A Sea of Green Unfolding, Book Three in The Long Trails series of unpretentious, eminently readable Historical Fiction by horse vet-author Lizzi Tremayne is my #SixSentenceSunday for the week.
Here’s the first bit of Chapter Five from 1862 Rancho de las Pulgas, near San Francisco, California…
Aleksandra didn’t cry, but she retreated into her own world again as the weeks passed. She did her part around the hacienda by rote. Her only moments of peace were found in her husband’s arms or with Dzień.
“It was good to see you at the table today, Aleks.” Xavier gripped her hands.
When you’ve lost everything, the only way to go is up…
Tragedy strikes in Aleksandra and Xavier’s newly-found paradise on their Californio Rancho de las Pulgas and newspaperman Gustavus von Tempsky invites them on a journey to a new life in New Zealand—where everyone lives together in peace.
Unfortunately, change is in the wind.
When they reach Aotearoa, they disembark into a turbulent wilderness—where the wars between the European settlers and the local Māori have only just begun—and von Tempsky is leading the colonial troops into the bush.
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The Hills of Gold Unchanging. Book Two in The Long Trails series of unpretentious, eminently readable Historical Fiction by horse vet-author Lizzi Tremayne is my #SixSentenceSunday for the week.
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Want to read an excerpt?
Here’s the first bit of Chapter Five from 1860 Utah:
The horses trotted through the rolling hills west of Great Salt Lake and on to the level plains again. Aleksandra and Xavier keep a close eye out ahead and behind. Johnny told her there hadn’t been any Indian trouble this far east. It had eased Aleksandra’s mind that Fish Springs station was untouched, “last time a rider went through there, anyway,” he’d added as an aside.
Travelers Rest and Rockwell’s passed without incident and ahead, the low roof of Joe’s dugout showed on the horizon.
“Haloo, Joe!” Xavier called out, not wishing to become afternoon target practice.
Book Two in The Long Trail Series: The Hills of Gold Unchanging
No one will stand in their way and live.
As the Civil War rages, secessionists menace California. Aleksandra and Xavier are trying to get back home—through the oncoming Civil War, the mining camps of 1860’s Nevada and California, and the Sacramento floods—to Xavier’s Californio Rancho de las Pulgas. Embroiled in the Confederate’s fight to drag the new state from the Union and make it their own, can Aleks and Xavier survive? The secessionists mean business.
A Long Trail Rolling is Book One of The Long Trails series of unpretentious, eminently readable Historical Fiction by horse vet-author Lizzi Tremayne. The beginning of Chapter 5 is my #SixSentenceSunday offering for today!
Contents
Would you like an excerpt? Here you go: From 1860 Utah…
Knuckles white on their rifles, the silent soldiers of Camp Floyd cheered as one when they recognized the oncoming horse as a Pony Express mount. Laughing nervously, they stood watching or slowly filtered back to the mess tent.
‘He’s way too early.’ Xavier hurried down the steps, his jaw tight, and grabbed the bridle of the heaving chestnut. After one look at the travel-worn rider, he glanced back at Aleksandra.
‘What’s going on?’ Aleksandra frowned at the pony.
Want to know what happens next? Find it here:
Book One in the series:
She didn’t expect to become a target…but she is one now.
Aleksandra is alone and running to prevent her father’s killer from discovering their family secret. Disguised as a Pony Express rider in 1860’s Utah, Aleksandra winds up in even deeper trouble when she rides full speed into the Paiute Indian War. With Xavier, her compelling Californio boss, can she escape the Indians on the warpath and evade the man who’s already killed her father—and set his sights on her?
Greener Pastures Calling, Book Ten of the Once Upon a Vet School series of unpretentious, eminently readable Contemporary Women’s Veterinary Fiction/Romance by horse vet-author Lizzi Tremayne is my #SixSentenceSunday for the week. This is your first post about this story!
Want to read an excerpt from the beginning of Chapter One?
Setting is
September 1992, Te Awamutu, New Zealand
Here you go!
After one look inside the cowshed at 25 Wharewhero Road, I didn’t think I’d ever be able to touch even my favorite Tip Top Chocolate Ice Cream again… not ever.
And that was before the putrid odor hit me.
“Eh, where’s the vet?” someone called from the pit between the cows and I peered down into the darkness. Sure enough, there was a little man in there, barely visible. His overalls were so crusted with unmentionables that he was hard to distinguish from the oily, black muck covering every surface of the shed—rails, floor, and halfway up the walls.
I swallowed hard and forced my gorge to stay down.
A new country, a great job, and a good Kiwi bloke.
Life couldn’t be better.
Until it gets worse.
Newly emigrated to New Zealand, equine veterinarian Lena wants a “good Kiwi bloke”, but they’re elusive as their nocturnal namesake. Her history with men is not, shall we say, salubrious.
Nigel’s avoiding females, unless they’re cows, horses, or his mother. After his first marriage, he won’t be responsible for anyone else’s life. Ever again.
Sparks fly when they meet, but not the first time, over the dirty instruments in a filthy cowshed. They’re made for each other… but then Nigel remembers where he first saw her. And then the questions start.
Just so you know, writers don’t always laze around all day, curled up with their keyboard in a pristine, cozy house…
I think for most of us it’s a juggle between our “other lives” and stolen time to write.
Some of us live on farms and work as well, and have children or grandchildren and older parents, too… as well as partners!
A case in point is yesterday…
I live on what’s called a “lifestyle block” in New Zealand. That means I have a TINY farm of 6 acres which costs me a lot of money, but I love it. There are now only about ten percent of the animals that were here when my boys were small, evidenced by the plethora of beloved animals I found when I had to go looking in old photos yesterday to try to find where the water lines ran… those which might have been exposed before we poured the concrete… but I digress…
It was a scorcher. (that means it’s hot, about 30 degrees C here today) Now to disconnect the house/farm water pump that I’d been fighting with for days (it runs for 15 seconds, stops for 38, then repeats. No wonder our power bill gave me a heart attack last month) I managed to get the alkathene fittings off, lugged the beast to the Landcruiser and off to town we went to drop it off for instant check-over in Paeroa, picked up half of a beast (White-Face was her name and she was 16 years old) along with my son, mail a packet of books to a library wholesaler (while worrying about the frozen meat… I don’t have air con in the cruiser. (She’s an old—600,000 km—farm model with no electric anything outside the engine and lights, so getting that meat home was kinda imperative), pick up my grandbaby from daycare, pick up the pump (which WAS working, YEAH!), and get home to put the now-asleep baby to bed.
It was probably because I had all the frozen meat to unpack and repack into the freezers that little Odin woke up as soon as I unclicked his carseat buckle…
Thoughts of the defrosting hundred kilos of meat in the car dancing in my head, I fed and changed the wee mite, giving thanks he was now 17 mos old and despite having to watch he didn’t wander the ¼ mile to the road or go play with the horse or cow, it was easier to unload all those big bags of meat with him happy and mobile.
When you look at it in the photo it doesn’t look like much… but it took this author and vet about 5 hours to get it right… did I mention the broken T-junction? or the end I broke off in the valve? Some people just shouldn’t be allowed a pipe wrench, much less two…
So, Odin helped me (I’m using that term loosely—I had to keep retrieving my big spanners and pipe wrenches) put the system back together. The question now became (as the pump wasn’t the problem), WHERE on the farm the leak could possibly be…
We don’t have a hard pan on this place. It’s a riverbottom. Near the bush. Which means we have lovely free draining soil that doesn’t hold water. Great in a place that rains over 140 inches a year. Not so great when you’re trying to find a leak. And tomos. Ever heard of a tomo? They’re underground waterways that pop up where they feel like in places like this… anything from an underground tiny stream to river. Big enough to lose big animals and tractors into. Certainly big enough to let water from a leak flow away to parts unknown… without leaving a trace above. Not ideal.
Working on pipes to make farm systems work is not much fun, but it’s like maths… you know when you got it right, anyway… for the time being.
So, back to it. The pump works. Tick.
Back to the drawing board for me…
Three lines (maybe more??? Oh no!) heading out for the farm and house.
I stared, twisting my lips, at the three inline valves I bought months ago but couldn’t bring myself to try to put them into the alkathene (a sort of a black hard rubber-plastic hosing) lines a foot and a half down in a ditch between the brick of the house and the BIG rocks I cemented into place to make the garden next to the footpath of exposed aggregate concrete. Not ideal when my two bad lumber discs go bad when I’m bending forward… which unfortunately was essential to the task… :/
Before that came “THE DAY BEFORE YESTERDAY”… (obviously, but still significant) when I spent the whole day digging trenches AROUND the water pump to try just where those pipes went… culminated in having to find the old pictures from long ago to see if any of them gave a hint as to where those pipes actually WENT.
It was fun going over the pics from 2000/2001/2002/2003. (Well damn. I just finally figured out how to get photos from iCloud onto FB, anyway!) 🙂 Some very cute kids… and lots of animals who were such an important part of our lives… Strawberry, Montoya, Bailey, Maya (still here, 17 now), Tango, Fred as a kitten (who’s also still here, but very old), Charlotte, and some people who are no longer on this earth, plus many who are.
Unfortunately, the culmination of this exercise was to discover the pipes ran straight down beneath the middle of the lovely exposed aggregate concrete my boys and I poured ten years ago… not ideal.
Authors Maybe Shouldn’t Have Pipe Wrenches…
SO, about putting in those valves… I had never broken an alkathene fitting before… but then I didn’t have (or couldn’t find) a pipe wrench. Did you know they’re breakable? Yep. Two. I backed off after that. By then Odin was hungry and tired. He no longer wanted to run around and it was getting dark. So we went inside and fed him. No bath, lucky little man, as no water, but after no nap, it didn’t take too very long to get him to go to sleep.
Now to finish my pipes!
IT ALL WORKED! The leak is still OUT THERE, but I now know it’s not 1-coming from the house (which had been a concern) and 2-not around the part of the farm where there was a lot of old blackberry to get through and find my old veggie garden). That leaves the main lines… I think I have an idea it’s where we recently buried a line… but it will take the ex-hubby’s tractor or a digger to get there. SO, can’t do anything about it today. A good thing. Then I can get more editing done.
YEAH!
Oh yes. And then I have a mobile equine veterinary practice too. Thank god there were no emergencies.
Hope you enjoyed a bit of my day! Back to writing… after get the little man up!
I loved my old covers (they were my babies, after all, my photos and I did the covers) but they didn’t say Historical Fiction at ALL! So I worked with the lovely author and cover artist Jessica Cale to create the new works of art! She’s working on the others, too!
If you’re a Booksweeps.com reader member and you’ve missed the Author Email Spotlight email on the 27th or if you haven’t joined Booksweeps yet, just join Booksweeps.com and find it on this page!
Just remember, for every Indie Author appreciates reviews so very much. Especially on Bookbub (The Best!), Amazon, and Goodreads!
Thanks in advance from every Indie Author!
I’d best stop and go search for water leaks and finish edits on the next one!
We had a wonderful time this month in the South Island of New Zealand to start the year off right! I hope you all had a wonderful end-of-year! We sure have!
Following a week of research in an SCA medieval reenactment camp near Christchurch, South Island, New Zealand, my (also-author) partner and I hired a mini camper-van and traveled the South Island giving author talks, selling books, and promoting my upcoming novels: Tatiana I and Somewhere Called Home!
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Edoras in the South Island
We left Christchurch and headed into the High Country… to look for Edoras, the stronghold of Rohan… it was awesome. Good little climb.
We also looked for Clydesdales and scenery up above Ashburton… found a lovely lake by which to camp! Morning Scenery…
South Island: Dunedin!
We began by traveling to Dunedin, where we visited our son at the University of Otago. Libraries of the South Island!
It was a great time. We went to a special place, researching, and then said so long and headed on to Gore—and the Gore District Library, the first library visit of our tour.
The enthusiastic readers and librarians were wonderful! Thank you so much to reader Sally, who instigated our visit there, and to librarians Penelope and Lorraine! We camped the next night in a freedom-camping site, then we went on to Arrowtown for its historic gold mining and historical Chinese miners village (more book research), before heading on to Lake Wanaka.
And the Lakes!
That night, we camped near Albert Town beside the Clutha River, then in the morning, returned to Lake Wanaka for a swim at a magical spot recommended by our son.
Westland District-Hokitika Library was our next stop, where we spoke with a large crowd of readers, some of whom were nearly moved to tears by some of the talk’s topics — mostly about some of the Māori history and their own personal family connections raised in discussing The Hills of Gold Unchanging. A few tears truly began with my very first reading of the dramatic beginning (i.e., I’d written it in the van on the drive from Wanaka) from a new story I’ve just begun from the Once Upon a Vet School series. It will be the first book in this age-relative set of tales of Lena, a gutsy equestrian who dreamed of becoming a vet—her life on the way and beyond. Book One is being written for 8 to 10-year-olds. You may have read some of Lena’s later stories in the Once Upon a Vet School books! Thanks so much to Head Librarian Natasha for all your help! After a truly exquisite dinner at The Kitchen Hokitika, we drove that night onto Westport, where Head Librarian Emma’s lovely mother Chris put us up at her Westport Spa Motel. Emma blushed as she told us how wonderful it is that her mother is supportive of her and her Buller District: Westport library. Library volunteer Sue Walsh (you stalwart!) was fantastic too! A lovely group of readers attended and as at our other talks, so many joined my VIP Readers Club. You can join too, on my website here!
We drove back toward Christchurch via Reefton, where discovered Alison Hale’s Hale Gallery, an exquisite equestrian and NZ rural artist! Her work is truly wonderful. I hope you can stop and see her when you’re by that way! And her STORIES!
Arthur’s Pass, South Island NZ
We stayed overnight at Arthur’s Pass and met some cool German tourists, then had a wonderful, if challenging, hike in the morning.
Christchurch South Island NZ
We drove on to Christchurch and finished our wonderful trip with an out of this world Phil Collins concert (complete with his 17 year old son on drums, after dinner with the fantastic family of our friend and fellow author Rebekah.
Lena Takes a Foal, Book Seven of the Once Upon a Vet School series of Contemporary Veterinary Fiction by equine vet turned author Lizzi Tremayne, is my #SixSentenceSunday for the week.
I awoke in darkness, shaking, the smell of molasses heavy and comforting in the air.
Bay mares, gray mares, screaming, bleeding.
I buried my head under my arms and hid from the dreams, but they wouldn’t go away.
I didn’t know if I slept or passed out, but someone was calling my name.
Lena Scott has a problem—one that might prevent her from graduating from veterinary school.
After a messy divorce, Kit Allen returns to his first loves—horses and his old veterinary school alma mater. He excels at imparting his knowledge to students and is determined to earn a tenure track position. Becoming involved with anything but a pager—ever—isn’t in the cards. Especially a talented and beautiful student in need of his assistance.
When Lena’s horse rears over backwards and lands on her, it has to be the dashing resident, Kit, who finds her. Luckily for her, she’s sworn off relationships after her last romantic disaster. She has more important things to worry about than sea-green eyes and rugged good looks.
Besides, if there’s one thing a veterinary school faculty frowns upon, it’s a relationship between a resident and a student…
Fifty Miles at a Breath, Book Six of the Once Upon a Vet School series of Contemporary Veterinary Fiction by equine vet turned author Lizzi Tremayne, is my #SixSentenceSunday for the week.
“Lena,” said the head ride veterinarian, Seth Latimer, the next morning, “I know you’re only here to do P & Rs, but can you please keep an eye out for metabolic problems?”
“Sure can, no problem.” I nodded.
“Specifically, we’ll be watching for dehydration, capillary refill time, and decreased gut sounds,” Dr. Latimer said, “and we’ve only got two vets here today, so we’re a little understaffed. With your Large Animal ICU experience, you’re a godsend.”
Horses bring them together. Their future looks rosy—it’s the present they can’t handle.
When equine veterinary student Lena and veteran pilot Blake fall in love, school and the past intrude. Add in a long-distance relationship, and things get just plain hard.
A grueling endurance race forces them to draw on their strengths and face their fears—together.
A Sea of Green Unfolding, Book Three in The Long Trails series of Historical Fiction by equine vet turned author Lizzi Tremayne is my #SixSentenceSunday for the week.
“Up until Melissandra got sick, you’ve seemed generally happier than I’ve seen you before, Aleks,” Xavier said, as they rode along together, checking the furthest fence lines for breaks.
Her brow furrowed for a moment, then she answered. “I have a family again,” she smiled at him, “and life has settled out. I’m even enjoying the time I spend doing “womanly” things, things I once despised.”
She chuckled and shook her head, then her face fell. “I’m just worried about Melissandra. I only left her today because Molly made me go.”
When you’ve lost everything, the only way to go is up…
Tragedy strikes in Aleksandra and Xavier’s newly-found paradise on their Californio Rancho de las Pulgas and newspaperman Gustavus von Tempsky invites them on a journey to a new life in New Zealand—where everyone lives together in peace.
Unfortunately, change is in the wind.
When they reach Aotearoa, they disembark into a turbulent wilderness—where the wars between the European settlers and the local Māori have only just begun—and von Tempsky is leading the colonial troops into the bush.
“Mama, why must we,” Emma twitched at her crinoline with a scowl in an attempt to keep it clear of the mud and manure in the middle of the main thoroughfare of Auckland, New Zealand, “wear the height of London fashion in this God-forsak—”
“Emma!” Mrs.Wyndham-Smyth hissed. “Ladies do not use that sort of language.” She flicked glances over both shoulders, her face paling.
Her daughter continued like she hadn’t heard her. “I thought we were moving to the wilderness when we came all the way to New Zealand and we’re still stuck in this filthy town. At least if we went to the provinces we could have some fun and not dress like trumped-up—”
“That really is enough, young lady.”
Emma took a deep breath to steady herself before she went on. “Tūī says we wear too much clothing. I agree. It’s steaming hot in these woolen dresses. We should dress like—”
“Heathens!” her mother declared. “You pay no mind to what the servants say. They are servants and we are their masters.”
She stared at her mother. “Tūī is my friend. She works for us, even though New Zealand is their land. The Māori’s land. I’m not sure why you treat them with the disdain you and so many others do.”
“It’s just the way it is.” Her mother tried to look indignant, but she seemed to be losing ground and stole more looks around her. As if her friends might be nearby.
“Anyway, I want to go live in the provinces. Coromandel Town seems a nice place.”
“The mines?” Mrs. Wyndham-Smyth’s eyes goggled and she turned a shade whiter. “Wherever did you hear that claptrap?” Her knuckles whitened on her shopping basket and she walked faster toward the market.
“From that nice Prussian newspaperman, ummm…”
“You mustn’t say ummm, my—”
Emma went on. “That Mr. von Tempsky whom Papa invited to supper last month.”
Her mother’s lips tightened. “He’s not a newspaperman any more. He’s leading our colonial troops into the bush… against the Māori. To ensure the successful invasion of the Waikato.”
“But…” Emma froze, then finally slapped her mouth shut a full half minute later. “That can’t be true.”
“True it is,” the woman said, turning back toward her. “And don’t let your father hear you say that. He’s the one who secured the commission for ‘The Prussian’ to help our army.”
“But we can’t…” Emma whispered. “It’s their land. They have all the land south of the—”
“Not any more.” Her mother gritted her teeth. “Seems the land in the Waikato has already been offered to the Australians and mercenaries who are coming to help fight.”
“Clear the way, prisoner coming through!” shouted a burly man. It was the jailor, bundling along a tall, dark man who would’ve been as handsome as Mr. von Tempsky if only he wasn’t so dirty and wearing manacles.
“Do you know who that is?” Emma whispered to her mother.
“It must be that Spaniard—Xavier Argolli or something, I think they said. The constable just caught him. He’s been running free after murdering his ship’s captain on the voyage to New Zealand.” She sniffed. “Imagine that.”
The prisoner looked up then and his eyes met Emma’s. He shook his head and just had time to whisper something before his captor dragged him past.
“Find von Tempsky,” had been his words.
Emma stared after the prisoner. He must’ve heard her mention the Prussian’s name. “Excuse me, Mama, I’m not feeling well,” she said as she spun on her heel and raced for home, already planning what to pack in her saddlebags. She’d find him.
Contents
Excerpt from A Sea of Green Unfolding:
December 1863, Auckland
Crowned by a spired white church, a high, rocky headland jutted out of the coastline to their port side. The captain of the whaler steered wide of the breakwater extending from the point and headed his ship into the next big bay.
“Auckland,” the captain said, nodding his head at the sprawling city behind the ships filling the inlet and docked at the wharves.
Upon the headland ranged several cannon and many one- and two-storied stone buildings. A Union Jack, flying from a flagpole, presided over the site.
“Complete with fort?” Xavier said.
“Fort Britomart, on the point of the same name.” Thompson nodded at the cluster of buildings. “Built on an old pā site.”
“Big ditches around the outsides and all,” Xavier said, staring up at them as they passed.
“They’d be the original Māori trenches,” the captain said, never taking his eyes from the rocks to their port side. “We’ll dock at Queen’s Wharf,” he added.
The city of Auckland spread out before them, rising up the gradual slope beyond the bay. The fort was sizable, but the church dominated the skyline behind Point Britomart. Warehouses and stores lined the road running along the water’s edge and houses covered the hills in the background.
“That’s a bit grand for this little place,” Xavier said, pointing to the church.
“Eh? Oh, that’s St. Paul’s Anglican. It was the first one here. It’s been there for twenty years, already. And up there,” he jutted his chin up the hill a little further, “is St. Patrick’s. Take your pick. They’re both grand.”
“I think I’ll find Aleksandra before I start looking around at churches,” Xavier said, with a grin.
The sounds and smells of port hit him when they edged up to the wharf and threw out their hawsers to the waiting men. As soon as the boat was moored, Xavier grasped the hand of the captain and thanked him profusely, then climbed down the rope ladder to the dock.
“Von Tempsky shouldn’t be too hard to find,” the captain called down after him. “Just ask at Fort Britomart. They’ll know where to find him.”
“Thanks again,” Xavier said, waving, as he headed for the point.
The rough scoria of the road surface grated on the soles of his boots as he passed the church. With its tall spire and elegant lines, it was truly beautiful. Certainly a finer building than he’d expected to find here. Perhaps it wouldn’t be such a backwater, after all.
His legs were proving a bit unsteady from his time at sea, so he stretched them out as he walked, nodding to passers-by, many of whom turned their faces away as he neared them. He grinned, despite himself. He must smell like a fiend after being on ship for three months, and the last of that on a whaler. Once he set the wheels in motion to find von Tempsky and Aleksandra, he’d get a room and a bath. He could almost feel the warm water of a scented bath enveloping him.
“Hold there,” the guard at the entrance to the fort challenged.
He held up his hands and stood still, coming out of his daydream.
“Hello,” Xavier said. “De veras, of course.”
“State your name and business,” he barked.
“Xavier Argüello, looking for Captain Gustavus von Tempsky. I understand he may be near Drury?”
Several men looked up at his comment, brows narrowed.
“Right this way,” the guard said, giving him a sideways glance, his hand on his sword hilt.
The other men melted away, then the guard stood aside for him to precede him into a stone building.
The door slammed behind him and metal scraped upon metal.
Xavier turned, but the guard was nowhere to be seen.
He surveyed the waiting room. A five by five room, with only a wooden bench against one wall and a high, barred window.Some welcome.
If they were trying to discourage visitors, they were doing a good job. He knocked on the door. A shiver ran up his spine when no one replied. He tried to lift the latch, but it wouldn’t budge. Even when he shook it. “Hey, you’ve locked me in! Guard!”
Only silence, then retreating footsteps on the boardwalk outside the door.
It finally clicked.
This was a gaol cell. But why? Had von Tempsky disgraced himself?
Xavier sat down to wait patiently, but eventually he rose to prowl from one wall to another. He pulled the bench before the grilled window, but it didn’t give him enough height to see out, so he put it back and continued to walk the walls.
There must be some mistake.
A Sea of Green Unfolding
When you’ve already lost everything, the only place left to go is up…
Tragedy strikes in Aleksandra and Xavier’s newly-found paradise on their Californio Rancho de las Pulgas and newspaperman Gustavus von Tempsky invites them on a journey to a new life in New Zealand—where everyone lives together in peace.
Unfortunately, change is in the wind.
When they reach Aotearoa, they disembark into a turbulent wilderness—where the wars between the European settlers and the local Māori have only just begun—and von Tempsky is leading the colonial troops into the bush.
Lizzi grew up riding wild in the Santa Cruz Mountain redwoods, became an equine veterinarian at UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine and practiced in the Gold and Pony Express Country of California before emigrating to New Zealand.
Busy raising two boys, farming, and running her own equine veterinary practice, she never thought she’d sit down long enough to write more than an article. A serious injury, however, changed all that, and planted her in one place long enough to jump-start her new career as an author!
With Lizzi’s debut historical romance, A Long Trail Rolling, she was: Finalist 2013 RWNZ Great Beginnings; Winner 2014 RWNZ Pacific Hearts Award for the best unpublished full manuscript; Winner 2015 RWNZ Koru Award for Best First Novel and third in the 2015 RWNZ Koru Long Novel section; and Finalist, 2015 Best Indie Book Award. She’s working on her eighth story!
When she’s not writing, she’s swinging a rapier or shooting a bow in medieval garb, riding or driving a carriage, playing in the garden on her hobby farm, singing, cooking, practicing as an equine veterinarian or teaching high school science. She is multiply published and awarded in special interest magazines and veterinary periodicals.
Lizzi loves the friendships she’s developed with the rest of the Belles. She adores how they’re so progressive, organized, and fun. Best of all, they are all willing to put themselves out there, together, to achieve more, create more, than would be possible going it alone.
Lizzi loves to connect with her readers. How would you like to connect?
Sourdough is in my heart. So is yogurt. My mum got me started, so we can all blame her.
We all love historicals, right? I guess so, or you probably wouldn’t be here on this page.
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Sourdough and Fermentation
For many hundreds (thousands) of years, people have been using fermentation of various sorts to improve or prolong the useful life of their foods (think beer, ale, bread, sourkraut, pickling, etc). Indeed, to prolong their own life, they used fermentation… the water wasn’t safe to drink in many places and even children drank ale or beer instead.
My heroines and others in my stories tend to make sourdough bread. The old miners in California were ever called Sourdoughs because it was so commonplace in the ’49’er’s life. Sometimes it was the only thing they had to care for and keep warm! There’s an old “Sourdough” who shows up to Aleksandra’s family’s cabin when she’s only a little girl.
Aleksandra herself makes a hearty rye sourdough as well as a potato sourdough, from which she makes Zurek. Yummmmmmm. If you’ve ever been to Poland, you’ll understand my obsession with Zurek. I’m so obsessed that it became the recipe inside the back of my first novel, A Long Trail Rolling. It’s my own recipe, gleaned from the many I’ve tried to make! Thanks Elliot, for tolerating my need to try the different forms of Zurek in nearly every Polish town we entered.
You DO know there’s a recipe in the back of each of my books, right? Well, there is. :)
Sourdough and Yogurt Starters
I grew up making sourdough breads and yogurt (Thanks Mum), and eat homemade yogurt every morning with my uncooked oats, raisins and nuts. As I recently discovered my body is much happier when gluten free, I started playing with my sourdough starter and GF flours, as well as letting my sourdough starter buggies eat up the gluten in regular flour. Both seemed to work for me. I’m not deathly GF, so I get away with it, it seems. 🙂
SO today I looked up gluten free sourdough starter and look what I found?
But wait, there’s more! Not just sourdough, but a plethora of other fermented foods!
I’ve had a little-used bottle (Thank you, Trudy!) of water kefir grains, which I had NO idea what to do with her, despite Trudy’s airy wave and “you just drink it” when I asked. 🙂 (sorry T, guess I’m just dense!) Now I see there’s a book for it, and even better, it’s free!
Not just that, there are a whole handful of free eBooks to be had at this wonderful site!
Couldn’t wait to join!
SO here you go!
Sourdough and Fermentation: Free eBooks!
Check it out. I just joined their newsletter list and got my free ebooks:
Aleksandra gave Rogan his head and they bolted down the hill. She buried her fists in his thick mane and let the colt find the fastest way down.
Four of the riders spun, training their guns on them as they neared them. “Mr. Hanks, Ephraim! Stop! It’s me, Aleksandra!” she shouted at the top of her lungs.
Ephraim, a Pony Express station keeper, was a longtime friend of her family. “Hold fire, boys!”
Want to know what happens next? Find it here
Book Two in The Long Trail Series: The Hills of Gold Unchanging
No one will stand in their way—and live.
As the Civil War rages, secessionists menace California. Aleksandra and Xavier are trying to get back home—through the oncoming Civil War, the mining camps of 1860’s Nevada and California, and the Sacramento floods—to Xavier’s Californio Rancho de las Pulgas. Embroiled in the Confederate’s fight to drag the new state from the Union and make it their own, can Aleks and Xavier survive? The secessionists mean business.
Book One of The Long Trails series is horsey historical fiction by an equine vet-author Lizzi Tremayne is my #SixSentenceSunday offering, A Long Trail Rolling.
ALEKSANDRA SCOWLED, but gave it up with a little grin. ‘Guess I didn’t think. Papa always said I didn’t think.’ Eyes filling, she glanced up at Xavier, then a tear ran down her cheek.
‘Look Aleks.’He tilted his head with a smile, reaching out to help her from the floor, ‘I’d prefer you in a whorehouse even less than I want to see you riding.’
Want to know what happens next? Find it here
Book One in the series:
She didn’t expect to become a target…but she is one now.
Aleksandra is alone and running to prevent her father’s killer from discovering their family secret. Disguised as a Pony Express rider in 1860’s Utah, Aleksandra winds up in even deeper trouble when she rides full speed into the Paiute Indian War. With Xavier, her compelling Californio boss, can she escape the Indians on the warpath and evade the man who’s already killed her father—and set his sights on her?
A special Valentine’s Day anthology for you from the Bluestocking Belles!
Anything can happen in the magic of music and candlelight as couples dance, flirt, and open themselves to romantic possibilities on the day made for lovers.
The Master of Ceremonies announces a great ball to be held on Valentine’s Day in the Upper Assembly Rooms of Bath. Ladies of the highest rank—and some who wish they were—scheme, prepare, and compete to make best use of the opportunity. Dukes, earls, tradesmen, and the occasional charlatan are alert to the possibilities as the event draws nigh.
But anything can happen in the magic of music and candlelight as couples dance, flirt, and open themselves to romantic possibilities. Problems and conflict may just fade away at a Valentine’s Day Ball.
25% of proceeds benefit the Malala Fund.
In five original stories, Jessica Cale, Sherry Ewing, Jude Knight, Amy Quinton, and Caroline Warfield bring you Valentines From Bath. 25% of proceeds benefit the Malala Fund.
Beauty and the Bounder: He’s a liar and a fortune-hunter . . . and exactly what she needs.
The Earl Takes a Wife: It began with a memory, etched in the heart.
The Beast Next Door: In all the assemblies and parties of Bath, no-one Charis met could ever match the beast next door.
The Umbrella Chronicles: John and Emma’s Story: A serious-minded, scientific man of learning seeks a complex and chaotic practitioner of all things superstitious who will upend his well-ordered life.
Candles in the Dark: He lights up the Assembly Rooms even as his love lights her life.
Contents
Preorder this Valentine’s special now from the links below!
About the Bluestocking Belles
The Bluestocking Belles (the “BellesInBlue”) are ten very different writers united by a love of history and a history of writing about love. From sweet to steamy, from light-hearted fun to dark tortured tales full of angst, from London ballrooms to country cottages to the sultan’s seraglio, one or more of us will have a tale to suit your tastes and mood.