Release Day! | The Christmas Book Shoppe
This is a very exciting day for
me, because today my novella, The Christmas Book Shoppe is
available.
About
the Book
Keeping her book store might take
a Christmas miracle…
Trudy Gallagher is quite content
with her simple life. For the past five years, she has lived and worked at The
Christmas Book Shoppe, a new and used book store formerly owned and operated by
her great-aunt. She loves nothing more than spending her days in the Victorian
house filled with books, surrounded by her cat and loved ones. As Christmas,
her favorite day of the year approaches, she begins the season with her usual
verve and excitement.
Yet when her landlord threatens
to sell The Christmas Book Shoppe, she is devastated. She cannot imagine life
without the book store she calls home. As she struggles to create a plan to
keep the book store open, it seems as if her whole world is turned upside down
and her every attempt to save the store fails.
Can she find a way to keep the
store she loves?
Enjoy
an Excerpt from
The Christmas Book Shoppe
As
she placed the last ornament on the Christmas tree, Trudy Gallagher
stood back and looked at her handiwork with a gratified smile. It was the
Monday after Thanksgiving, and she had spent the majority of the day decorating
The Christmas Book Shoppe for the holiday. Like every other year, she and her
assistant Marge had placed the six foot artificial Christmas tree before the
front window in the foyer, and Trudy had happily wrapped it in lights and
tinsel, placing book themed ornaments along the branches.
“A little early to be putting up a Christmas tree, don’t
you think?” Mr. Scranton, a regular patron at the book store–and the town’s
resident curmudgeon–asked when he came to donate yet another stack of used
books.
“Well, Thanksgiving was last Thursday,” Trudy replied in
the kindest tone she could muster. It was tradition at The Christmas Book
Shoppe to decorate for the holidays the Monday after Thanksgiving. After all,
they were The Christmas Book Shoppe,
a store that carried a mix of new and used books, housed in the historic
district of a small town called Christmas, Arkansas–which was named for the
town’s settler as opposed to the holiday, as most out of towners understandably
believed. They had to embrace the spirit of Christmas, just like most other
businesses in town did. Yet there was always someone who accused them of
decorating too early. Trudy couldn’t help but wonder; what would Mr. Scranton
say if he knew that she had decorated her apartment on November first?
Scoffing at her, Mr. Scranton turned and went on his way,
his pace slow as his cane assisted him. Trudy could have sworn she heard him
mutter “bah humbug” under his breath as he exited through the front door, his
harsh tone clashing with the twinkling bell above the door. Though that could
have simply been her imagination, which, given all the novels she read, was
usually quite overactive.
Trudy shrugged as she placed the two heavy plastic bags
full of moldy paperbacks on the desk and began to sort through them.
Really, who could blame her for embracing the Christmas
spirit as fully as she did? After enduring long humid Arkansas summers that
often started as early as April and boasted weeks of temperatures in the high
nineties and low hundreds, it was a relief to have cooler weather. When the
heat of summer was too much to bear, she often daydreamed about the Christmas
season just to distract herself from the reality of living in such a humid
climate.
But it wasn’t just the cold weather she enjoyed. She
loved everything about Christmas. Watching classic Christmas movies, drinking
hot cocoa while reading a light and cheery Christmas novella, and listening to
Christmas songs all December were some of her favorite things. And there was
just something about all the pretty decorations and lights that made the whole
town of Christmas, Arkansas look like the inside of a snow globe…minus all the
snow. It was simply a magical time of year.
“I’m glad you enjoy decorating the tree so much,” said
Marge as she made her way back to the front desk. With a deep sigh, she added,
“Putting that tree up just wears me out.”
Looking up from the copy of Thoreau’s Walden she’d been inspecting, Trudy
offered a smile and said, “Well, I’m happy to do it.”
With raised eyebrows, Marge shook her head. “I can
certainly tell.”
Marge was a middle aged woman who had been working at The
Christmas Book Shoppe for the last few years. While she was a good employee,
she didn’t share Trudy’s excitement about literature and holidays and found her
boss’s enthusiasm rather tiring. It was amazing that the two got along as well
as they did.
Trudy once again smiled and then took the newly arrived
books and began to shelve them. It was a little curious that Mr. Scranton had
donated so much as of late. Counting what he’d brought in today, he’d donated a
total of ten bags full of books in two weeks. Trudy wondered how many books he
had in that old, somewhat off-putting house he lived in on the top of a hill at
the edge of town.
After the donations were situated on the shelves, Trudy
took to straightening the bookcases, and in the process she found herself somewhat
distracted, reading the synopsis scrawled on the back covers of titles that
caught her attention. She often found herself similarly sidetracked while
working here at the shop and realized that this was one reason why her
to-be-read pile was growing entirely out of control.
When she found a particularly interesting novel set in
the Edwardian era, she flipped open the cover and read the first few pages.
Soon her mind was thousands of miles and a hundred years away, caught up in a
world of lords and ladies.
“That a good book?”
With a gasp, she slammed the book shut. Looking up, she
saw her friend, Reed Thornton. A roughish smile twisted his mouth, making him
look more like Downton Abbey’s Tom
Branson than ever.
“You scared me to death,” she said, taking a deep breath
in an attempt to steady her heart rate. “And yes, it is a good book. I think
I’ll keep it for myself.”
In his hands, she saw a stack of books, all bearing
familiar titles. The Great Gatsby, Wuthering Heights, Persuasion. In Trudy’s world, it was unusual for most guys to even
like reading. But for a guy to pass up science fiction and thrillers for
classic literature? That was just unheard of.
“Looking for a good romance, are we?” she asked as they
made their way back to the front desk.
He gave her the same exasperated expression he offered
each time she made a wise crack about his reading habits. “It’s required
reading for my classic lit class.”
Trudy smiled skeptically. She knew Reed had in fact
enrolled in a class dedicated to the classics at the university after recently
going back to college in order to earn a master’s degree in literature. Yet she
also knew that Reed had always been a sucker for the classics, just like her.
They’d taken literature classes in high school together and their mutual love
of the classics was one reason why they’d been such good friends for most of
their lives.
“You know there isn’t any shame in guys reading romance
novels, right?” With a snort she added, “I mean, look at Nicholas Sparks. His
novels have been giving women false hopes for years now. And Fitzgerald was a
guy, and he wrote The Great Gatsby.
Besides, haven’t you already read that?”
“When we were seniors in high school,” he said with a
half frown. “But that was a long time ago. I’ve read too many books since then
to remember all I need to know about it for this class.”
“Well, it is a pretty good one to revisit,” she said as
she rounded the corner of the front desk.
As she scanned the barcode on Persuasion, she cocked an eyebrow at Reed.
He sighed as he dug his wallet out of his back pocket.
“It’s the only Austen I haven’t read yet.”
She chuckled as she placed the stack of books in a bag
bearing the store’s emblem.
“Do you give all your customers this hard of a time?” he
asked as he accepted the bag.
She simply laughed in reply.
“You know, I could just buy my books on Amazon. I’d get a
lot less cheek if I did.”
“Yeah, but you’d pay a lot more. Plus, you wouldn’t get
this sparkling customer service that brings in customers from miles around.”
Chuckling, he rolled his eyes, took his bag and left.
Giveaway
One winner will receive a Kindle
download of The Christmas Book Shoppe.
Open internationally to anyone who can
receive a Kindle download via email. Must be 18 or older to participate.
a Rafflecopter giveaway
http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/393c8dbf4/?
If you read the book, please
consider leaving a review on Amazon and/or Goodreads. It would mean a lot to
potential readers and the author alike.
Thank you for stopping by to read
about this book. I hope you enjoy it. Merry Christmas!
–Miranda Atchley
Happy release day for your sweet new novella, Miranda!! Wishing you a joyous Christmas season, friend ♥
ReplyDelete~Amber
Thank you, Amber! I'm so grateful for all the encouragement you've shown me throughout my writing journey. It is a definite blessing! *big hugs*
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