall asleep on the couch. So, yeah, I wrote while he was over because he and I had almost nothing in common. Plus hello! I had deadlines.

Other boyfriends were attentive, kind, and at least pretended to be interested in the things that make me happy. Still, Ive never had a boyfriend at Christmas. And honestly, I am okay with this. However, you know it would still be fun to untie that Christmas bow and unwrap a sexy guy for the holiday. The day after Christmas, however, he can go right back to the boytoy factory.

Spending Christmas alone doesnt bother me, because wrapped man for the holiday or not I know there is true love out there for me, and he is just waiting on me. When we finally find each other, lonely Christmases will be no more. I sure hope, if youre alone and single this Christmas, you eventually find your Mister Right also and have that handsome, loving, warm body to snuggle up with on these cold winter nights.

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays!

Remember to smile every day and remember to keep on laughing! Lifes too short to not laugh.

 

Embrace the joy of Christmas and some yuletide cheer in this collection of five sweet holiday romances from four of today’s most entertaining authors! Featuring brand new stories from Pamela Ackerson, Jennifer Patricia O’Keeffe, Cindy Lewis Smith, and Jae El Foster, this anthology will help you hold the spirit of Christmas and the magic of true love in your heart the whole year round.

Meant to Be by Pamela Ackerson: Single and starting over in tiny Lorman, Mississippi, teacher Faith Anjos dives into home renovations with tools in hand and a boat from her late dad’s fishing Sundays. Realtor Gabriel White becomes her unexpected ally, sharing lunches, family barbecues, and stolen kisses under patriotic park lights. But when a sassy ex-roommate stirs trouble and life’s curveballs hit hard, Faith learns that true love thrives not just in perfect houses, but in the messy magic of Christmas cheer and forever promises.

Window Shopping by Jennifer Patricia O’Keeffe: Single and sentimental, Whitney dives into downtown’s dazzling displays—animatronic toys, frosted windows, violin carols—chasing Christmas cheer alone after helping coworker Chad remotely. Fate intervenes with a literal bump into charming Chad, leading to diner laughs, Santa’s lap shenanigans, and hand-holding revelations. As they embrace kid-at-heart traditions amid bustling streets and Santa’s sly matchmaking, a parade invite blossoms into dinner-and-movie dreams. Proving the season’s sparkle uncovers love when least expected.

Mr. Hollister’s Christmas by Cindy Lewis Smith: Thirty-three and resigned to spinsterhood in Goldfield, Josie channels her Georgia Christmas memories into a perfect Eve nuptial for Rose and Hank, footed by taciturn rancher Clint Hollister. Their prickly partnership blooms amid pine boughs, fiddle waltzes, and whispered regrets from a saloon-fueled mail-order mishap. When a wheel-wrecked ride home unveils Clint’s hidden role in her arrival—and his lingering loneliness—snowy revelations ignite a romance as timeless as the stars above the Llano River.

What the Snow Blew In by Jae El Foster: Snowbound in Deerborne, Connecticut, during a record-breaking blizzard, editor Carina Whitaker hunkers down with wine, her cat Tom Boy, and cherished Christmas ornaments—until a shivering mailman named Jerry delivers a package and seeks refuge from the storm. As power flickers out and drifts bury her home, candlelit evenings spark unlikely conversations, shared meals, and cozy traditions that warm more than the gas fireplace. Amid reading aloud by firelight and piano carols, holiday magic proves that what the snow blows in might just be the love she’s been waiting for.

 

The Magic of Mistletoe by Jennifer Patricia O’Keeffe: Sarah’s winter break turns into survival mode: dodging doll-throwing dollops, sweeping glass shards, and sacrificing her office sanctuary for peace between battling children. Amid cold coffee confessions and contract close-calls with hubby Thomas, festive fumbles—from runaway pillows to reluctant photos—test their bond. Yet as grilled cheeses soothe tears and starry-eyed surprises arrive post-midnight, mistletoe weaves its spell, transforming holiday havoc into heartfelt harmony and impossible dreams come true.

Jennifer Patricia O’Keeffe is an author of romantic comedy and anything quirky. She resides in Tennessee, just outside of Nashville where she shares a home with her cats. Ms. O’Keeffe loves to make the world laugh and to find humor and love in the least likely of places.

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Winter Blogfest: Kristina W. Kelly

This post is part of Long and Short Reviews’ Winter Blogfest. Leave a comment for a chance to win one copy of the paperback or ebook (winner’s choice) of Tavern Tale – a cozy sapphic fantasy adventure. US only. Non-US, the ebook of Tavern Tale.

Cozy Winter Favorites Festivals, Holiday Lights, and Cold Weather Tea

My favorite holiday is Halloween…until it’s over and then I’m sure that my favorite holiday is Christmas. From the lights and the atmosphere, to burying myself in blankets, the season certainly holds some of my favorite things. It was these favorite things that inspired many of the events and items in my cozy fantasy novel, Tea Tale. The story is set during the in-world winter holiday, Midwinter Nights Faire. Let me tell you about my favorite winter holiday things from the real world and how they influenced my fantasy tale!

Not Just Light Strands

I love Christmas lights! Not just the light strands around the tree, or the glowing rainbow on the eaves of houses. I love candle lights in the windows and the lighted yard decorations and displays that have scenes and shapes like penguins jumping over sleighs. So when I wrote Tea Tale, I had one of their traditions be lighted lanterns. Strings of them cross over streets and hang over the market, and shops and living areas have smaller light strands – all lit by a little bug called a fireworm. To me, festive lights are like little dots of magic.

Hot Tea

Year round I love tea, but especially in winter months a hot cup of tea hits just right. Some of my favorite blends are made with black tea leaves and aromatic elements like vanilla and lavender. When I sat down to write Tea Tale, I knew that I wanted to have tea drinking be a central theme for the story. In the book, there are three main teas that are served and they were inspired by some of my favorite tea drinks I consume more often during winter months.

Foggy Iramont – this drink is inspired by an earl grey London Fog. Key notes are bergamot, hint of citrus, lavender, and vanilla. I recommend “Lady Lavender” from The Tea Spot or “Earl Grey Creme” from The Spice and Tea Exchange. And then add some lavender and milk, and whip to a frothy goodness before consuming.
Divine-i-tea – this drink is inspired by root beer and cream soda. I recommend something like Root Beer tea from Stash Tea. An alternative, and one of my all-time favorite tea blends, is the Winter Solstice tea from The Tea Spot as it has licorice and butterscotch notes which gives it a hint of that root beer flavor.
Snowshroom Spice – this tea was inspired by chai tea, but with a twist. Like a dessert in a liquid form, it has notes of chocolate and cinnamon. And in the book, it’s made from mushrooms from the north. In the real world, I recommendChocolate Chai Supreme from Harney & Sons.

Winter Festivals

Lastly, I enjoy a good winter market or festival. Near me is a German Christmas market that happens every year, Christkindlmarkt. The performers like jazz bands and dancers, the food like hot salted pretzels and hot cocoa, and the vendors that have unique items especially the festival-specific collector gifts like mugs shaped like boots and wooden ornaments. I don’t even have to buy anything!

(Narrator: she did. In fact, she purchased cheddar popcorn and various chocolates and cookies and—)

Ok, yes I did buy things. But I also watched the ice skaters, the polka band, visited the giant Christmas tree, and made a craft with my kids. But the best part? Making memories with my family and starting traditions. I tried to capture all of this in Tea Tale as their Midwinter Nights Festival occurs around the city at night and features games, street vendors, special items, and a bazaar.

What about you? What are your favorite cozy things or moments about winter and holidays?

 

Tea makes everything cozier in Trelvania!

Divine has learned a lot about herself, her magic, and her goddess. But now she and Saph are getting ready for the Midwinter Nights Faire, and that’s the worst time for her magic to go haywire! She might be able to talk to animals now, and Saph seems to be flirting with other patrons. Is there anything left in Iramont for Divine?

It will take an unlikely quest, some world-shaking revelations, and some unexpected friends to show Divine her direction in life. The journey will be a tale to tell…over tea!

 

Kristina W. Kelly is an author of poetry, short stories, and novels including the coauthored epic fantasy and sci-fi fusing series the Etherea Cycle. Her scifi and fantasy poetry collection Imaginari includes her photography, and her cozy fantasy adventure series Tales of Trelvania was inspired by RPGs.

Kristina is Secretary for Poetry Society of Indiana (2025), published in online poetry magazines and anthologies, and has received multiple honorable mentions and semi-finalist from the Writers of the Future contest. She won second place in the 2023 Poe-it Like Poe Contest.

Since childhood, writing stories on her mother’s typewriter or trying to catalog her own books like a library, Kristina has been in love with storytelling. Her undergraduate pursuits focused on Psychology, Music, and Computer Science. With trumpet as her main instrument and a connection to nature, Kristina often works music and visual landscapes into her writings.

She takes photography, makes various crafts, plays video games (RPGs are her favorite), dabbles in other instruments, and tends to her flower garden. She loves going on new adventures in the great wide somewhere (sometimes just by picking up a new book). Kristina resides in Indiana with her husband and sons.

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