Linda Lael Miller | Growing Up Western
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Her stories were great. Jesse James once slept in the family barn, and she clearly remembered the day the Dalton brothers tried to rob the bank in Coffeyville. The townspeople had gotten word that they were coming, and they were ready, on roof tops and between buildings, with rifles. The gang was annihilated--the shots were audible from the farm several miles outside of town--and later the bodies were displayed as a deterrent to budding outlaws. Grandma Wiley's father was ahead of his time, psychologically, and refused to take his children to town and parade them past those bloody corpses, like so many others were doing.
My dad and uncles were rodeo cowboys in their younger days--Uncle Jack Lael was a champion, rode at Madison Square Garden, and got to kiss Miss America, so I grew up around horses and tales of the baddest bulls and wildest broncos on the circuit, of course. When people ask me how I can make the old west seem so authentic in my books, I like to say it's because I was born and raised in it!
lindalaelmiller.com
Labels: harlequin, Linda Lael Miller, series, westerns
3 Comments:
Linda, love your books. Thanks for an interesting look into your life. I especially liked WANTON ANGEL, great book, plus the heroine had a good name. :-
Cowboys rock!
Wow, what rich history you have to draw from. I find stuff like that so fascinating, and it's fun getting a sneak peek into how some authors get their ideas. Pulling from real life situations makes it all the more interesting, I think.
Linda i posted my comment on the other page I hate i missed you yesterday on your blog I absolutley adore you my favorite book is PIRATES i was so drawn in that book i couldn't put it down hope you read my comment on the announcement page of your blog i told you how much me and my reading friends love you.
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