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RomanceRe: ~Welcome To The Romance Section (New Members Introduce Yourselves)~ by LaraDaniels(f): 2:28am On May 18, 2013
New here, but it's good to be here. My name is Lara Daniels and I write romantic novels set in Nigeria, and fictional countries in Africa. I also currently host a talk show on distinct radio - the #1 US Naija community radio right here in the United States. My second book, Love at dawn was an iTunes bestseller and my latest book, Lessons in love is set in the very heart of Lagos, Nigeria. It is out now at Amazon. Please check out my books at www.laradaniels.org, get your copy and please spread the word. Thank you.
RomanceThe Officer's Bride: Nigerian Romance Novel Set During Abacha's Reign. by LaraDaniels(op): 8:21am On May 17, 2013
An excerpt of 'The Officer's Bride' by Lara Daniels[center][/center]

Barracks. June 7, 1998

Eddy believed he had died and gone to heaven, but he also knew it was the honeyed scent of the child-woman who lay beside him that caused his deluded thought.
“Nafisah.”
“Hmmm?”
“What fragrance are you wearing?”
Nafisah’s lips curved into a half smile, and her shoulders moved with a slight shrug. “I can’t tell you,” she said in her native Fula. She’d lowered her gaze as she spoke, and her voice was soft. Shy. Eddy heard his own breathing turn somewhat uneven.
A woman never shares her secrets. He managed a smile as he remembered the saying. “You can’t, or you won’t?”
She ignored his question and turned away from him so she could recline on her other side. As she did so, the bedcovers shifted, exposing one curved, naked hip. His desire flared.
God! He needed her.
Shoving off the covers on his hair-dusted legs, he proceeded to hold her supple frame in his arms, but she leaped off the bed. He did the same, one strong arm reaching out to pull her into him. She eluded him again by taking a step back. One pair of playful brown eyes locked with his own intense gaze and before he could think of reaching for her again, she’d run into the adjoining bathroom.
“Come back here,” he growled, marching after her. Somehow, her swiftness reminded him of the Sultan of Sokoto’s well-bred horses, and in spite of the continued discomfort to his male member, he smiled again.
If she heard him, she didn’t show it. Quickly, she closed the bathroom door, the sound of a locking bolt pretty much telling him that she had shut herself in there. Her giggles floated through the door to where he stood. God! How he ached for her; his smile vanished, and a flat, crooked line replaced it.
“Come out,” he ordered. He raised his upper arms, so that they now braced both sides of the door. He could feel his eyes narrowing as he lowered his head, ever so briefly, to assess just how bad he really was. Da Allah, but Nafisah’s throaty laugh was doing strange things to him. Tender and feminine, her giggles made him long for the brackish air of Lagos beaches, with the wind blowing over his smooth, hairless scalp. He imagined laying her on the sandy shore and possessing her for himself until day break.
“Nafisah!”
Just when the idea of pummeling down the door began to take shape in his mind, she opened it. Taking a step back, his body trembled with a combination of his lust and love as she sashayed towards him. He found himself dropping to his knees in adoration. Money couldn’t buy everything, and one of them was the bewitching beauty of this child-woman polished in both her walk and her talk. Her brown eyes…her lovely form…God was definitely wide awake when he was creating this one.
He was still on his knees when she bent down to plant a chaste kiss on his forehead.
“We don’t have much time,” she whispered, her minty breath fanning his scalp.
Eddy glanced at the clock hanging on the wall and found himself agreeing with her. He knew, as well as she, that the bloodthirsty soldiers serving him were waiting…waiting to remind him that a higher calling, much stronger than the love for a woman called.
Without a word, he rose and lifted her in his sturdy arms. Gently, he placed her on the opulent bed, but his next action was anything but as he made love to her on the matrimonial bed that had been theirs for a day. His possession of her was volatile, a lovemaking that understood the urgency of time. Yet, she met him thrust for thrust, moaning out his name with his drive into her. He realized then that he was determined to sow his seed just in case he had no more nights like this to spend with her. The thought went through his mind, and he imagined his heart breaking, but he held off the dark emotions, determined to enjoy the woman with him. Right here, right now, all that mattered was his Nafisah – sweet, beautiful Nafisah who, five years ago, had also experienced the General’s reign of terror.
She came, pulsing hard around him, and he emptied himself – his heart, his soul, his whole being into her, her name on his lips as he found his release. A heavy sleep descended on him, but just before he surrendered himself to its serene arms, he admired the long eyelashes of his wife, now shuttered close. From her slow breathing, he could tell she was fast asleep. A satisfied smile curled his usually grim lips, and it was only then that he finally allowed himself to nap.
Minutes later, the antique grandfather clock gifted to him by the Sultan chimed, and he reluctantly got off the bed to put on his uniform. Once again, dark thoughts of the task before him clouded his mind.
Goodbye Nafisah.
“No,” he whispered hoarsely into the night; his gaze rested on the sleeping form of his wife and a dark frown marred his determined face. No. No goodbye. Never goodbye. And he kissed her, ever so gently, on her soft lips.
Giving his bride one last glance, he turned to stride out of their bedroom. He went down the stairs with a heavy heart, his meancholy growing when he stepped into the chilled air of mountainous Jos.
Suddenly, he swore under his breath. In the name of the most merciful, he would come back for her tomorrow and he would love her forever…until the cold hands of death seized him.
For now, duty to country called. And Abacha’s head would be rolling down by morning.
Insha Allah!

Available at [url]http://www.amazon.com/The-Officers-Bride-ebook/dp/B009RR175E/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1368775102&sr=1-1&keywords=the+officer%27s+bride.[/url]

Literature/Writing AdsRe: New Nigerian Romance Novel: Lessons In Love By Lara Daniels by LaraDaniels(op): 7:59am On May 17, 2013
Literature/Writing AdsRe: New Nigerian Romance Novel: Lessons In Love By Lara Daniels by LaraDaniels(op): 7:45am On May 17, 2013
This is an excerpt from Lessons in Love as featured on Information Nigeria:

We’re now in his kitchen. He lets go of my hand. I doubt if any cooking ever takes place here. It’s so clean. So new. So contemporary. It ought to be in a museum. I lean against the granite countertop while he strides across to the very modern stainless steel fridge – I’ve not seen the likes of this before; in magazines, maybe. From where I stand I see the refrigerator is well stocked – all kinds of flavored drinks and a wide variety of assorted snacks. He mechanically procures a coke and tonic water from the fridge, empties it into two tall glasses which he has retrieved from the cabinet above the fridge. Then he reaches over to the wine cellar and brings out a bottle. He twists off the cap and shortly pours it into the glasses. He carries both cups and turns to face me. His eyes glow with something I can’t decipher.
“Here,” he says, handing me one of the drinks. He is close enough for me to smell his crisp, mesmerizing scent, and frankly, it disconcerts me.
I eye him doubtfully. Truth be told, I’m nervous. I’ve told this man I want him to sleep with me and he hasn’t given me a reply.
He takes a long swig of his drink, then places it on the counter top and gives me a quizzical stare. “Are you okay?”
I shrug, trying hard to tamper down this mortification that’s washing over me in waves. “You’ve not said anything Jimi,” I say.
His eyes burn into mine. “Tara, cut me some slack. You’ve stomped me with a request that’s a little disturbing…something out of character for you. A man needs a drink.”
Disturbing? What’s all this self-righteous talk? “But you were so willing to say yes yesterday,” I say bravely. “You didn’t need a drink then.”
“Tara, yesterday…I was speaking without thinking, something I rarely do. You were upset and defensive. I don’t know, I lost it. ” He stops and grimaces. “When I said sex mechanics yesterday, you do know I wasn’t asking you to sleep with me, right?”
I nod. “I do.” In hindsight, I realize it was one of those awkward situations I get myself into where the conversation spirals out of control.
“Look, I don’t know how long you’ve had sex but the way you wrote about sex in Tomorrow and Lagos Blues, it’s just … implausible. For two people who supposedly love each other, there was no tenderness there.”
I roll my eyes. We’ve been here already. He has made me listen to the comments of other readers. Why are we rehashing how bad of a writer I am when it comes to love scenes?
“So when I said sex mechanics,” he continues, “I meant…” he rubs his hand on his head, struggling to find his words. “Crap,” he spits out. “I don’t know what I meant. Tara look, you are the writer. Do what you need to do to get your material. Just make sure it’s good material.”
I frown, shaking my head. “But Jimi, I’m doing what I need to do to get good material.”
He gives me a blank stare like he has no clue about what I’m saying.
“I’ve never really been in love before.” Well, until now. “I’ve also never been intimate with anyone before and I’m asking for your help, and you haven’t given me a reply.”
“What?” He whispers. I think he’s about to implode. “What do you mean you’ve never been intimate with anyone before?”
I ignore his shocked expression and trudge on. I am a desperate woman on a desperate mission and I’ve got to air my piece, now that I still have the courage to say it.
“Look Jimi, all I know is that yesterday you were so willing. Today, you’re…..I feel like you’re trying to let me down nicely. I’m no charity case. If you don’t want me, tell me and I’ll go ask someone else to do me the favor.”
I sense his menace before he voices it. “Over my dead body,” he says, and before I can take my next breath, he pounces on me.
Literature/Writing AdsNew Nigerian Romance Novel: Lessons In Love By Lara Daniels by LaraDaniels(op): 7:43am On May 17, 2013
Fourteen months ago, Tara Olu-Browne quit her well paying job to follow her heart: Become a full time romance writer. Her decision is paying off, until she agrees to write for Black Desire, a new romance publisher set to turn out books that will appeal to a West African audience. Black Desire is headed by business mogul, Jimi Akintaylor and while he says he enjoys Tara’s previous works, he is critical of her current manuscript calling the love scenes improbable. Tara is left with two choices: quit writing for Black Desire or suck up her pride and request pointers from Jimi on how she can improve on the love scenes. She chooses the latter, and realizes too late that she just signed up for some very practical lessons in love.

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