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Tammi
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Jun 20, 2014 06:08PM
I love the name Crockett. Then, I just finished reading Stealing the Preacher, but it is my favorite name of the four Archer brothers.
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Thanks, Tammi. I thought those names were fun, and a tribute to Texas. Glad you enjoyed Stealing the Preacher.Tammi wrote: "I love the name Crockett. Then, I just finished reading Stealing the Preacher, but it is my favorite name of the four Archer brothers."
Loved all the Archer books! I've never read a Novella before, but A Cowboy Unmatched was perfect. Sometimes I find myself rushing through thicker novels to see what happens, but with a shorter book, it's fun just taking time and enjoying it more. Two things: 1. Do you know who left the note and money for Neill to work on Clara's roof? 2. Please tell me you have more Archer stories in you just waiting to hit the pages :)
A Cowboy Unmatched was originally part of a collection entitled, A Match Made in Texas, which contained four novellas all centered around the fictional town of Dry Gulch, TX. Each of the novellas were tied together by a matchmaker who worked quietly behind the scenes. You might enjoy reading all the stories. An Unforseen Match by Regina Jennings, No Match for Love by Carol Cox, and Meeting her Match by Mary Connealy. Meeting her match is the concluding story that reveals the town matchmaker and shows her finally finding love of her own. It was a fun project!Unfortunately, the Archer stories are finished. It's so hard to say goodbye to them. Yet, I hope to create new stories that you will love just as much. My most recent release, Full Steam Ahead, pairs an obsessed scientist with a woman on a mission to save her father's business. Throw in a legendary pirate dagger, a runaway boy, and lots of exploding boilers, and you've got one crazy adventure.
The Archers will forever live on in my imagination, having children and grandchildren who continue the family legacy of love and laughter as they search out their own happily ever afters. :-)
Oh.... I see. Well, I look forward to those other stories then. I'll have to grab the book with all of them. I love Mary Connealy :). I'll find that matchmaker yet :) I've actually been saving Mary Connealy's trilogy of Montana Marriages for my vacation (which started at 3:30 yesterday). I'm breaking those books out as soon as I get to the gate at the airport Tuesday :)
Mary's fabulous. You'll love her Montana series. Have a wonderful vacation filled with lots of good reading. :-)
I absolutely love biblical names, and I love it when you use biblical names in your books! I find that, for me as a Christian, it's brilliant using biblical names with characters and incorporating a double meaning for their name into the story (for example, Jericho Tucker and Gideon Westcott, from your books), tying in their situation to the biblical story. But I also just like using biblical names anyway.The one name that makes me want to cringe is when "Evelyn" is used as a guy name. Take, for example, the British show "Downton Abbey". There's a character in there named Evelyn Napier, but they pronounce it as "Ee-vlin", so I didn't even know it was the same as mine (except missing an N) until I caught a glimpse of the name in the credits. So every time I hear that, I want to cringe, because I've always known it as a girl's name.
It must be strange to hear your name used as a man's name, Evelynn. There are several names in common use today that I knew more solidly as one gender, but over time they have switched to encompass both. I've had several girls come through my office lately with names that in my mind were definite male names. Connor was one. Never saw that as a girl's name before. Threw me off for a minute.
I had a neighbor named Dude.Meredith is another 1880s man's name that makes me do a double-take.
Great article! I like hearing the method behind your characters' names.


