I’m
delighted to welcome popular author, Lizzie Lamb, to the Reading and Writing
blog today. Lizzie originally hails from Scotland which is very evident in her entertaining Scottish-themed novels, and I love the humour she brings to each story no
matter the stakes for her appealing heroes and heroines. Lizzie tells us a bit
more about her settings and inspiration below as she introduces her new novel,
Girl in the Castle - available now to pre-order from Amazon worldwide.
Why I write Scottish-themed novels
Thank you for having me on your blog, Rosemary, I hope your
followers will enjoy reading my post about why I write Scottish-themed
contemporary novels. (It’s a pleasure,
Lizzie!)
More
recently, the Outlander Series by Diana Gabaldon featuring uber-hero Jamie
Fraser has fired my imagination. For me, he is the
ultimate kilted hero and has it in spades – looks, sense of honour, loyalty, is
sex-on-legs and can speak Gaelic. I’ll even admit to subscribing to Amazon
Prime so I could watch the TV Series: OUTLANDER.
Readers, I have discovered, are drawn to the mystical, dreamy
highlands of Scotland as the backdrop to contemporary romance. As a writer, born
and bred in Scotland, I heartily agree with that sentiment. Tall, Dark and
Kilted, features a sexy laird Ruairi (Roo-ary)
Urquhart who has to fight to safeguard his land and inheritance. In Scotch on the
Rocks, kilt-wearing
American, Brodie arrives on Eilean na Sgairbh on the back of a storm wind and
turns my heroine's life upside down.
In my latest novel Girl
in the Castle the heroine - a disgraced academic - hides away in a castle
in the highlands while she sorts out her life. There’s a phantom piper, a lost
Jacobite treasure and a love affair to keep my readers interested. Here’s the
blurb in the form of a book trailer.
Romance readers simply love a novel which features a man in a
kilt. The element of ‘costume’ (ie the kilt), especially in a contemporary
setting, removes the hero and the reader from the everyday and transports them into
the realm of fantasy and romance. And, in the case of a kilted hero, there is also
the tease of whether he’s followed tradition and gone ‘commando’, or not! My
novels seem to hold a particular resonance for ex-pat Scots in USA, Australia,
New Zealand and Canada and sell well in those countries. Born in Scotland, I
try to write with complete authenticity about Scotland - the land and its
people.
The kilted hero in my novels is, generally, aristocratic – a
laird, at the very least. And, while he does not have to work to earn his daily
crust, he carries the weight of his inheritance and the welfare of his tenants
and family on his shoulders. He often has emotional scars which only the
heroine can heal. My novels have a happy ending and readers can close the book
with a satisfied sigh knowing that all the obstacles which have prevented the
hero and heroine from leading a happy life have been resolved.
I hope you have enjoyed learning a little about what drives
me to write Scottish-themed romances. You can learn more about them and me on
my website and via my other links. Do get in touch
as I love hearing from my readers.
Thanks for a great post, Lizzie!
Thanks for a great post, Lizzie!
After teaching her 1000th pupil and working as a deputy head
teacher in a large primary school, Lizzie decided it was time to leave the
chalk face and pursue her first love: writing. In 2006 she joined the Romantic
Novelists’ Association’s New Writers’ Scheme, honed her craft and wrote Tall,
Dark and Kilted (2012), quickly followed a year later by Boot Camp Bride (2013)
and Scotch on the Rocks (2015). Girl in
the Castle is released this month.
Scotch on the Rocks was a finalist in the prestigious Exeter
novel prize. Lizzie is a founder member of the New Romantics Press along with
three other members of the Romantic Novelists’ Association.
If you have a dream - go for it. Life is not a rehearsal.
Find out more about Lizzie and her novels on her Amazon Page, Goodreads and twitter: @lizzie_lamb