Showing posts with label Regency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Regency. Show all posts

Saturday, 19 May 2018

New Sunday Snippet

Regency Wedding Dresses

This week for my Sunday Snippet, I’ve chosen a short section from what was my first published novel, Dangerous Deceit. Set in the Regency of 1813, I was reminded of it by the Royal Wedding today as some of it takes place in the town of Windsor!


Here’s the blurb:

Lydia Hetherington is uninterested in society balls or marriage, until her brother's friend, Lord Marcus Sheldon, rides into her life to unseat her from her horse and unsettle her heart.

An undercover spy for the government, Sheldon is equally unsettled by Lydia.

Complicated by a French spy, her friend's unrequited love for Lydia's brother, James, and a traitorous villain, Lydia gradually finds her emotions stirred by Lord Sheldon. But what is his relationship with the beautiful Lady Smythe and his part in an old scandal?

Snippet

Lydia swung round, expecting to see Agnes after all, only to find Lord Sheldon surveying her with what looked like admiration tinged with concern. She grabbed the discarded dress and held it in front of her, feeling the hot flush creep up her neck and face.

“Oh, I do apologise, Miss Hetherington.” The deep voice sounded less apologetic than Lydia would have liked. “I was certain this was the room I was directed towards. Pray forgive me.”

Lydia forgot her blushes as she saw the amusement in his eyes and was determined to remain unconcerned. “Think nothing of it, my lord. I am used to strange men bursting into my room uninvited. Did not James bring you up?”


You can read lots of snippets from other authors in a variety of genres on Weekend Writing Warriors.

Saturday, 1 October 2016

Author Inspiration: Anne Stenhouse

It's a while since I've had a guest here so I’m very pleased to welcome fellow Scottish writer, Anne Stenhouse, to the Reading and Writing blog today. I’ve enjoyed Anne’s three previous historical novels and look forward to this latest one which is on my (long) TBR list.


Courting the Countess

Lady Melissa Pateley is not having an easy time of it in 1819.

Her beloved husband Neville has died, and a fire at her London home has left her covered in scars. If it wasn’t for a band of loyal servants, she’s not sure how she would survive.

Things take a turn for the worse when one day, Colonel Harry Gunn and his fellow soldier Zed break into her home, bundle her into a coach and kidnap her. She is at a loss until she learns that Harry Gunn is the cousin of George Gunn, a man who has been stalking her for years, and that Harry’s Uncle John had warned him that as long as George is out there, Melissa is not safe. Uncle John insists that Harry finds Melissa and keeps her safe.

But that very night George shows up at Harry’s home with Harry’s sister Lottie, who thinks Melissa and George would make a good match. Perhaps Melissa would have been safer at home after all. Yet even with her scars, she is certain that the handsome Colonel Gunn is attracted to her. But of course, nothing is ever simple.

Startling revelations rip the family apart, causing everyone to question what they once held dear. As Colonel Gunn goes in search of George and the truth, he has to wonder – had the keeping of secrets not marred more lives than the secrets would have destroyed?

Courting the Countess is available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

Inspiration behind the story

Courting the Countess arose out of a competition entry. I’m a member of the Romantic Novelists’ Association and attend their annual conferences. Attendees are invited to enter a competition named in honour of the late Elizabeth Goudge – I feel sure a lot of your readers will remember the name well. 

When Christina Courtenay was Chair she invited the first 2,000 words of a story which gave a new slant on a fairy tale. I puzzled because of course some, like the Cinderella rags to riches trope, are very much used and I wanted to get away from the much used. I chose Beauty and the Beast – but have reversed the roles. The Countess is badly scarred by fire and the hero, Colonel Harry Gunn, is Greek God gorgeous, unscathed physically by war service. I threw an unwitting villain and a real villain into the mix.

I think it’s a darker book than my earlier ones, but some readers have enjoyed that divergence.

It sounds great, Anne – I really like that idea of reversing the original fairy tale roles and I enjoy books set in this period.

About Anne

I love writing dialogue-rich historical romance with lashings of humour and a swirl of thematic mystery. 

Never short of a word myself, my heroines defy and manipulate the conventions of their time with sparkling wit. Heroes with a touch of arrogance must be ripe for comeuppance and that's what my ladies are about.

Edinburgh provides a glorious Georgian and Regency setting for Bella (in Bella’s Betrothal) and London for Mariah (in Mariah’s Marriage). I'm lucky to live in one and regularly visit the other.

You can find out more about Anne and her other books on Facebook and on her blog at Novels Now

Tuesday, 2 December 2014

The Downton Effect

I'm sure many of you, like me, never miss an episode of Downton Abbey when it's on, and I'm certainly looking forward to the Christmas special. For me, it's all about the fashion and the characters, though I do hope Julian Fellows means what he says about ending it on a high. Perhaps the next season will be the last? In some ways, I hope it is as I wouldn't like it to get too modern and the 'Lady Mary and her suitors' story is beginning to bore me! I would love to see Edith's man (who is supposed to have died in Germany) return alive in the end.


There's no doubt that life in a big house amongst the aristocracy is a popular genre, especially with our friends across the Pond, whether that be in films or books. One well-known Regency author, Jo Beverley, came up with the lovely idea of posting on her blog a selection of Regency novels that are set around a large country house at Christmas, by different writers.

I'm very honoured that Midwinter Masquerade is included in the list and I'll be checking out the other books mentioned. If you're interested, you can find the titles, covers and blurbs on Jo Beverley's Blog - where you can also recommend in the comments any others you might have read with this kind of setting at the festive season.

Rosemary