Thursday, August 15, 2024

News! And chances to win things!

 



Be sure to check every day for chances to win. I’m taking part in this, and my post will go live at 4:15 a.m. Eastern time on August 22, 2024.

I’m also on a blog tour every Wednesday from 8/28 to 11/13/24. 


The first stop on 8/28/24 is at https://elainepcantrell.blogspot.com/ Hope. Dreams. Life...Love and the second, also on 8/28/24, is at  http://www.romancenovelgiveaways.com/ Romance Novel Giveaways.

Below is the schedule for the rest of the tour (unless there’s some unexpected change):

9/4/2024

Read Your Writes Reviews

 https://readyourwrites.blogspot.com/

9/11/2024

The Avid Reader

 http://the-avidreader.blogspot.com

9/18/2024

Fabulous and Brunette

 https://fabulousandbrunette.blogspot.com

9/25/2024

Sandra's Book Club

 https://sandrasbookclub.blogspot.com/

10/2/2024

Literary Gold

 https://www.literaryau.com

10/9/2024

Kenyan Poet

 http://owenhabel.com/

10/9/2024

LS & R

 http://www.longandshortreviews.com

10/16/2024

Lisa Haselton

 https://lisahaselton.com/blog

10/23/2024

Momma Says To Read

 https://www.mommasaystoread.com/

10/30/2024

Dawn's Reading Nook

https://dawnsreadingnook.blogspot.com

11/6/2024

Travel the Ages

http://www.traveltheages.blogspot.com/

11/6/2024

Westveil Publishing

 https://www.westveilpublishing.com/

13-Nov

Maggie Blackbird

https://maggieblackbird.com/blog

 My tenth novel, Hidden Treasures, will be released on 9/16/24. It’s currently available for pre-order on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and Apple.  https://books2read.com/u/b5gYDR

Audiobooks

 For lovers of audiobooks, A Peculiar Enchantment was released last December, and is available on Nook, Apple, Audible, Google Play, Chirp, and Amazon: https://books2read.com/u/bz2WoD

By Sword and Fan came out last month but it currently is available only on Amazon and Audible. Apparently it can take up to a month to be picked up by other audiobook sellers.

Current Project: 

My eleventh book, A Murder of Convenience, is now with my editor. The first round of edits begins early in September. As you may have guessed, it’s a mystery set in my usual time period.



Friday, June 14, 2024

Review of An Offer for a Spinster by Dorothy Sheldon


An Offer for a Spinster (Book 1 of Willoughby) by Dorothy Sheldon caught my eye out of a bunch of similar books  because the last name of my best friend in grade school and junior high was Sheldon. I previewed the first page and found nothing to put me off  so I bought it and I’m glad I did. The Regency romance genre in the age of self-publishing is a very mixed bag.

Sheldon is the real deal. No flubs that I noticed except a word or two  (“surreal” for one) that were not in use at that time and no grammatical infelicities. An Offer for a Spinster is clean and sweet without being icky, if you know what I mean and I think you do. It’s the kind of historical romance I remember fondly from the nineties, before so many of them had obligatory sex scenes every thirty pages or so.

I won’t rehash the plot; it was not unbelievable and I’m sure many compulsive readers will sympathize with the main characters’ problems with their families. Before I was halfway through the book, I bought the next in the series, and now I find that she has written several other romances as well. Binge read time!  


 

Wednesday, May 15, 2024

A question and news

 How do you feel about the current fad for authors to crank out multiple novels per year? I notice it most in the romance community but maybe it’s penetrated other genres as well.

Some of my favorite authors are doing this, and I think it’s a pity. To write fast, the books must be shorter and less complex. They’re dessert rather than the entrĂ©e. Personally, if I’m hungry for a book, I like a main course rather than a bon-bon.

In the case of historical romances, research sometimes becomes a casualty. I recently read a Regency romance in which someone wears a bowler hat, headgear not invented until 1849. The author must know this as she has written many, many Regency novels and bowler hats have not appeared in them previously. This is the kind of error that occurs when writing quickly.

Please let me know what you think: do you prefer more books per year or one every year or so that’s longer and meatier?     

 

It’s been a while since I’ve written a post. Old news: my ninth novel, By Sword and Fan (as in, “Sometimes the fan is more useful than the sword”) came out last November.

In December I submitted my tenth, Hidden Treasures. Its release date is September 16, 2024.

Also in December, the audiobook version of A Peculiar Enchantment came out on Amazon and Audible and more recently “went wide” so it’s available on a number of other sites as well.

A brief excerpt:

Lying on his side, he breathed in the rosemary scent of his bride’s hair. It was almost in his nose as she was lying with her back to him. They need not rise quite yet, but if he woke her now…No. She was deeply asleep. He would like to take the credit, but most likely yesterday’s travel and perhaps nervous exhaustion accounted for it. He could look forward to tonight and the following night and a string of others. He would indulge himself by putting his arm around her. 

He reached over her side in search of her warm, soft …fur?

 His eyes popped open to meet round green eyes in a black-furred face. He and Tabby regarded each other across Adelaide’s slumbering form. The cat uttered an irritable word.

 “I beg your pardon.” Am I apologizing to a cat for taking a liberty with her? Ducane supposed he was.

 She exhaled irritably and, after staring at him a moment longer, turned her back and jumped off the bed.

PS: The above is as steamy as it gets, and there is no fantasy or paranormal element. Love is the most peculiar enchantment.

Monday, February 12, 2024

Censored Angel by Joan Koster: review

 It’s rare to review a novel as disquietingly relevant to our current problems as Censored Angel by Joan Koster. The central figure, Ida Craddock, was a writer, proponent of birth control, and mystic. Her opposition to Anthony Comstock, a postal inspector from 1873 to 1907, who used his position to prosecute anyone who published, advertised or sent through the mail anything he considered obscene, is the central theme of Koster's well-researched novel.


A religious zealot, he censored any mention of abortion, birth control, prostitution, gambling, free love, prevention of venereal disease, and gambling, among others. He was responsible for some 4,000 arrests and proud of having caused fifteen people to kill themselves by his persecution.  

Ida Craddock was forceful, brilliant, well-educated, and odd. It’s hard not to think of her as a 19th century Joan of Arc. Needless to say, she and Comstock were natural enemies. Censored Angel is a fascinating read that should alarm all of us in the current drive by Comstock’s modern-day heirs to censor anything they disapprove of and remove books from libraries.

The last of the Comstock Laws was not repealed until 1971. Think about that as you read this book.