Black Friday Magic~Win 36 Romance Books and More!

🍂THANKFUL GIVEAWAY! 🍂 WIN 36 Romance Ebooks + $50 B&N Gift Card + A Kindle Fire ENTER NOW ♥   https://www.ellewoodspr.com/romancegivea...

Wednesday, May 8, 2019

#TBT WHEN HOCKEY INVADED THE SOUTH… A LOOK BACK AT BOOM BOOM GEOFFRION AND THE 1972-73 ATLANTA FLAMES

When the National Hockey League awarded an expansion franchise to Atlanta Hockey, Inc. on November 9, 1971, ice hockey was an unknown entity in the land of Bulldawg football and Braves baseball. The mere mention of ice sends panic rippling through Southern minds—rightfully so—and the thought of someone actually skating on that surface while attempting to play a game that seemed the combination of basketball, soccer, and roller derby provoked extreme skepticism. When Bernie “Boom Boom” Geoffrion was signed as Head Coach of the new franchise signed in May 1972, the news received little notice in Atlanta. The naming of a coach for a nameless hockey team meant little to those in the South.
Two weeks later Atlanta Hockey, Inc. became the Atlanta Flames, and in less than six months Boom Boom Geoffrion became a Southern sports personality equal in stature to contemporaries Henry Aaron or Pete Maravich.

AN INSTANT SOUTHERN GENTLEMAN

Geoffrion immediately bonded with the South. His gruff, authoritative disposition and flair for success impressed a town conditioned to mediocrity in its professional sports. The native of Montréal, Quebec, promised excitement on the ice, at the very least.
And so it was that a first-year expansion team, whom experts had predicted to win just three games all season, set a league record for points earned by an expansion club and impudently challenged and demolished traditional NHL powerhouses. When the experts questioned the reasons behind this unprecedented success, the finger always pointed towards Bernie Geoffrion.
Geoffrion maintained that he was not surprised the team won games. Rather, he was surprised that the collection of veterans and young players quickly coalesced into a team. Geoffrion liked to brag that there were “no superstars on my hockey club. My boys stick together.”

GEOFFRION DEMANDED RESULTS

When it came to ice hockey and the Flames, Geoffrion was satisfied with nothing less than success. At practice, he could be found on skates, standing in the center of the ice, whistle in mouth, regulating the team’s activities by the high-pitched notes. At the first sound of the whistle, players began to circle the rink slowly, rhythmically, sticks held as a tight-rope walker clutches a baton for balance. Another note increased the speed. Bodies began to bend over, sticks began to move back and forth quickly in front of the players to aid speed. Unemotionally, Geoffrion sounded yet another note. The speed increased dramatically. Skates moved faster and faster and faster until the bodies blended together, encircling the rink and Geoffrion in a red and gold blur.
A final note sounds, and the skates abruptly twist sideways, spraying ice high into the air, stopping the players in their tracks. An instant later, they’re headed in the opposite direction, responding to the sound of the whistle. A previous night’s loss always left the Boomer disgruntled, and he would warm his players not to eat before practice. Pucks were dropped on the ice, and players began taking shots on goal or moving the pucks up and down the ice. Geoffrion was not content to observe. Grabbing a stick, he would join the players. A quick flick of the stick and Keith McCreary found the puck he had guarded so preciously just a moment before moving up the ice with the Boomer. A series of sharp moves faked the skates off Rey Comeau and Boom Boom had his puck. Rookie sensation Jacques Richard was slammed into the boards, wrestling briefly before surrendering rights to his puck. And so Boom Boom continued, methodically defeating star and novice alike, stealing the puck from men twenty years his junior.
Next, he turned to the men who guard the nets. “Take me on!” he’d taunt goaltender Phil Myre or Dan Bouchard. Seven pucks lined the blue line, and Geoffrion began to fire in rapid succession. The pucks whistled off the stick, moved at a velocity that gave credence to the claim of 100 miles-per-hour, and flew at Phil Myre, who held the lead in Goals Against Average most of that season. The first shot missed the net and slammed into the boards with the resounding boom that many years before had earned Geoffrion his nickname. The second Myre warded off with his glove hand. The other five were in the net before Myre could move.
Watching, many wondered why this man was no longer playing, 42-years-old or not. It was obvious why he was once the most feared man in the league, was fifth on the all-time scoring list in 1972, and why he was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in August 1972.
After a highly successful 16-year career with the Montreal Canadiens and the New York Rangers, Geoffrion retired to coach the Rangers. Midway through the first season, he was forced to resign when plagued by severe stomach ulcers. Three years later he accepted the post with the Flames after promising his wife Marlene he wouldn’t become sick again.

HOCKEY EMBRACED BY ATLANTA FANS

The transition from French Canadian to Southerner found favor with Geoffrion, whose omnipresent French accent contrasted sharply with the Southern drawl. Atlantans adopted Geoffrion as a hero, commonly greeting him with ten-minute standing ovations at speaking engagements. He was accorded respect, and—inconceivable in Atlanta—little second-guessing by local media.
In its very first season, Geoffrion’s Flames competed for the Stanley Cup Playoffs, in contention until the final games of the season. Club officials had hoped to sell 2,000 season tickets that first season. Ten thousand season tickets were scooped up by the novice hockey fans, leaving just 5,000 seats available for single game tickets. “Get your tickets before the freeze,” a tag line before the inaugural season had begun, turned into a prophecy as fans were turned away by the thousands.
Geoffrion saw his role as coach as instilling confidence in his players. Confidence was key to his—and his Flames’—success. Would that formula work today—the ability to command respect, dish out humility when necessary, and ensure the players’ confidence in themselves and their coach? Perhaps. This much is certain: Bernie “Boom Boom” Geoffrion and his first-year expansion team made believers of the NHL and ignited hockey fever in the South that memorable season 47 years ago.
A final note—In those days, sell-out games did not guarantee financial success. There was no national—or even regional—television revenue, there were no NHL-wide promotions, no Winter Classics. There were just teams like the Flames with a loyal base of fans who would pack the arena game after game, and still lose money. The Flames had no Ted Turner to rescue the team and keep it in the South. Many hearts were broken the day the Flames left the Omni for Calgary. Geoffrion and many of the original Flames made their homes in Atlanta, staying long after their coaching and playing careers were over.
When The Boomer lost his final match—with cancer—on March 11, 2006, those same hearts broke again. Atlanta had lost a legend and more importantly, a beloved friend.
© 2019 Robyn M. Ryan

Monday, March 18, 2019

The Book Readers Demanded~Healthy Scratch

Once the Clearing the Ice Trilogy concluded with This Piece of Our Being, readers immediately requested more hockey romances featuring characters who played a central role in Caryn and Andrew’s saga. One of the most requested characters, Lauren Gentry kicks off the new spin-off series, Tampa Suns Hockey, in Healthy Scratch.
If you’ve read any of the books in the Clearing the Ice Trilogy, you know that Lauren’s an independent and success-oriented person who’s likely to blurt what’s on her mind before she considers the consequences. Well, true to her nature, Lauren certainly took control of her story and traveled in a direction I never anticipated! That’s one of the best benefits for an author—at least for me! You may think you know the general plot structure…but many times as characters develop, they throw a curve ball at your plot and you find yourself writing something you had not considered. I’ve learned to go where the main characters lead and just enjoy the journey!
Dealing with cyber-bullying never once played a part in the Healthy Scratch I thought I’d create. But suddenly I found myself taking a look at adult bullying, especially online, and discovered the topic did play a large factor in Healthy Scratch. Likewise, I didn’t know the many layers that created the relationship-adverse Lauren Gentry, nor did I anticipate her journey to confront her demons and understand her past. Many authors call this style of writing “pantsters” (writing by the seat of your pants) as opposed to the more traditional method of developing structured outlines and detailed character descriptions before beginning that first draft. Honestly, I’ve hated outlining since I was in middle school—my brain just doesn’t work that way. So, as they say, you play the hand you’re dealt!
Just in case you missed the “New Release” promotion for Healthy Scratch, you’ll find the details below. (Who’d imagine that Facebook would go dark, along with its family of apps, on the day after we released Healthy Scratch.) 
As a little Saint Patrick’s Day Flash Sale, you can grab This Piece of My Soul for just $.99 through March 17. That’s a savings of $3.00—maybe enough to enjoy your favorite green beverage this Sunday!
Yes, I’m already collecting suggestions for the next book in the series. Feel free to add yours after you’ve read Healthy Scratch!

Friday, March 15, 2019

I Heart YA Books: #NewRelease for #SportsRomance "Healthy Scratch: T...

I Heart YA Books: #NewRelease for #SportsRomance "Healthy Scratch: T...:                                   Healthy Scratch by Robyn M. Ryan is the hockey romance you've been waiting for! AVAILABLE NOW! A...

Tuesday, March 12, 2019

Friday, March 1, 2019

Music: An Author's Muse

Buy now!

Music sets the muse in motion…at least in this writer’s experience. When you need to concentrate on a task, do you have a go-to playlist? For me, playlists set the mood and are far less distracting than the radio or television in the background—or silence.
Yes, silence is distracting. You hear all the little things you normally don’t notice because you’re usually surrounded by some kind of noise. Birds chirping~What kind of bird it that? Is it that bird perched right outside the window. Lawnmowers~Don’t you just love the smell of freshly cut grass? Who’s having their lawn serviced today? A siren in the distance~What happened? I hope everyone’s all right. Was there a wreck? My dog snoring~Since when does Kenzie snore? As you see, it doesn’t take much to get me off-task.
Just by chance, I discovered that music provides a soothing, non-intrusive background when writing. It sets a mood, depending on the genre you choose. While writing The Clearing the Ice trilogy, I often listened to two of my favorite artist’s albums. You may not know this artist if you live in the US, but in Quebec and Europe, he is a mega-star. We discovered him by chance during a visit to Paris. Garou (Pierre Garand) is a French-Canadian singer with a voice that is very conducive to writing romance. He sings in both French and English, but that doesn’t matter one bit. Most of the time, I don’t even realize which language he’s using. It’s the tenor, the tone, and the mood his music evokes that counts.

GAROU’S MUSIC SETS THE MUSE

His 2008 English album Piece of My Soul and a recent collaborative album Forever Gentlemen provided the muse needed while the books’ plot developed, changed, then fine-tuned once more. And then there were the edits…round one…rounds two…three…four… His strong, sexy, sometimes raspy voice kept me plugging away. And when that break is long overdue, listening to him sing is pure blissful relaxation.
Music Sets The MuseMusic Sets the MuseWe were lucky to see him perform during the Montreal International Jazz Festival in an intimate setting, The Metropolis club. That evening sizzled the entire two —three hours he sang. This is the same star who performs in sold-out mega-venues in Europe and Canada… there in a small club, giving everything he has to his audience.
 Pre-Order Now for March 12 Delivery

He wants out of the friend zone…she doesn’t believe in happily ever after.

Relationships are not in Lauren Gentry’s playbook. The only kind she’s willing to consider are friends-with-benefits and even a red-hot and sexy hockey player like Dave Martin isn’t going to change that. Right?

When those chocolate brown eyes threaten to melt her defenses she has to remind herself that demons from her past could rise up at any moment. Which is going to be pretty hard to do, since she loses herself every time they touch.

Dave used to love the benefits that came easily to professional athletes; especially when they were in the form of puck bunnies who only wanted one night. But when he meets the pint-sized girl with bewitching green eyes and sun-streaked auburn hair his outlook suddenly changes. 

He wants forever with Lauren. Now he just has to convince her.

Can Lauren risk everything for the man she’s secretly been falling for? Or will her past stop her from taking a chance on love?


Healthy Scratch—book #1 of the Tampa Suns Hockey Series—is a standalone romance whose main characters’ lives are intertwined with those introduced in The Clearing the Ice Trilogy. You don’t need to read the trilogy to enjoy Healthy Scratch. The book stands on its own, promises HEA, and no cliffhangers! To heighten your enjoyment of the Tampa Suns Hockey Series, you may wish to read The Clearing the Ice Trilogy.

 Pre-Order Today