Carolyn Brown has been a well loved author for years and her newest is getting lots of love.Β And I’m so happy she’s here today to tell us all about it!
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Hello, everyone and thank you for inviting me to your site today!
My granddaughter is getting married this fall, and sheβs not one of those size six girls who can walk into wedding dress store, try on a dozen dresses and find the perfect dressβespecially when she has her heart set on a black lace dress for her wedding. When we began to shop for her dress, I wished for a custom wedding shop that catered only to women who wore a size fourteen or larger. So I created one calledΒ The Perfect DressΒ and set it in the little town of Celeste, Texas. This summer I plan to bring my old Singer sewing machine out of retirement, and make my granddaughterβs black lace wedding dressβjust the way she and I will design it!
The Perfect DressΒ is not a real place so donβt go to the local doughnut shop in Celeste and ask about it, but the town, the characters and the shop were all very real to me while I was writing about it.
Speaking of characters let me introduce you to Mitzi. Sheβs and her two plus sized friends, Paula and Jody, have dreamed of putting in their own plus-sized wedding dress shop for years. Now itβs a reality. Theyβve bought an old two story house at the edge of Celeste and hung out their shingle.
Jody is a thin vegetarian now, but when the girls were in high school, she was a big girl just like her friends. Sheβs living proof that a woman will do anything for love, but when love goes awry, sheβs sure glad that sheβs got Mitzi and Paula to support her.
Paula is carrying a big secret. The three women have shared everything since they were little children, but she canβt talk about her secret, not when both her friends are in the middle of drama themselves. She has to be the strong one to share Jodyβs sorrow and Mitziβs happiness.
Fanny Lou, Mitziβs grandmother, is an eccentric old gal with lots of advice that sheβs not one bit shy about spreading around. Sheβs the mother role for all of them, constantly popping into the shop with a box of doughnuts, or the local gossip.
Lately Mitzi has been feeling like maybe her βperfect familyβ is missing someone… perhaps the perfect man. She hasnβt seen him since high school, but that doesnβt mean that Mitiziβs heart doesnβt go pitter-patter for this awesome single dad. Graham towers above Mitzi, who is almost six feet tall. He has twin girls, who are also plus sized. He feels the sparks, too, but questions whether Mitzi could ever love some big guy who already has teenage daughters.
There is definitely a gap between the teenager girls, who help out in the shop, and Fanny Lou, the granny, and the three best friends. But true friendship knows nothing about ageβitβs love, support, and unflinching loyalty towards each other, no matter what the age.
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by Carolyn Brown
Release Date: April 16, 2019
Publisher: Montlake Romance
Blurb:
In the small town of Celeste, Texas, Mitzi Taylor has never quite fit inside the lines. Nearly six feet tall, flame-haired, and with a plus-size spirit to match every curve, sheβs found her niche: a custom wedding-dress boutique catering to big brides-to-be with big dreams. Taking the plunge alongside her two best friends, sheβs proud theyβve turned The Perfect Dress into a perfect success.
Just when Mitzi has it all pulled together, Graham Harrison walks back into her life, looking for bridesmaid dresses for his twin daughters. A still-strapping jock whose every gorgeous, towering inch smells like aftershave, the star of all Mitziβs high school dreams is causing quite a flush.
For Mitzi, all it takes is a touch to feel sparks flitting around her like fireflies. She can just imagine what a kiss could do. Grahamβs feeling it, too. And heβs about to make that imagination of Mitziβs run wild. Is it just a hot summer fling, or are Mitziβs next designs for herself and seeing her own dreams come true?
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Excerpt:
Mitzi rushed back to the sewing room, where the hum of two sewing machines filled the air. βGraham Harrison just came in the shop to set up an appointment for his two daughters. He said they only live a few houses up the street from us. He looked like a bull in a china shop sitting on that pink sofa. And of course he didnβt even recognize me, but I sure knew him the minute I laid eyes on him.β
At the mention of that name from the past, work jolted to a halt.
βAll the girls in high school swooned over him, including Mitzi, but she hasnβt told us if heβs still as sexy as he was back then.β Jody took a bowl of salad from the fridge along with a plate of vegetables that she stuck into the microwave to heat.
βHeβs aged very, very well, and Iβm having cookies,β Mitzi said.
βSmart girl,β Fanny Lou said. βLife is short. Eat dessert first. So you had a little crush on Graham?β
βEveryone did,β Mitzi answered.
βNot me. I was always in love with Lyle,β Jody said.
βWell, according to what I heard at the church bake sale today, Graham moved his daughters here to Celeste because they were being fat shamed down in Greenville. One of them knocked a girl on her butt, blacked both eyes, and bloodied her nose with one punch. It was the last day of school and they said they were going to suspend her for the first two weeks of next year for fighting,β Jody said.
βShe should get a medal, not suspended,β Mitzi fumed.
Fanny Lou took a gallon jug of sweet tea from the fridge. βWho all wants a glass?β
Three hands went up.
She filled four glasses with ice and then tea and carried them to the table. βI remember when he went to work for his dad at the Cadillac dealershipβright after he and Rita got married. His dad gave him a job on the lowest level, and he had to work his way up. Rita was furious because she thought theyβd get a big house and a new Caddy every year. Stupid woman figured since his folks had money that he had an open bank account.β
Paula took the ham and cheese containers from the fridge while Mitzi pulled a loaf of bread from the cabinet. βYou eating with us, Granny?β
βIβll eat with you and Paula, but I donβt want any of that stuff Jody is having. I donβt eat fake meat. Iβll eat what I want and die when Iβm supposed to. Slice some of them tomatoes I brought in here earlier. And Iβd rather have bologna instead of ham and mustard instead of mayo,β Fanny Lou answered.
βMe, too,β Paula said. βI want one like hers.β
βI was thinking the same thing.β Mitzi set about making three sandwiches.
So Graham was divorced and raising girls on his own. Bless his heart for getting them away from a school that bullied them because of their size. Mitzi could relate to the girls. But then, so could Jody and Paula. Sheβd always figured that Jody adopted her own modern-day hippie style to combat those feelings of insecurity. Paula had retreated into superstition. Mitzi had just plowed her way through emotions and other kids, spending a lot of time in the principalβs office for fighting.
She pushed all that to the back of her mind, put the sandwiches on plates, and carried them to the table. βYβall know that this job for Ellie Mae could turn into a big thing. I bet her older sister will be the maid of honor and her mother will want a fancy dress.β
βThatβs what youβre in business for, isnβt it?β Fanny Lou said. βMan, this brings back memories. Friday night was bologna sandwich night when I was a kid.β
βWhy?β Jody asked.
βBecause Mama always cleaned house on Friday, and she didnβt have time to make a big meal,β Fanny Lou answered.
βFunny how an hour of beading takes forever and our noon hour goes so fast.β Jody pointed to the clock.
βGood Lord!β Fanny Lou finished off her sandwich and grabbed a cookie. βIβve got an appointment with my CPA at one and itβs a fifteen-minute drive to Greenville. See you girls later. You have my permission to flirt with Graham, Mitzi.β
Mitziβs cheeks began to burn. βI had a teenage crush on him. Iβve grown up since then.β
Fanny Lou winked as she headed for the door. βPaula, since you live with Mitzi, Iβm putting you in charge of being sure she takes her birth control pills every morning.β
Mitzi felt even more heat in her cheeks. βGranny!β
βWhen you get old you get to say whatever the hell you want to.β Fanny Lou closed the door behind her.
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Carolyn Brown is aΒ New York Times,Β USA Today,Β Publisherβs Weekly, andΒ Wall Street JournalΒ bestselling author and a RITA finalist with more than ninety published books. Her genres include romance, history, cowboys and country music, and contemporary mass-market paperbacks. She and her husband live in the small town of Davis, Oklahoma, where everyone knows everyone else, knows what they are doing and when . . . and reads the local newspaper every Wednesday to see who got caught. They have three grown children and enough grandchildren to keep them young. Visit Carolyn atΒ www.carolynbrownbooks.com.
Website:Β https://www.carolynbrownbooks.com
Facebook:Β https://www.facebook.com/carolynbrownbooksΒ
Goodreads:Β https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/13554.Carolyn_BrownΒ
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Giveaway:
$25 Amazon Gift Card and Digital Copy of Carolyn Brownβs THE PERFECT DRESS
https://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/07c2363f221/
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