My new Band of Bachelors, Book 2: Alex, releases next month. The heroine of this story, Sydney Robinson, is a beach volleyball player, seeking a new partner after her old one is injured. Of course she will meet Navy SEAL Alex Kowicki on a blind date, one of many he's allowed his bachelor buddies to arrange for him. Their first encounter is as an explosive and unusual affair involving zombies, popcorn with Junior Mints and soda. Not fair for me to give you all the deets.
It's the first time I've written a six foot four inch lady, and one who is taller than the leading man. She has an Amazon body, and isn't afraid to use it. And she's a complicated mess at first when the reader gets first introduced to her. She has her strong side, and her soft little girl side she doesn't let people see very often.
He watched her
sleep, as she hugged his upper arm, burying it into her chest, looking like
little girl lost, like she’d never let go. Her face with a soft crease between
her brows indicated perhaps she’d had a sudden bad dream. Maybe that’s what
wakened him. Carefully he used his other
hand, drawing the strands of brown hair from her forehead to watch her more
closely. She clutched his upper arm tighter, rolling her hips against his thigh
in her sleep.
I wrote about soccer players in SEAL's Goal in the Kindle World Game For Love. I spent hours and hours on the sidelines at soccer matches, even getting tossed for making a comment about a reffing call. For the most part, I behaved.
Bringing sports into my SEAL stories has been a fun adventure for me. There are so many similar things an elite athlete does, just like a Navy SEAL. The focus, the training, the working with teammates--all these things are similar and make for good content. How they get expressed, or not expressed, adds some tension to the romance. Competition can be a good thing. In a romance it can also be a bad thing.
I wrote this scene describing the fictitious gym called The Beach in my town of Santa Rosa. It's a gym, if I could have about $10M and some change to build, that would be a huge youth center and a boon to the community. It also will figure heavily in the later part of the book in a surprise twist. Here's the scene, as I saw it:
She arrived at the
Beach Inc. complex twenty minutes early. Already the parking lot was filling
with Suburbans as scores of high school girls teams poured into the main gym,
knee pads floating above their socks at their ankles.
Sydney
walked through the heavy glass doors and heard the roar of voices, whistles and
team shouts. The air was cool, electric with excitement, purpose. She could
smell the competitiveness hitting her flush in the face and she loved it. Drank
from it. Inhaling, she discovered she’d been holding up the entrance, so
stepped aside to let several young players and their chapperones enter.
Carly had
reserved a sand court, she’d told her. Sydney began to walk further into the
space. The two-story structure had perhaps a dozen traditional indoor courts,
on both floors. Large expanses of glass divided the playing areas, with skylights
bathing the whole interior in natural light. The state-of-the-art facility was
impressive.
Several
games were in progress. Sounds of whistles, the never-ending “sideout” and team
cheers echoed throughout the huge structure. Parents and other team players sat
on padded seats on risers instead of the standard metal or wooden benches
Sydney was used to.
A
Hawaiian-themed snack bar was down at one end of the building, near the four
sand courts. Beach Boy and Margaritaville music boomed while two attendants in
flowered Aloha shirts helped the customers. A short line of thin giraffe-like
girls waited for smoothies and bagels for breakfast. Sydney had been one of
them not too long ago. The squeal of an espresso machine pierced the air and
surprised her.
Sydney
smiled and shook her head. This was not what her growing up had been like.
She’d played in hot smelly gyms all over California, from brand new courts in
the Central Valley to dingy inner city courts lined with graffiti and exploded
toilets in the Bay Area and L.A. She’d attended summer camps at colleges that
didn’t have gyms as nice as this one was.
“Hey,
bitch!” Carly’s voice streamed across the room. “You ready to play, or are you
going to go have a smoothie?”
How about you? Do you enjoy reading about sports in romance novels, and if so, which sports? Do you like reading about men or women's sports, or both?
Sharon Hamilton
Life is one fool thing after another.
Love is two fool things after each other.
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