Celebrate Canada/America Bookish Event #canadaday #historicalromance #giveaway @NNP_W_Light

Celebrate Canada American Bookish Event

Join me and 11 other authors in celebrating Canada Day and the Fourth of July holidays @NNP_W_Light’s Canada/America Bookish Event. My book, Rogue’s Hostage, will be featured on Canada Day, July 1st.

Rogue’s Hostage is set in Pennsylvania and Quebec during the French and Indian War, ending with the epic battle of the Plains of Abraham that decided the fate of Canada as British rather than French. It was, to say the least, a pivotal moment in Canadian history.

Blurb:

She wants her freedom. Her captor wants her. Can love survive a deadly war?

His hostage…

In 1758 the Pennsylvania frontier is wild, primitive and dangerous, where safety often lies at the end of a gun. Mara Dupré’s life crumbles when a French and Indian war party attacks her cabin, kills her husband, and takes her captive. Marching through the wilderness strengthens her resolve to flee, but she doesn’t count on her captor teaching her the meaning of courage and the tempting call of desire.

Her destiny…

French lieutenant Jacques Corbeau’s desire for his captive threatens what little honor he has left. But when Mara desperately offers herself to him in exchange for her freedom, he finds the strength to refuse and reclaims his lost self-respect. As the shadows of his past catch up to him, Jacques realizes that Mara, despite the odds, is the one true key to reclaiming his soul and banishing his past misdeeds forever.

Rogue's Hostage Kindle Countdown Deal July 1-8, 2021

Check out our books just in time for Canada Day & 4th of July and enter the giveaway to win a $15 Amazon gift card. Use the Rafflecopter form below to enter. Winner will be drawn on July 9, 2021.

Happy Canada Day and Independence Day!

Linda

Enter to win a $15 Amazon (US) gift card:

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Celebrating the 19th Amendment for 4th of July

One hundred years ago, women finally won the right to vote in the United States of America. We weren’t “given” the right; our ancestors demanded the right to vote, for 70 years! I’m still appalled that it took so long. In honor of the centennial, I’m recycling this post from 2018.

Fourth of July graphic

Happy Fourth of July!

The Declaration of Independence states “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal…” But nowhere does it mention women.

When I was growing up, I was told that the word “men” was intended to refer to all mankind, including women, a comforting notion that satisfied my childish curiosity. However, I no longer believe that, in large part because I now know that Abigail Adams, wife of our second president and mother of the sixth, wrote to her husband John in March of 1776 with the words “remember the ladies”. Since I’m quite certain he did not have dementia at the time, it’s obvious that the ladies were deliberately excluded, as were enslaved men.

suffragette with sign

Yeah, they were pissed off. (Suffragette With A Sign
@ Therealdarla)

Nor are women mentioned in the US Constitution, and the right to vote is not delineated. In the early history of our nation, laws about who could vote were decided by each individual state. None allowed women to vote. Wyoming Territory gave women the right to vote in 1869, followed by Utah Territory (1870) and Washington Territory (1882). When the territories became states, they preserved women’s suffrage. It may seem odd that these Western states were the first, but given the fact that women were scarce in the Old West, I suspect suffrage was a way of attracting more women to settle in the Far West. Or perhaps the Western territories were more egalitarian, since there was no existing old-style patriarchy to run things, like there was back east. Hard to say for sure. You can find out what year your state first allowed women to vote at the National Constitution Center’s website.

My point is, women’s rights are not something we can take for granted. The right to vote was hard won by several generations of women, starting in 1848 and finally culminating in victory in 1920 by passage of the 19th Amendment, 130 years after the Constitution was ratified.

As our current president would say, “Sad.”

I hope to live long enough to see full gender equality.

Equality between man and woman

Equality between man and woman
@ BrianAJackson

In the meantime, have a happy and safe Fourth of July!

Linda