Meet author Kari Lynn Dell author of Tangled in Texas.
Kari Lynn Dell is a ranch-raised Montana cowgirl who attended her first rodeo at two weeks old and has existed in a state of horse-induced poverty ever since. She lives on the Blackfeet Reservation in her parents' bunkhouse along with her husband, her son, and Max the Cowdog, with a tipi on her lawn, Glacier National Park on her doorstep and Canada within spitting distance. Her debut novel, The Long Ride Home, was published in 2015. She also writes a ranch and rodeo humor column for several regional newspapers and a national agricultural publication.
Second Chance Romances
I love second chance romances as a reader, and even more so as a writer. Non-romance readers will often turn up their nose and sniff, “What’s the big deal? You know they’re going to live happily ever after.” And I say, “Exactly.”
I have to create characters who are so obviously meant for each other that you will turn the last page and heave a blissful sigh, secure in the knowledge that they are set for life. And then I have to figure out believable, preferably heart-wrenching reasons to keep them (mostly) apart for four hundred pages. Second chance romances are a leg up because they come with a huge dollop of conflict built in. Like Tori and Delon in Tangled in Texas, the couple has already taken a run at love and failed miserably. Why on earth should they risk having their hearts torn in itty bitty pieces and scattered in the dirt again?
Here are a handful of my favorites and the reasons they’ve earned a chunk of prime real estate on my keeper shelf.
My One and Only by Kristan Higgins – This one is packed with Higgins’ usual broad humor, but it also has a deeper, darker story that runs underneath, in which the heroine must face her past in order to work out why her marriage failed. And the book begins in Glacier National Park, only miles from where I live. The divorced couple sets out on a road trip that takes them through my tiny Montana hometown (it even mentions our giant concrete penguin), winds across North Dakota and ends up in my husband’s slightly larger hometown in Aberdeen, South Dakota. Obviously, she wrote this book just for me.
Fancy Pants by Susan Elizabeth Phillips – This was my first S.E.P book and I was totally hooked. The hero’s side fight to conquer a mental block to reach his full potential is very much like Delon in Tangled in Texas. And me in real life.
Carolina Girl by Virginia Kantra – Virginia is one of my auto-buys. And Meg is such a great heroine—smart, tough, brutally honest with herself and everyone else—and cynical to the bone. Sam’s got his work cut out, persuading her to take another chance on him…and love.
Tell Me Lies by Jennifer Crusie – This was my first Crusie, grabbed off a rack in an airport bookstore, adding me to her legion of fawning fangirls. It taught me that you can make a reader laugh out loud on one page, then rip their heart out on the next. It’s probably also where the seeds of my addiction to subplots and huge casts of characters with convoluted relationships was born. Those seeds not only bloomed but produced a truckload of fruit in Tangled.
Lessons in French by Laura Kinsale – I love this book because the hero is a complete screw-up. A true rogue, impulsive, moody, often thoughtless, a dangerous man who has done truly bad things. But he can be so sweet. And a freaking truckload of fun. You’ll keep turning the pages just to see what the heck he’s gonna do next and how he’s gonna persuade Callie to go along with it.
The Black Hawk by Joanna Bourne – If I was forced to pick a favorite, this would be it. Joanna’s entire Spymaster series is incredible. The characters are so complex and unexpected. The woman are brilliant and dangerous, more than a match for the men, and in the tumultuous times of Robes Pierre and Napoleon, there are no easy moral answers, especially for those who began as supporters of the revolution. This book is the culmination of a storyline that runs through the entire series, watching Hawker grow from a lethal child of the streets to head of the British Service, a wealthy, respected gentleman with a deliberately murky past. His relationship with Justine is likewise interwoven into the other books. And as much as I adore her, I have to admit that Hawker is one of my favorite fictional characters of all time.
It took 32 seconds to end his career.But it only took 1 to change his life.Thirty-two seconds. That’s how long it took for Delon Sanchez’s life to end. One minute he was the best bronc rider in the Panhandle and the next he was nothing. Knee shattered, future in question, all he can do is pull together the pieces…and wonder what cruel trick of fate has thrown him into the path of his ex, the oh-so-perfect Tori Patterson.Tori’s come home after her husband’s death, intent on escaping the public eye. It’s just her luck that Delon limps into her physical therapy office, desperate for help. All hard-packed muscle and dark-eyed temptation, he’s never been anything but a bad idea. And yet, seeing him again, Tori can’t remember what made her choose foolish pride over love…or why, with this second, final chance to right old wrongs, the smartest choice would be to run from this gorgeous rodeo boy as fast as her boots can take her.
Check out the Texas Rodeo series:
The shop looked cleaner and classier than she remembered. The eaves and windows were trimmed with red, and a huge logo had been painted on the expanse of blank front wall—the silhouette of a bareback rider in red and black, with Sanchez Trucking, Inc. circled around it. Neatly pruned shrubs lined the sidewalk on either side of the door marked Office. Sheesh. Even a shop had better landscaping than her place.
“How do you get up to your apartment?” she asked.
“The stairs are around the side.”
She stepped out of the car and was engulfed in Delon’s signature cologne—grease and diesel exhaust. Even though she’d loved Willy, truly and deeply, one tiny corner of her heart had always twitched at that scent. She’d hated how it still affected her, but there it was, so all she could do was make damn sure her path didn’t cross Delon’s when he was competing at Cheyenne, and avoid truck stops whenever possible.
And if her brain kept hopscotching between the new Delon and Willy and the old Delon, she’d be the one falling off of barstools before long.
She hunched her shoulders against the chilly breeze and walked around to the side of the building. The staircase was metal, narrow and steep. No way would she let Delon go up those alone. She went back to find him maneuvering his leg out of the car. He hissed in pain when his toe caught on the doorframe. She stepped closer and offered a hand. His fingers were warm and strong as always, but the clasp of his palm against hers felt different.
The calluses were gone. Those hard ridges on the fingers and palm of his riding hand that had been such a raspy, delicious contrast to her most sensitive spots. The nape of her neck. The inside of her thigh. Her nipples. She remembered how he’d smiled when he realized what it did to her—a dangerous smile full of wicked promises.
She let go so abruptly he lost his balance and had to grab the open car door to keep from toppling backward.
“Oops,” she said. “Slipped.”
And fell face first into another hormonal bog. Damn. She really had to get a hold of herself, before she went totally bonkers and tried to get a hold of Delon instead. That would be bad. Because he was her patient—and he was her past. They were both, to paraphrase his words, fucked up. Two broken halves couldn’t make a functional whole. Could they?
“I can make it from here,” he said.
She stepped back, but fell in beside him as he limped around the side of the shop. “Those stairs are treacherous.”
“I’ve had a lot of practice. I’ll be fine.”
“I doubt you were half tanked before. So rather than stand back and watch you roll ass over teakettle down a flight of stairs, I’ll just follow you on up.” His expression went mutinous, his bottom lip poking out, and she laughed outright. “Wow. I bet that’s exactly what Beni looks like when he doesn’t get his way.”
His scowl dissolved into a weary sigh. “It’s been a long day.”
“Tell me about it.” Beginning with her father’s divorce bomb, but she wasn’t thinking about that now.
Delon grasped the stair rail and stepped up with his good leg, then brought his sore leg level. Tori let him get two steps above her, then put her hand on the railing behind his, her upper body canted forward so she had leverage if he started to sway. Her position put his butt directly in her line of sight. Dear Lord, that was one nice butt. She yanked her gaze away, to a trio of trucks parked in a row alongside the shop, the chrome and polished paint of the tractors gleaming under the security lights.
A familiar fascination tugged at her sleeve. Big rigs had a sexy mystique, like modern day stagecoaches, the drivers perched high and proud, all that horsepower at their command. She’d had fantasies about Delon dragging her into one of those sleepers. Carrying her off to crisscross the country, just the two of them on an endless road trip, town after town of strangers who didn’t know or care who her father was. She gazed at the nearest black one, streamlined as a stealth fighter. Climb on in, it whispered. I’ll take you anywhere you want to go.
Her head rammed into Delon’s elbow as he stopped on the landing. When she stumbled, he grabbed the back of her coat and hauled her upright as easily as if she was Beni’s size.
“Good thing you came along to keep me safe,” he deadpanned, then raised his eyebrows. “Were you staring at my trucks?”
At first she thought he said butt, and her face went hot, before she realized he’d caught her checking out the semis. “They’re pretty.”
“Pretty.” He spit the word out in disgust. “Next thing, you’ll call them cute.”
She drew herself up, offended. “Cute is not in my vocabulary.”
“But you do have a thing for trucks.”
“I don’t—”
“It’s okay. Lots of girls do.” His smile was sly, his eyes gleaming with something wild and dangerous.
She suddenly realized they were face to face on the landing, their bodies touching, if you didn’t count the five layers of clothes between them. His hand was still on her shoulder and his fingers tightened fractionally, as if he would pull her even closer. Her heart sprouted legs and launched into a frantic gallop. Oh God. What if he kissed her? She wasn’t ready for that. Was she? If he leaned in and put his mouth on hers, would she shove him away, or devour him?
- 1 Print copy of Tangled in Texas
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- What do you think of second chance romances? Do you have any favorites?
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I really love second chance stories. I loved Dare to Rock by Carly Phillips.
ReplyDeleteI enjoy reading second chance romances. Some people...not all...deserve a second chance. One of my favorites is "I Kissed a Rogue" by Shana Galen.
ReplyDeleteI have read a couple second chance romances, no favorite, yet.
ReplyDeleteI enjoy them - the couple have often had additional experiences that put them in a better place for having a successful relationship.
ReplyDeleteI do like the idea of second chances. Right off the top of my head, can't pick one. Since I live in Texas, I like cowboys.
ReplyDeleteI love second chance stories. I've read many. Hard to pick a favorite. Thanks for the post.
ReplyDeleteCarol L
Lucky4750 (at) aol (dot) com
Love second chance romances.
ReplyDeleteCan't think of one single favorite, but I do enjoy reading second chance stories
ReplyDeleteI enjoy second chance romances, but can't think of a "favorite" one right now. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteI love all second chance romances !
ReplyDeleteI enjoy them, I findicated that they tend to have more storyline (plot twists) , characters develop before your eyes. Almost blossoming you can say.
ReplyDeleteOh sheesh you want me to pick a favorite, I mean I can probably name a couple of fav authors ...
Jill Shalvis (Lucky Harbor )
Kristen Ashley will definitely keep your eyes tearing
Danny I can name more but I can't think ... so much pressure lol
Love second chance romance .The book sounds wonderful and the cover is beautiful
ReplyDeleteI love them. Too many favorites to list, but life is all about making mistakes, apologies, starting over, and saying "I'm sorry".
ReplyDeleteI think they are great! Love when the couple work things out together!
ReplyDeleteOh the second chances are one of my favorites! I really dont have a favorite....so many good ones!
ReplyDelete