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@staceykeith
(via Why You Love Diabolical Villains by Stacey Keith)
Why You Canât Resist A Bad Boy [A Stacey Keith Guest Blog]
The following is a guest post from DREAM LOVER author @staceykeith!
I love bad boys. And chances are, you love them, too.
Itâs all that oozing testosterone, the allure of playing by nobodyâs rules.
Whenâs the last time you broke rules, bucked the system, or even gave someone a firm, resounding no?
If youâre like me (and chances are, weâre a lot alikeâI heart bad boys, you heart bad boys; I heart reading, you heart readingâneed I go on?) you spend way too much time making nice with folks.
Even your garden-variety bad boy makes nice with no one. Sometimes not even the heroine.
Secretly, we eat it up.
Keep reading
Itâs the perfect metaphor for this wacky adventure called life. #writerstuff #nerd #novelist #life
Joyce: Welcome to HEA, Stacey! Please tell us a bit about your new release, Sweet Dreams. Stacey: Sweet Dreams isnât âjustâ a romance. Itâs a love story between a driven, damaged, but spectacularlyâŠ
My interview just came out with USA TODAY! SO much fun!
Itâs almost here!Â
Stacey Keith's About Me Video
Some dreams are too perfect to come true...
www.StaceyKeithAuthor.com
SWEET DREAMS, a love story
The bell above the door rang. Coralee rolled her eyes. âWhat do you want to bet itâs the same group as last time, come back for seconds?â
âIâll take care of it. Why donât you get started on the dishes.â Maggie wiped her gloved hands on her apron and glanced at herself in the mirror next to the walk-in freezer. Her long dark hair was pulled back in a bakerâs snood. Flour streaked her left cheek. She wiped it with the back of her wrist and then went out front where two men and a woman waited, looking wildly out of place in her cozy country bakery.
The taller of the two men wore a tux and the woman wore a full-length apricot silk Cubana dress. Maggie saw the clothes before she saw the faces. When she glanced up at the man, her heart nearly stopped.
Wow.
Maggie realized suddenly that her apron had cake batter on it and she wasnât wearing a speck of makeup. She couldnât breathe properly because all the air had left the room. There was a fluttering in her chest she hadnât felt in a long time, coupled with an insane desire to turn around and run back into the kitchen. But that was stupid. What was sheâfifteen?
âIâm guessing you folks are here for the wedding,â she said with her best professional sparkle. âMay I help you?â
The man frowned at her, which brought his piercing blue gaze off the menu on the wall above her head and directly to her flushed, perspiring face. God, how she hated her reaction to him, hated that while he assessed her coolly, everything inside her heated up like a thermometer plunged into boiling water.
âYou have coffee here, right?â the second man asked. He wore an expensive-looking suit with a red power tie and a matching pocket square. His nails were spotless, which wasnât something you saw all too often in farm country. Â
âWe have coffee, espresso, cappuccino and iced coffees,â she said, wishing suddenly that she had a nice outfit on. And didnât smell like a doughnut. And knew more people who dressed like this.
âTwo coffees,â Power Tie replied. âBoth black.â He turned to the blonde woman, who shrugged slightly. âMake that three coffees.â
Just being near the man in the tux made her nerve endings stir and tingle. Nobody that sexy had passed through Cuervo in a long time. She practically had to force herself to remember that good-looking men were bad news. If a man was handsome, you could count on him for two things: to screw you over and to break your heart.
She gave her tingly feelings a violent shove to the side.
It was hard not to feel sorry for the woman he was with. Poor thing. Sheâd never see it coming.
Maggie inserted a portafilter into her Italian espresso machine. She turned the portafilter to the right and locked it into place. The machine was a thing of beauty, all chrome and knobs and levers. Even with her back turned, she could study the guy in the tux in the machineâs reflective surfaces. Yet the longer she looked, the more annoyed she became with herself. Men were trouble. A lot of trouble. She knew that. So why keep torturing herself?
But there was something stern and mysteriously self-assured about him that drew her in. He struck her as a man used to giving orders and to getting his own way. His hair, sandy blond, was cut short on the sides and slightly longer on top. His face was broad across the jaw and cheekbones, which saved him from being merely pretty.
Maggie didnât like pretty. She liked men who looked like menâwho could wear work boots as well as tuxes.
Mostly, she liked men you could depend on not to cheat on you the minute some woman flashed them a smile.
She pressed the tamper down on top of the coffee grounds and squeezed hard, wishing she could do the same thing to her brain. It had taken her over three years to get her life back together again, and now it was exactly what a life was supposed to be: boring. The formula was simple, really. You worked. You spent time with your family. You knitted ridiculous sweaters for your pug. Rinse, lather and repeat. What you didnât do was let yourself eyeball other womenâs boyfriends.
Rule #1: Never look twice at a good looking man who had a woman of unspecified importance standing next to him.
Rule #2: Never look twice at a good looking man, period.
Maggie finished making the coffee and then turned around with the three coffees wedged inside a cardboard carrying tray. She was aware that his eyes were on her and felt an electric sizzle zinging beneath her skin. But he practically oozed the kind of alpha maleness that set her teeth on edge. And he clearly had money.
Men with good looks and money? Youâd have to be certifiable to date someone like that.
âThatâs quite a cake,â he said, surprising her.
He had a deep voice, like Sambucca mixed with cream and then set on fire.
Maggie made the mistake of gazing directly into his eyes and felt the hair raise up on her arms. His eyes were glacier blue and surrounded by dark bristly lashes. A woman could lose her religion drowning in those things. âI beg your pardon?â
He nodded toward the kitchen where the cake sat like a parade float. Coralee stood next to it, staring at him.
Maggie didnât like what was happening to her. His intense gaze felt as though he could see through her somehow, past the bossy efficiency, the big mouth, and her tendency to keep all men at a distance. For a second, the world fell away and it was just the two of them. She felt his lazy, dangerous maleness like she felt her own heartbeat. Then she blinked and the moment was gone.
âComfort and ease are soft chains. You swap truly living for cable television and the bleak ugliness of modern American life. How will you ever discover what you are made of unless you put yourself to the test? âWe think we have time, but we donât. What we have is conditioning. We are conditioned to go to work, get married, have kids, pay our taxes, not ask questions.â
stripped down: a naked memoir by stacey keith
Stripped Down: A Naked Memoir
by Stacey Keith
Genre: Autobiography, Memoir
STRIPPED DOWN: A Naked Memoir is a look back at a surreal world kept carefully hidden from public view. This chronicle of life in the skin trade follows the meteoric rise of Stacey Keith, a girl scarcely out of her teens whose eye-popping assets launch her from wet T-shirt contests to the catwalks of Houston, strip bar capital of the world.
Almost overnight, she is discovered by a famous porn star, who Svengalis
her onto the pages of Playboy, Penthouse, and dozens of other menâs magazines. While strutting her stuff onstage and across the country, Stacey makes the fateful decision to head to Hollywood. Sheâs got everything a girl could want: fame, attention, endless piles of cashâŠbut no idea what awaits her.
With Internet porn overtaking menâs magazines, everyone from her Mafia-boss road manager to her smarmy talent agent pressures Stacey to do more than just flash her flesh. Uber-boob filmmaker Russ Meyer verbally abuses her; rocker Don Henley tries to use her. Yet through it all, from the warped misogyny of Playboy to the S&M dungeons of the Pacific Palisades, Staceyâs dark, self-deprecating humor will leave you laughing, crying and rooting for her at every step of the way.
**Only .99 cents!**
Goodreads * Amazon
Stacey Keith is the award-winning author of the Dreams Come True series (Kensington Books), DREAM ON, SWEET DREAMS and DREAM LOVER, in addition to A WEDDING ON BLUEBIRD WAY with New York Times Bestseller authors Janet Dailey, Lori Wilde and the talented Allyson Charles.
Twice a Golden Heart finalist, Stacey has won a Maggie, two Silver Quills, a Jasmine, a Heart of the Rockies, and over fifteen other first-place finishes in Romance Writers of America contests.
An avid writer of fiction, nonfiction, poetry and short stories, Stacey doesnât own a television, but reads compulsivelyâand would, in fact, go stark raving bonkers without books, which are crammed into all corners of the house. She now lives in Civita Castellana, a medieval village in Italy that sits atop a cliff, and spends her days writing in a nearby abandoned 12th century church.
The two things she is most proud of are her ability to cook pasta alla genovese without burning down the kitchen and swearing volubly in Italian with all the appropriate hand gestures.
Website * Facebook * Twitter * Instagram * Pinterest * Amazon * Goodreads
Follow the tour HERE for exclusive excerpts, guest posts and a giveaway!
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My secret source of writerly inspiration ...
So close, you can taste the spumanti.
I like stories about working-class heroines. Maybe it's a push-back against all the tinsely "Falcon Crest" television I grew up with in the eighties--the over-s
I like stories about working-class heroines. Maybe it's a push-back against all the tinsely "Falcon Crest" television I grew up with in the eighties--the over-starched George Jetson snap-on 'dos, the glittering cocktail gowns, the sobbing betrayals.
Blech.
Give me a nice girl who maybe hasn't had it so easy. Who doesn't have a lot of money. Who's learned something about herself because golden opportunities weren't handed to her at birth.
That's exactly why I came up with Cassidy Roby, the heroine of DREAM ON.
On blog tour now. Click here if you want to read this 98 review/5 star memoir for 99 cents. https://www.amazon.com/Stripped-Down-Memoir-Stacey-Keith-ebook/dp/B0110VVQ14