Risky Regencies

the original, riskiest, and forever the friskiest Regency Romance Blog

For the latest on-dit sign up for the Riskies' newsletter at

riskies@yahoo.com (please put NEWSLETTER in subject line)

Winners of
TO TASTE TEMPTATION
by Elizabeth Hoyt!


Doglady, Stefanie, Alyssa, Debora Dennis, Crystal, Jane, Kathy, Kammie, Santa and Traveler

Please email riskies@yahoo.com to claim your prizes

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

We're ULTIMATE!

See this book here? It's part of the Idiot's series, which I'm sure you're all familiar with.

This particular entry, THE ULTIMATE READING LIST (written by Shelley Mosley, John Charles, Joanne Hamilton-Selway, & Sandra Van Winkle), has lists of book recommendations in lots of different categories. The purpose of the book, as the authors state in their preface, is this:

As librarians, we love to read, and helping readers connect with the right books is one of the things we enjoy most about our jobs. So by putting together this list of old and new favorites, we've taken all the hard work out of your task of finding a good book.

There is a whole chapter of romance lists, and -- hurrah! -- one of these lists is devoted to Regency romance. Two "classic" Regencies come first -- Heyer's The Grand Sophy and Chesney's Minerva -- and then we get the list of seventeen recommended Regencies from the past ten or fifteen years.

When I first saw this list, I scanned it looking to see if I thought they did a good job -- e.g. did it have Carla Kelly, Barbara Metzger, etc on the list -- and to see if I knew anyone on the list.

So I read along, nodding my head happily -- Jo Beverley, Mary Balogh, good... Emma Jensen, Loretta Chase, Metzger, Kelly, Kerstan, Harbaugh, all good... Oh, look! Amanda's on that list!!!!

I was very happy. Amanda McCabe! Yay! And they picked The Errant Earl -- one of my favorites! Of course, I know Amanda deserves to be on the list, but she hasn't been around as long as, say, Jo Beverley or Mary Balogh, so some folks might not realize it. (Yes, silly people do exist.)

So then I was happy, and went ahead and skimmed the rest of the list. And stopped short.

No, that wasn't my name, was it? No, I must have misread. My eyes blurred, and I read the second Carla Kelly as a Cara King, didn't I?

Didn't I???

Nope. I'm on the list.

I was totally shocked, let me tell you. ONE book out. That's it. And a book that, coming at the tail end of Signet's Regency line, didn't get a lot of notice.

(By that time, Regency didn't even have its own page of reviews in Romantic Times Magazine -- just a little box in one corner of the historical section.)

And you know what else is great? Megan's on the list too!!!!

YAY, MEGAN!!!

So out of a total of seventeen books, the Riskies have three.

Astounding.

We rock! We're ULTIMATE!

(And as a fan of the Ultimate Spider-Man, the Ultimate X-Men, and the Ultimate Fantastic Four, I think that's darn cool.) :-)

Okay, yes, I can hear some of you grumbling, and you're right! Elena totally belonged on the list. And Janet. And Diane should have been either there or on the historical list. But still...

We're ULTIMATE!

And so are all of you. WE ROCK!!!

Cara
Cara King, author of My Lady Gamester, starring the Ultimate Atalanta, who defeats the Malicious Malkham with her Mutant Gaming Powers

Jane Austen Movie Club Reminder

Remember, the next meeting of the Jane Austen movie club will be next Tuesday, August 7! (Not today, as I once erroneously stated.) We'll be discussing the Gwyneth Paltrow EMMA. So stop by!

Cara

Monday, July 30, 2007

Foreign Affairs


A very nice thing happened this week. Joelle, a "huge fan" (as she describes herself) from France, emailed to tell me that the French edition of The Mysterious Miss M is being released in August and she sent me a jpg of the book cover. Joelle has read my books in English and it was très généreux of Joelle to take the time to tell me about this exciting event, it gave me the idea of showing off my foreign covers.

Harlequin Mills & Boon has world-wide distribution and their authors might have their books released over and over again in different countries. I haven't yet had the pleasure of one of my books to be released in Japan (can't wait for that one) but they've come out in Italy, Germany, Australia, and now France! My Diane Perkins books will even appear in other countries-Spain and Norway.

The covers are all different, and sometimes the titles are altered in the translation.

My first foreign sales were to Italy. I remember years ago when I traveled to Italy with my friend Susan, I had just started writing romance. I searched bookstores for a romance in Italian, but only found them on newstands. I purchased an Italian Harlequin then, and now my own books have appeared on their newstands. Molto ironico!

The Mysterious Miss M







A Reputable Rake












I am supposed to receive copies of each foreign edition, but that does not always happen. So far, I have the whole set of German releases. One of the first reviewers I contacted to review The Mysterious Miss M was Kris Alice Hohls, who now is publishing a romance review magazine Love Letter. Kris liked Miss M so much she convinced Cora, the German branch of Harlequin, to release it as a single title book. The others came out in their series lines.

The Mysterious Miss M













The Wagering Widow







A Reputable Rake












I love those German covers, with all their bursting emotion.

The most elegant covers, however, are the Australian ones. In Australia, my books were released in a two-books-in-one format, paired with another Regency author. It has been so difficult to find good images of these books and I only had Lords & Ladies to scan.

The Mysterious Miss M in Regency Scandals







Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
The Wagering Widow
in Regency Rakes

A Reputable Rake in Lords & Ladies




(Don't you think the titles for these last two should be reversed?)



So far one of my Diane Perkins books has been released in Spain. This is not my favorite cover--much too contemporary and generic--but it has to be my favorite foreign title.


La Impostora (The Improper Wife)






I tell you, this is all part of the fun of being a romance author!
For more fun go to Romance Novel TV. Click on the RWA 2007 tab and on Girl's Night Out. If you look quick you'll see me!

Also hurry over to DianeGaston.com. Only one more day to enter my contest to win copies of The Mysterious Miss M for you and a friend.

To be a winner every month, sign up for our Risky Regency newsletter at riskies@yahoo.com (Put NEWSLETTER in subject line). The newsletter is a prize in itself!

Au revoir! Arrivederci! Auf Wiedersehen! Adiós! G'day, mate!

Labels: , , , , ,

Winner!

Congratulations, KimW! You've won a copy of Amanda's A Notorious Woman! Please send your address to riskies@yahoo.com. Thanks so much to everyone who commented, and be sure and visit us on Thursday when Janet will chat about her new book Rules of Gentility. (Well, visit EVERY day, of course, so as not to miss any of the fun!)

Saturday, July 28, 2007

Megan and Amanda Chat About Amanda's New Book!





Megan: So, what made you think of this story?






Amanda: Well--Romeo and Juliet! Or the Zeffirelli movie version of it. Along with movies like A Dangeous Beauty and Casanova. I love the aesthetics of Renaissance Italy, the clothes, the villas, the whole juxtaposition of violence and feuds with the most amazing art and learning. And Venice is so romantic and mysterious! Julietta and Marc just seemed to belong there.








Megan: And what made you change your writing venue from Regency England to 16th century Venice?






Amanda: The Regency well had run dry! After the books and novellas at Signet, I had a very hard time getting excited about any Regency ideas. But I've always been interested in the Renaissance (being a complete history geek). The tremendous optimism of the time period, the advances in science and exploration, the rise of humanism and art--not just in terms of technique, but in what it meant to be an Artist. What it meant to really be human. Tremendously exciting. (Plus those great gowns!). And now even the Regency well is refilling with new ideas!








Megan: How did you do your research?






Amanda: I read a lot! (Plus forced myself to watch those movies over and over again. It was terrible, but anything for my craft...) I also found a great treasure at a book sale just as I was starting this story--a reproduction of a 16th century souvenir book full of colored sketches of Venice during Carnival. Masked revelers pelting each other with eggshells full of perfume, dance barges on the Grand Canal, sword duels, the Marriage of the Sea ceremony. It was a great inspiration, many of those scenes found their way into the A Notorious Woman! Masked balls at the Piazza San Marco, for instance. Some other great sources were Cohn's Women in the Street: Essays on Sex and Power in Renaissance Italy; Ruggiero's Binding Passions: Tales of Magic, Marriage, and Power at the End of the Renaissance; Wills' Venice: Lion City; and Newton's The Dress of the Venetians, 1495-1525. (These are just a few).






Megan: What's with the codpieces? How did they work exactly?






Amanda: Heh heh, you said 'codpieces'!! (Sorry, immature moment there. Ahem). In short (ha! short!), a codpiece is a flap or pouch attached to the front of trousers/hose, held closed by string ties or buttons. At first, anyway, this was a matter of modesty--hose were very snug, open at the crotch, with a man's, er, equipment loose under the doublet. As doublets got shorter, this was just not going to work anymore, and the codpiece became a thing of vanity. They became padded to emphasize the genital area, weirdly shaped. To see some examples, you can go here. (BTW, in Middle English, cod or codd means "bag". Get it? Tee hee).








Megan: It seemed as if you might be thinking of continuing this with one of the other characters; do you have plans to go on with the series?






Amanda: When I first wrote this story, I didn't mean to set up sequels! But, as characters sometimes do, Nicolai and then Balthazar caught my imagination. They needed their own stories! Their own heroines! I had also been thinking of another character for a while, a beautiful French assassin, et voila! She turned out to be a great match for Nicolai (even though she tried to kill him in the past. Oops). Balthazar was a bit tougher to matchmake for--he's handsome but, well, complicated. He has to go to the Caribbean to find his love (and no, it's not Elizabeth Swann!). I also may have to go there, and do in-depth research on beaches and pina coladas for this book...








Megan: Your heroine is a perfumier (is that the right word??). What's your favorite scent?






Amanda: I love perfume, and read way too many perfume blogs! (Check out this and this). Unfortunately, I seem to have a weird body chemistry that makes scents I love in the bottle (like Chanel #5 and Joy) smell like motor oil when I put them on. But I have two stand-bys--Evelyn by Crabtree & Evelyn (a summery rose smell!) and Coco Mademoiselle for special occasions (why this works and #5 doesn't, I dunno). It was so much fun to research Renaissance methods and styles of perfume bottles.










Megan: Are there real people who were the inspirations behind Julietta and Marc?






Amanda: I wish there was a Marc! As for Julietta--I guess she is a bit like me (sadly not the tall part). Most of my heroines are either something like me or something like how I wish I was. Or a mix. And heroes are guys I wish I could meet.








Megan: What are you working on now?






Amanda: I just started working on a Regency-set story (book #2 in the upcoming "Muses of Mayfair"--Clio's story), which is set in Sicily. After that, on to Balthazar's Caribbean story!








Megan: In your writing, do you feel you're taking risks? How?






Amanda: I think trying an Italian Renaissance setting was a risk. And some editors felt the story was too "dark" (even though no one dies or gets tortured or anything!!). I was lucky Harlequin loved it, and saw the potential! Sometimes there are stories we just have to tell, and this was one for me. Also, I find myself drawn more to experienced, more complex heroines lately, women who are making their own way in a dangerous world. (Julietta owns a perfume shop, and dabbles in some alchemy on the side; Marguerite, Nicolai's lady, is a spy/assassin; Balthazar's heroine, Kate, runs a tavern in Santo Domingo). They're more of a match for the heroes, LOL!






Megan: Is there anything you wanted to include in this book that you (or your CPs or editor) felt was too controversial and left out?






Amanda: Originally, there was more about Julietta's alchemical experiments! But it was cut due to word count constraints. I do tend to ramble on when not given perimeters! They did let me keep the Greek fire, which I really enjoyed...






Be sure and comment for the chance to win a signed copy of A Notorious Woman, on shelves now! Winner will be announced Monday morning. And sign up for the Risky newsletter at riskies@yahoo.com, to get news of upcoming interviews and contests, and other fun stuff!


Friday, July 27, 2007

That's Entertainment!

Today, my Son and I are taking a nearly four-hour bus ride, from Providence, RI, back to New York City. In this case, I thank goodness for Nintendo, and its all-powerful DS, which will entertain my son for most of the time we are on the bus. What did mothers do in past years without electronics?!? Besides curse their childrens' names, of course.

We've spent this week at my father's house on Cape Cod, MA. Dad lives a very Regency gentleman kind of life: He gets up, has his hot beverage, potters about in his yard, reads (a lot!), visits the local gossip spot (in his case, the Swap Shop, where he volunteers his time), sends and receives mail, and opines on the news of the day.

I've been able to write in the evenings, because both the Son and the Father go to bed around nine o'clock. It's so still and peaceful here, and you can actually see the stars, a non-occurence in Brooklyn, where I live.

Vacation means many different things to many people; for me, although I don't have a full-time job, it is a rare opportunity to relax. My favorite vacation is one where I actually forget what time it is, and almost feel as if I've gotten enough sleep (and mid-afternoon naps are the norm, not an anomaly).

It's getting to be that time for a lot of us; what is your ideal vacation? Where are you going this year? And most importantly, what books are you bringing?

Megan
PS: No pix, 'cause I'm on dial-up. Perhaps later, when I am back in the land of the internet cable.

Labels:

Thursday, July 26, 2007

buzz buzz buzz

I read a sad little news story the other day in between the sad and huge news stories about flooding in England. English bumblebees are becoming rare.

Bumblebees are not honeybees (although they do produce honey); they are the large, amiable, furry creatures about an inch long that, well, bumble about from flower to flower in England. We have something very similar (and even huger) in Maryland where I live, a place that is particularly blessed in flying insects, bees, pretend-bees, and things that will sting you as soon as look at you.

Talking of which, here's the business end of a bumblebee, and unlike honeybees, they can sting you more than once. So even though they look delightfully furry, it's not a good idea to pet them.

And it's not only bumblebees that are endangered. In all, about fifty varieties of native bees in England have become extinct recently, and the reason is mostly the loss of hedgerows. A habitat for many species of plants, animals, and birds, these plantings were often centuries old, marking ancient land boundaries, and many have been destroyed by modern agribusiness. If you travel in the English countryside you can see the scars of hedgerows destroyed to make larger fields.

But the good news is that the bumblebee has moved into the 'burbs. It's English gardens, crammed with flowering plants, that will help the bumblebee survive.

And now for the Regency tie-in. Well, there were a lot more flying critters around then. Surely someone has written an entomologist or beekeeper hero or heroine? Anyone got any good bee or bug stories?

All contests all the time at www.janetmullany.com and www.janelockwood.com (or at least for the moment). And sign up at riskies@yahoo.com to get our newsletter buzzing over to you every month.

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Would she sell today?

I recently learned about an article in the Guardian which documents an experiment by David Lassman, the director of the Jane Austen Festival in Bath. He sent minimally tweaked versions of Jane's novels to various publishers, who responded with rejections, most of them not seeming to have recognized the hoax.

This could be very depressing--if professionals in the publishing world are really unfamiliar with Jane Austen's work or unimpressed by her wit and characterizations.

Instead, I suspect that the readers and editors handling these submissions did recognize Jane's words but decided the source was a plagiarist (a stupid one!) or a nutjob or both, best handled with a form letter.

Still it leads to some interesting questions.

What if Jane's books were never published in their own time and the manuscripts had just recently been discovered in some attic? I think they would generate interest as period novels and sources of information on society and women's lives. Academics would read them. Some would inevitably become Janeites and pass the books onto their friends, reaching at least some level of cult popularity. Anyway, that's my guess.

So let's take the alternate reality further. What if Jane somehow time traveled into the present with her manuscripts, so they'd have to be represented to publishers as historical fiction? I'm not sure what would happen then.

If submitted as literary fiction would editors say they have too many romantic elements (plus that gauche HEA)? If submitted as romance, would editors tell Jane they weren't sexy enough? Or would some clever person recognize that there's a market for them? If there were not already a Jane phenomenon (as discussed in Janet's post on I Dream of Darcy), our culture might still be ready for one.

Now--get your rotten tomatoes ready!--if I were that clever person, I have a dreadful suspicion that I would ask Jane to tighten her pacing and alter some of her language. I truly don't think it makes sense for modern authors to be pedantic in trying to recreate period language. Making things accessible to modern audiences does not automatically equate to dumbing down. It's not just about money; it's about getting good stories out to a broader audience.

What do you think? Would Jane sell again today? If you were the acquiring editor, what would you do?

Elena

www.elenagreene.com

Labels:

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Cara's pics of SYON PARK

Well, it's been a month since I returned from my trip to England & France, so it's about time I shared some pictures, right?

First, a picture of the front of Syon House.

Syon Park is located near London (and you can tell -- it's like a country house paradise, ruined by the constant noise of planes flying overhead), and bills itself "London home of the Duke of Northumberland." (Ah, yes, that's the sort of second home I could live with -- I could even tolerate the planes.)

The next photo is of the back of Syon House.

First came Syon Abbey. Then came Henry the Eighth. Syon Abbey refused to bow to Henry's religious ideas, so soon, Syon Abbey was no more.

Which is really too bad, because Syon Abbey was apparently quite unusual... It was a Bridgettine Abbey, housing both men and women, and extremely wealthy. Recent architectural research argues that the Abbey Church was unique in England, and quite huge.

Our next photo is, of course, a side view of the house!

In 1547, the Duke of Somerset (then Lord Protector to King Edward VI) took the estate, and began constructing Syon House in the Renaissance style. Of course, in true Renaissance fashion, Somerset eventually fell out of power, and was executed in 1552.

The house itself is a square house, built around an internal courtyard, giving the interior a lot of sunlight, and an airy, almost Mediterranean feel.

Here we see the interior courtyard of the house.

In 1604, James I gave Syon to Henry Percy, the 9th Earl of Northumberland (and descendent of Shakespeare's "Hotspur.") Unfortunately, soon after this, his cousin took part in Guy Fawkes's attempt to blow up Parliament, and the earl went to the Tower for fifteen years as a suspected conspirator.

The next four photos show one of the most stunning features of Syon Park: the Great Conservatory.

The Regency-era owners of Syon Park were Hugh, the 2nd Duke of Northumberland (who had the title from 1786 to 1817), and Hugh, the 3rd Duke of Northumberland (who was duke from 1817 to 1847).

The 2nd Duke was an army man, and fought in the Seven Years War and the American Revolution (where, among other things, he commanded the relief force at Lexington).

The Great Conservatory was built between 1826 and 1827. The architect was Charles Fowler (who also designed the covered market at Covent Garden); the masonry, of Bath stone, was by Thomas Cundy; and the metalwork was by James Richards of Birmingham.

The whole estate is really quite gorgeous. Though the outside of the house is plain and rather uninspiring (it's no accident that brochures advertising the estate tend to show the conservatory rather than the house), the interiors are utterly fabulous. Adam did a lot of the interiors, including the famous double cube room. Inside photos are banned, so I have none, but if you want to see the interiors, you can see some here: http://www.syonpark.co.uk/


Todd and I did get rather lost walking from the train station to Syon Park -- our directions were poor, and construction had made signs hard to see -- so by the end of the day, our feet were killing us. But except for that, it was really a lovely day.

Indeed, if you take one day trip from London to see a stately home, I think Syon would be my recommendation. I've seen most of the stately homes and villas near London, including Ham House, Marble Hill House, Chiswick, the Queen's House in Greenwich, and Kenwood House, and I found Syon the most enjoyable.

The grounds are lovely too -- but more on that later.

One particularly interesting thing we saw -- some archeologists (and a television reality show about archeologists, or some such thing) are currently excavating the remains of Syon Abbey. (This is how they now realize just how huge the church at Syon Abbey was.)

As I mentioned, the grounds are lovely. We had neither the time nor the feet to do much walking around, but we did stroll a bit on this river path.

In an attempt to bring in more money, part of Syon Park has been made into a children's playground, the fancy sort that one pays to visit. There is also a large commercial gardening center -- which seemed quite popular.

Some guidebooks were rolling their eyes at all this sad commercialization, but it seems to me that children's playgrounds and garden centres make more sense than some of the alternatives.

Well, that was my trip to Syon! In the coming weeks, I shall have more photos for you all, and info about Regency-era Nice, among other things. (I have SO many photos! The blessing and the curse of having a digital camera.)

And remember: in two weeks is our next cyber-meeting of The Jane Austen Movie Club! (I had erroneously said it was next week -- sorry, I can't read a calendar!!! Yes, Cara, it's ALWAYS THE FIRST TUESDAY OF THE MONTH. Which means August 7.) This time we'll be discussing the version of EMMA starring Gwyneth Paltrow and Jeremy Northam. So if you've ever seen it, please show up and share your opinions!

And if you've never had the chance, you still have a week to rent it...and see what you think about Ewan McGregor as Frank Churchill, Alan Cumming as Mr. Elton, and Toni Collette as Harriet Smith!

So...the questions for today are: which is your favorite photo? What was Henry the Eighth's problem, anyway? What's your favorite country house or villa? How would you like to have Syon as YOUR second home? And if you've ever been to Syon, what did you think?

Cara
Cara King, author of MY LADY GAMESTER, which has not a single country house any it, not even of any kind

Tracy Grant Interview WINNER!!!

Janga, you've won a copy of Secrets of a Lady by Tracy Grant!

Please send your address to riskies@yahoo.com

Thanks to everyone who commented! Be sure to come back this coming Sunday, when our own Amanda McCabe will be giving away her new book, and we'll have a great new interview with her!

The Riskies

Sign up for the Riskies newsletter at riskies@yahoo.com and get advance notice of our contests! Please put NEWSLETTER in the subject line.

Monday, July 23, 2007

Beau Monde Treasures

As promised, here are my treasures from the Beau Monde Silent Auction.

On the Wednesday before the RWA conference, the Beau Monde held its wonderful all day conference with great workshops by the likes of Kalen Hughes and our own Janet Mullany. Kalen put the program together this year and did a fantastic job.

After the workshops there is a Regency Tea and silent auction. Beau Monde members donate items for the auction and we bid on them by writing down our bid. Then we watch to see if anyone tries to outbid us. Some of the items went through hot and heavy bidding, including my donations: An Illustrated Guide to London, 1800 by Mary Irene Cathcart Borer and Historical Maps of the Napoleonic Wars by Simon Forty. Now before you sigh and think how good it was of me to donate these books consider that I'd purchased them twice. Forgot I had them. My donations are always books I bought twice.

At the end of the auction I was standing by my items with pen at the ready in case anyone tried to outbid me. Obviously it was not a discerning crowd because only one person tried to wrest an item from my possession.

This fellow here, a lovely soldier figurine about six inches tall.

The dastardly person who tried to outbid me was KEIRA.
But she was really sweet, because she told me she planned to give the figurine to me as a surprise. Instead, I paid more money for it!

Anyway, he is a perfect suitor for my Veneta, the only Regency Royal Doulton figurine I've ever seen.























Some other treasures no one else recognized as Great Finds were the Wellington biography and the Wellington print. You can't see it here but the print is in a lovely wooden frame.

Amanda can tell you that I've been a Wellington groupie since 2003 when we visited his country house, Stratfield Saye.

My favorite treasure of all, though, was the 1837 Architectural Print of London buildings. The name of the print is hidden by the mat, but a name on one of the buildings is Boston Insurance Office.
Even though this is later than the Regency I love these prints. I have several of them, including one of Apsley House (that Wellington groupie thing again) that I purchased from a print shop in London when we had about 5 minutes to shop.




Here is another treasure that arrived the day after I returned home. My very own Leonidas (aka Gerard Butler) talking action figure, complete with two heads and a blood spattered body. I pre-ordered it ages ago! He is sooooo lovely. And I didn't even have to bid on him.

What treasures are lurking in your house?
What is that one Regency Item you would LOVE to own?


Pay me a morning call at my brand new website! See my news. Browse through my pages. Enter my contest to win two copies of The Mysterious Miss M, one for you and one for a friend.

Labels: , , , ,

Sunday, July 22, 2007

Tracy Grant Interview!



Tracy Grant has been writing Regencies for over twenty years, first with her mother (as Anthea Malcolm) and then on her own. She lives in northern California, where she is on the board of the Merola Opera Program, a training program for professional opera singers, coaches, and stage directors, and is managing director of h e l p : human elemental laboratory of performance. Her latest book, Secrets Of A Lady, is out July 31. All pertinent comments on her interview will be entered to win a copy of her brand new book! The winner will be announced Monday evening.

Secrets Of A Lady
, your latest book, is actually a reissue; can you give us the book's history?

Secrets Of A Lady was originally published as Daughter Of The Game in hardcover in 2002 and then in mass market the next year. I'm thrilled that Morrow/Avon is now bringing it out in trade. For the reissue they decided to give the book a new title and a new cover (which I love!). I was very fond of Daughter Of The Game as a title, but I also quite like Secrets Of A Lady (which we settled on after endless lists of titles went back and forth). Secrets Of A Lady definitely sums up Mélanie Fraser's story, and it has echoes of the nineteenth-century novels which so influenced me in writing the book. For the reissue I wrote a new epilogue (a letter from Charles to Mélanie). Secrets Of A Lady also includes about fifteen pages of what Avon calls A+--a really fun section that's sort of like DVD extras. Different authors do different things with the A+ section. I did mine as a series of letters between Charles and Mélanie and other characters that flesh out the back story. They were a lot of fun to write (and hopefully to read :-).


What made you think of this story?

I first got the idea for Secrets Of A Lady almost twenty years ago, when I was still in college. I was co-writing Regency romances with my mom. Our second book, which was never published, had a secondary romance between two characters named Charles and Mélanie. The Charles and Mélanie in that book almost ended up getting married. At one point, I thought, "you know if these two people actually did get married, it would be very interesting to see what happened to them in seven years or so, when some of the secrets behind their marriage came out." I knew it was a story that would never work as a traditional romance, so I filed the idea away at the back of my mind. My mom and I went on to write a total of seven Regencies (as Anthea Malcolm) and then one Regency-set historical romance (as Anna Grant). After my mom died in 1995, I wrote three Regency-set historical romances as Tracy Grant. But I kept putting more and more history and intrigue in my books. I finally realized that what I really wanted to write was an historical suspense novel. When I started mulling over plots, I went back to the Charles and Mélanie characters from the unpublished Regency and I realized this was the perfect way to tell that story. I changed the characters and the back story quite a bit, but I did keep their names.

And so Charles and Mélanie Fraser were born. Charles, a duke's grandson connected to half the British peerage, has been a diplomat and an intelligence agent during the Peninsular War. Now he's a reform-minded politician, resigned to often being one of a few voices arguing against the suspension of habeas corpus or in favor of the reform of debt laws. Mélanie is a half-Spanish, half-French refugee who Charles met and married during the war. She's now known as one of the beau monde's most charming political hostesses, equally at home writing a pamphlet on women's education, taking her children to Gunter's for ices, or entertaining the Duke of Wellington at dinner. They have two young children, a beautiful house in Berkeley Square, and a remarkably happy marriage. But Mélanie is not what she seems on the surface. Nor, in many ways, is Charles. It's the unraveling of the secrets at the heart of their marriage that drives the story.

Do you have plans to continue the series?

I've already written the third book in the series, The Mask Of Night, and I have a fairly detailed outline for the fourth and lots of ideas for future books. If Secrets Of A Lady does well, hopefully the subsequent books in the series will be published. Avon Trade is reissuing Beneath A Silent Moon (the prequel to Secrets Of A Lady) next summer. Charles and Mélanie are complicated characters with a complicated marriage and a penchant for landing in the midst of intrigue and adventure. I have lots of stories to tell about them and their friends and family and world.

Can you talk a little bit about your background, and how it helps or doesn’t in your writing?

I was a history major in college, which is a huge help in writing historical fiction. I focused on late fifteenth-century England (largely because at the time I was writing a series set in an alternate history late-fifteenth century Britain that I never sold), but what I learned about research, about evaluating data, about sifting through primary sources is invaluable. I also studied theatre and did a fair amount of acting through college (I was an apprentice at the Berkeley Shakespeare Festival--now the California Shakespeare Theater--one summer), which is probably why Mélanie and Charles quote Shakespeare all the time. I love using the theatre in my books--I have theatre sequences in both Secrets Of A Lady and Beneath A Silent Moon. There's an ongoing character in the series, Simon Tanner, a friend of Charles and Mélanie's, who's a playwright. I also love opera--a lot of my non-writing time is spent working on the Board of the Merola Opera Program, a professional training program for opera singers, coaches, and stage directors (in fact, I just finished working on a nonfiction book about the first fifty years of the Merola Opera Program). It's great for working in musical references, and I find both both plays and operas a wonderful inspiration. On my most recent research trip to England, I saw Rossini's "La Cenerentola" at Covent Garden and learned that the English premiere of the opera was in January, 1820, when The Mask of Night is set. I wanted to have a sequence at the theatre in the book, so I was able to work in the "La Cenerentola" premiere. The Covent Garden program even lists the original cast.

Which of your books is your favorite?

That's like having favorite children :-). But Charles and Mélanie, and my books about them, are particularly close to my heart.


Was Secrets Of A Lady an easy or difficult book to write?

I don't think I've ever written a book I would call "easy to write " :-). Secrets Of A Lady was a particular challenge because I was trying something a bit different. It has a more complicated plot than any of my prior books (though in general, I have a weakness for complicated plots) and Mélanie and Charles both have quite complex character arcs. And because the majority of the book is essentially a chase round London, I had to have very detailed information about a lot of different locations as well as doing a lot of research about the Peninsular War for the backstory and the extended flashback sequence set in Spain. So it was a challenge--but I like challenges, and I had a lot of fun writing it.

How do you do your research?

After years of writing Regency-set books, I have a fairly extensive library, but I always need new information for each book. I spend hours scouring the stacks at the Stanford and U.C. Berkeley libraries. Sometimes my writer friend Monica McCarty goes with me--we each disappear into the stacks for our respective time periods (she writes about early seventeenth-century Scotland), then compare notes over lunch. I love reading primary sources, such as diaries and journals of the period. U.C. Berkeley has the “Morning Chronicle” on microfilm, which is great resource--you can learn which play was performed at a given theatre on a given night, read about Parliamentary debates, news from abroad, fashion notes. Speaking of fashion, another writer friend, Candice Hern, has been incredibly generous sharing her wonderful collection of Regency fashion magazines and prints. And more and more is available online these days as well. For my last couple of books, I've been able to take trips to Britain. My friend and fellow writer Penny Williamson and I traced most of the path of Secrets Of A Lady through London and picked out a house in Berkeley Square that's the model for Charles and Mélanie's house (pictures in the Gallery section on my website (http://tracygrant.wordpress.com/gallery/)

What are you working on now?

The fourth Charles and Mélanie book and an historical novel set in the French empire in 1811.

In your writing, do you feel as if you are taking risks? How?

I think anyone who writes a book (not to mention sending that book out into the world) takes risks. But as I said above, I like challenges, so I think perhaps taking risks particularly appeals to me as a writer. I'm happiest and most excited about my writing when I feel I'm pushing myself. A friend who saw the early pages of Secrets Of A Lady said she didn't see how the story could have a happy ending. I liked that challenge--creating a happy ending out a seemingly impossible conflict (how well I succeeded is something readers will have to judge for themselves :-). I think Mélanie is perhaps a particularly risky heroine in that she makes choices that are decidedly morally ambiguous (as do a number of characters in the book). One of the reasons I love writing about Mélanie is that I'm never quite sure what she'll do in a given situation or how far she'll go. It's fascinating for me to explore as a writer.

I think also the books I write now take risks in that they combine elements of different types of fiction--historical fiction, mystery/suspense, adventure, romance. Balancing the different elements can be a challenge, but it also lets me explore all my favorite elements in a book.

Did you run across anything new and unusual while researching this book?

A lot of Secrets Of A Lady takes place in the darker, underworld side of Regency London. So I wrote scenes in settings I'd never used before--the Marshalsea Debtors' Prison, a brothel, a gaming hell. I learned about aspects of Regency society I hadn't touched on in my earlier books, which revolved more around the world of Mayfair. For instance, I learned about posturers or posture molls, women who would perform erotic poses, either scantily dressed or completely naked. Charles and Mélanie encounter a posture moll at the Gilded Lily, a coffeehouse that doubles as a brothel. Charles is more shocked than Mélanie.

Is there anything you wanted to include in the book that you (or your CPs or editor) felt was too controversial and left out?I

I wasn't trying to be non-controversial:-), and my editor (Lucia Macro) and agent (Nancy Yost) and my critique partner (my friend Penny) were all very supportive of the story as I wanted to tell it (in fact, one of the darkest scenes in the book is there because Penny told me I had to include it). I did cut some things in the revision stage, but that was a question of pacing (the book was even longer and Lucia felt--rightly--that some of the Charles and Mélanie scenes should be expanded). In the original version, Helen Trevennen had a daughter who she'd fostered out at birth who was working as a seamstress at a dressmaker's. It showed another aspect of Regency society (and another fate that could befall young women), but Charles and Mélanie didn't really learn anything vital in their scene with her. There was also a chase through Covent Garden Market which I loved (and which I spent ages researching and choreographing). But Lucia very sensibly pointed out that it didn't actually move the story forward. So I cut it. But then I built the chase (with some slight modifications) into Beneath A Silent Moon where I managed to make it much more integral to the story :-).

Is there anything else you’ d like the Risky Regencies readers to know about you?

I find the Regency era endlessly fascinating and I love books that take risks, so naturally I adore this site! Thank you for being such a fabulous place for readers and writers to discuss books and the Regency!

Thank you, Tracy!