Showing posts with label #spices. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #spices. Show all posts

Monday, November 23, 2020

Romance Means Kisses by Elva Cobb Martin

If you write or aspire to write romances, you will know the importance of learning how to describe romantic kisses. As Christian writers we want to show romantic passion, but it’s not that easy to do in the Christian market. Anybody can warm up their pages with blatant bedroom scenes, but it takes skill to heighten the romantic tension in a book with only a look...a kiss...or even an almost kiss. 

I highly recommend two authors who have taught me much about romance and “kissology.” Susan May Warren has a great workbook available on Amazon that I treasure, How to Write a Brilliant Romance. (Kiss and Tell I think was the earlier version and the one I have.) And Julie Lessman, in my opinion, is the queen of romantic tension and kisses. A blog series of hers, I think she did on Seekerville, is in my file that I refer back to often, Sixteen Suggestions to Warm up the Pages with Romantic Tension.  

I personally love the first heady kiss between my hero and heroine. 

Here’s a scene from my just released novel, Georgia Ann, English Rose, of the first kiss and reaction. You always need a reaction. Georgia Ann is Book 2 in my Charleston Brides series. 

He (Samuel) touched a tendril of her hair curling on her shoulder. 

She gazed into his shining jade eyes so close to hers. 

His glance fell to her lips, and he drew her nearer. Slowly he bent and pressed his mouth to hers. 

Fireworks exploded in her head and travelled down her frame. Her arms came around his neck without forethought. The kiss deepened until she felt transported on a soft, wispy cloud. 

Suddenly he released her and stood. “It’s time to go back.” He reached a hand to help her stand, but she couldn’t. Her knees buckled. 

He chuckled and held her against him for warm moments. Her cheek pressed into his shirt and the spicy scent of cloves enthralled her. Did all his clothing carry that delectable scent now? "

Then there is another type of kiss like this one when my hero Samuel first sees Georgia in the sultan’s dungeon. It’s a kiss of sorrow and imminent danger. Up to this moment she had thought him dead from his earlier ship wreck. And I found a photo that helped me see my captured heroine. 


Samuel knew the moment Georgia understood he was at her cell door. 

 Her body stiffened on the pallet. She sat up and stared toward the cell door. Tears overflowed her eyes. She arose and stumbled toward him. They clutched fingers through the bars. 

His heart jumped into his throat at her loveliness even in her rough Turkish slave garment. Her hair, parted in the middle, hung down her side in a thick blond plait. Silky curls, escaped from the braid, framed her lovely face covered with tears. 

“We thought you were dead,” she whispered between shuddering, repressed sobs. They kissed through the metal bars, and Georgia staggered as if she might fall, but Belle grabbed her around the waist and held her erect. 

Another favorite kiss of mine is the “almost kiss.” 

This scene comes from Marisol, Spanish Rose, Book 1 in this Charleston Brides series. One night Marisol is discovered as a stowaway on her indentured master Ethan’s ship—with her six-month old son, Samuel, and a servant girl. Captain Ethan loses his usually gentle nature. 

"What is going on in that head of yours, Marisol, to bring your baby and Amy aboard my ship, upsetting all my crew?” He gave her a little shake and looked at her with such a derisive expression, her temper flared. 

She stomped her booted foot and, to her surprise, smashed down on his. Hard. 

He growled and pulled her to him, scrunching her bouffant skirt. His tight, bearded face came within inches of hers. Manly, warm breath feathered across her cheek. “Now that kind of attack will never do, my Spanish lady. Maybe for a snake, never for a captain. Did you mean to do that?” His blazing eyes held her captive as much as his arms. His glance fell to her lips. 

Her knees threatened to fold, and she couldn’t breathe. She tried in vain to pull away from the warmth emanating from his encircling arms and firm chest. “No, I promise I didn’t, Ethan. Please let me go.” She couldn’t prevent the tremor in her voice. 

He released her, and her knees buckled. 

He chuckled and caught her elbows to steady her. 

New strength flowed to her limbs, and she pushed away from him. “Let me go back to my cabin, sir, I have a plan to help you rescue your sister, but we can talk about it tomorrow.” 
In the daylight. 

So work on it. Get those romantic kisses in your romance and elicit those sighs. 

Georgia Ann, English Rose Blurb 
The lure of the legendary Spice Trail beckons, but he may never find a spice more precious than the treasure he left in Charles Town. 

Two Charles Town men love Georgia Ann Cooper—Samuel Vargas and his step-brother, Joshua Becket—but only one both intrigues and infuriates her. Even though he’s a dangerous budding patriot and a privateer—or more likely pirate—Samuel fills her dreams and waking moments. 

When he leaves Charles Town for high sea adventure on the legendary Spice Trail, she determines to push him out of her thoughts and her graces. A task made easier when she sets out on her own journey to England on one of her father’s merchant ships. 

Samuel Vargas is determined to make his own way in the world, not live in the glow of his parents’ escapades in Charles Town and the Spanish Main. There’s no better place to earn his fortune than the Spice Trail and along the Barbary Coast of the Mediterranean. But the adventure becomes more than he bargained for when at Tripoli he stumbles across a familiar face from Charles Town in a sultan's dungeon, and he’s forced to use all his abilities to save the life of the woman he’s been trying to forget. 

As their paths intertwine on a journey filled with Barbary pirates, intrigue, and romance, only love and the grace of God can overcome the past and ignite a new beginning for Georgia Ann and Samuel. 
                                                             ***
Thanks for stopping by. I’d love to have your feedback and how you describe a great kiss. And please do share this on your social media by clicking on the small icons below.



Elva Cobb Martin is a mother and grandmother who lives in upstate South Carolina. She is president of  ACFW-SC Chapter. All her novels have spent time on Amazon's 100 Bestseller's list for Women's Religious
Fiction. 

Link to Georgia Ann, English Rosehttps://amzn.to/3lYhueR (click on redirect link              to go to Amazon page)
Connect with Elva

Friday, February 22, 2019

Researching a Novel - Spices Part 3: Nutmeg's Blood-Soaked History

by Elva Cobb Martin

As a review, the Spice Trade refers to the trade between historical civilizations in Asia, Northeast Africa and Europe.
Spices such as cloves, cinnamon, nutmeg, cassia cardamom, ginger, pepper and turmeric were known and used in antiquity for commerce.


NUTMEG
Nutmeg and New York
The Spice Trade brought great riches to Arab, Indian, Venetian, Portuguese, Dutch, and Spanish traders. It once brought death to residents of the Banda spice islands over a nutmeg monopoly. In 1603 the Dutch East India Company (known as VOC) ousted the Portuguese control of nutmeg on these islands.

Here's an interesting tidbit in the history of nutmeg. The English fought the Dutch over control of this spice. England finally handed their island of Rhun over to the Dutch in exchange for a swampy island trading post in North America, an unattractive property known then as New Amsterdam; today as Manhattan Island.


Nutmeg's Boodbath
Meanwhile, the Dutch East India Company, now in control of the Banda islands and its valuable main export, nutmeg, enforced a bloody monopoly. Anyone suspected of selling nutmeg outside the company faced the death penalty. Some still tried to do so and in 1621 the VOC leader, Jan Coen, launched an attack against the Bandanese. Forty local leaders were beheaded and the systematic slaughter of all males over the age of 15 took place. Others were taken from the island and sold into slavery.
The population of thousands was reduced to 600. To replace the dead and deported workers, VOC brought in African slaves.

Through this merciless monopoly, the Dutch East India Company became immensely wealthy. By 1669, it had 50,000 employees, an army of 10,000, about 200 ships and paid its shareholders unbelievable dividends.

Breaking the Dutch Nutmeg Monopoly
A French missionary and horticulturalist named Pierre Poivre snuck into the Banda Islands in 1769 and stole some nutmeg seeds and tiny trees. He took these back to the island of Mauritius and created a botanical garden. The British swept in and took the Banda Islands and starting growing nutmeg trees in their tropical colonies. Soon, Granada, in the Caribbean, became the world's second most important source of nutmeg.

Like many other spices, nutmeg is one of those fragrant additions to food that brings a little kick of warmth and curious complexity that, once tasted in a dish, can't be done without.  Chinese and East Indian cultures use it as a curative and aphrodisiac, as well as flavor enhancer.

Health Benefits of Nutmeg
One ounce or 28 grams of ground nutmeg is a lot – just a teaspoon can very effectively flavor an entire batch of oatmeal raisin cookies. But this amount demonstrates its nutritive benefits. Manganese is the clear winner as far as content, at 41% of the daily recommended value. It delivers an amazing array of advantages within the body, from blood clotting and regulating the blood sugar, to metabolizing carbohydrates and absorbing calcium. It also helps form tissues, bones, and sex hormones.

Who knows, nutmeg may play a part in my current wip. Since it is set in about 1760, my story would be right in the middle of the battle against the Dutch monopoly of this spice.

Today nutmeg is available everywhere and it's inexpensive. But it's original price to get to us was costly in lives and heavy in greed.

Thanks for stopping by. Please share by clicking on the small icons below and I would love to get your comments.

Blessings,
Elva Martin


Elva Cobb Martin is vice-president of the South Carolina Chapter of American Christian Fiction Writers. She is a former school teacher and a graduate of Anderson University and Erskine College. She has two inspirational novels published with Lighthouse Publishers of the Carolinas. Summer of Deception, a contemporary romantic suspense, and an historical romance, In a Pirate’s Debt. Both have spent time on Amazon’s 100 Best Sellers List for Women’s Religious Fiction. She has indie published a Bible study on Amazon, Power Over Satan, on the  believer's authority in Christ. Decision, Charisma, and Home Life have carried Elva's articles. She and her husband Dwayne are semi-retired ministers. A mother and grandmother, Elva lives in South Carolina. Connect with her on her web site http://www.elvamartin.com,on Twitter www.twitter.com/ElvaCobbMartin; Facebook http://www.facebook.com/elvacobbmartin;  and Pinterest https://www.pinterest.com/elvacobbmartin    
 Link to her romance novels and non-fiction works on Amazon:http://amzn.to/2pOgVHI





Friday, February 15, 2019

Researching a Novel - Part 2 The Spice Islands & Cloves

by Elva Cobb Martin

I love researching stuff to make my novels richer and help readers learn something new while enjoying my historical Christian romances. My current wip will involve my hero sailing for spices to trade in the 1700's. 

The history of spices reveals a hazardous, exciting tale spread over centuries of daring, courage and greed. 

The Spice Islands or Maluku Islands lie in the Indonesian Pacific archipelago, north of Australia, south of Thailand,China, etc. You can see them in the bottom right corner of the map below.













Arab traders introduced cloves to Europeans around the fourth century but sought to keep their sources secret. The Portuguese explorer, Vasco da Gama, broke their monopoly by his voyage to India around the tip of Africa in 1497, and their later 16th century explorers found the islands themselves.


One of the Spice Island native traditions was to plant a clove tree when a child was born, symbolically linking the child to the tree's life. 

The clove tree is an evergreen that grows up to twelve feet tall with large glossy leaves and crimson flowers in clusters that when ripe and dried become the cloves like we use in cooking.




In the 17th century the Dutch took over the islands and eradicated the clove trees from all the islands except Amboina in order to drive up the spice's scarcity and price. As a result, cloves became worth more than their weight in gold.

Now how will I weave some of this research into my current novel? Consider the danger and the great rewards in trading for spices. My hero Samuel Vargas will sail on a spice expedition with hopes of making a fortune that will buy a plantation in Charleston so he can settle down and marry my heroine, Georgia Ann Couper. But his capture, on the way, by the Spanish, will throw a wrench (maybe I should say an oar) in that plan. And grieving Georgia Ann, who was told his ship sank with no survivors, will have a devastating adventure herself when her father sends her on a trip to England to relieve her grief.

Think Spanish galley slavery and Barbary pirates! But also think high romance and HEA.  ( :

Thanks for stopping by. Please do share by clicking on the small icons below. And remember when you use cloves again to stick in that ham, or use the powdered form in an apple pie--a lot of "stuff" happened over centuries to get this spice so readily available on our kitchen shelves.

Blessings,
Elva Martin


Elva Cobb Martin is vice-president of the South Carolina Chapter of American Christian Fiction Writers. She is a former school teacher and a graduate of Anderson University and Erskine College. She has two inspirational novels published with Lighthouse Publishers of the Carolinas. Summer of Deception, a contemporary romantic suspense, and an historical romance, In a Pirate’s Debt. Both have spent time on Amazon’s 100 Best Sellers List for Women’s Religious Fiction. She has indie published a Bible study on Amazon, Power Over Satan, on the  believer's authority in Christ. Decision, Charisma, and Home Life have carried Elva's articles. She and her husband Dwayne are semi-retired ministers. A mother and grandmother, Elva lives in South Carolina. Connect with her on her web site http://www.elvamartin.com,on Twitter www.twitter.com/ElvaCobbMartin; Facebook http://www.facebook.com/elvacobbmartin;  and Pinterest https://www.pinterest.com/elvacobbmartin    
 Link to her romance novels and non-fiction works on Amazon:http://amzn.to/2pOgVHI



Friday, February 8, 2019

Researching a Novel: The Spice Trade Part 1

by  Elva Cobb Martin


For my current novel (wip) I have done a lot of research into spices and found the subject most interesting.

In this picture the ancient Silk Road (red) and the Spice Trade Route (blue) spurred exploration and triggered the Age of Discovery to find new routes to these valuable commodities.

I want to talk about the Spice Trade in this series of blogs.

The Spice Trade actually drove the world's economy from the end of the Middle Ages well into  modern times. But the economical importance of spices, recorded in the history of Kerala, referred to as "The Spice Garden of India," goes back as far as 3000 BC which marks the beginning of the spice trade.

Wars have been fought on land and sea and nations have been made wealthy (and at least one annihilated) in the battle for control of the spice trade. 


The search for cinnamon, ginger, pepper, cloves, nutmeg, turmeric, cassia, in the ancient world gave rise to unbelievable tales. To satisfy the curious, to protect their market, and to discourage competitors the spice-source countries like India and Asia spread fantasy tales of danger, magic, strange animals, and snake infested glens. Sinbad the Sailor stories grew out of this mindset.

For us in the USA, one most important fact stands out about the Spice Trade. The Americas were discovered (1492) due to Spain sending Columbus to find a western route to India ( from the Atlantic to the Pacific) to reap in the rewards for these valuable spices desired by all Europe.

The danger-fraught routes at that time (1400's) from Europe were through the Mediterranean and Egypt (Alexandria) overland to the Red Sea and down the Persian Gulf, then sailing over the Indian Ocean to India and the Spice Islands. The Spice Islands are located in the Indonesia area of the South China Seas, not far from Vietnam. Here's what it looked like.





















Hope I haven't bored you, but I love discovering history like this and sowing bits into my novels. My goal for my historical Christian Romance novels is that readers enjoy a warm ROMANCE, high adventure, and learn something new. How about the spices we love and how they came to us?

Thanks for stopping by. Please do share by clicking on the small icons below, and I would love to hear your comments. Don't miss the next parts of this series as we tell the amazing history of a few or our most beloved spices--and how to weave some of it into a romance novel to bless your readers and whet their appetites.

Have a Romantic Valentine's Day next week! And read an exciting romance. See my links below. (plug, plug)

Elva


Elva Cobb Martin is vice-president of the South Carolina Chapter of American Christian Fiction Writers. She is a former school teacher and a graduate of Anderson University and Erskine College. She has two inspirational novels published with Lighthouse Publishers of the Carolinas. Summer of Deception, a contemporary romantic suspense, and an historical romance, In a Pirate’s Debt. Both have spent time on Amazon’s 100 Best Sellers List for Women’s Religious Fiction. She has indie published a Bible study on Amazon, Power Over Satan, on the  believer's authority in Christ. Decision, Charisma, and Home Life have carried Elva's articles. She and her husband Dwayne are semi-retired ministers. A mother and grandmother, Elva lives in South Carolina. Connect with her on her web site http://www.elvamartin.com,on Twitter www.twitter.com/ElvaCobbMartin; Facebook http://www.facebook.com/elvacobbmartin;  and Pinterest https://www.pinterest.com/elvacobbmartin    
 Link to her romance novels and non-fiction works on Amazon:http://amzn.to/2pOgVHI