This is what I'm looking forward to for the next year of reading. Do you have any other suggestions? [Edited to add suggestions.]
December 2009
"The Maid's Lover" by Amanda McCabe (Undone)
January 2010
"Proof by Seduction" by Courtney Milan
"Chalice of Roses" by Jo Beverley, Mary Jo Putney, Barbara Samuel, Karen Harbaugh
February 2010
"Countess of Scandal" by Amanda McCabe
"Lessons in French" by Laura Kinsale
"Promise Me Tonight" by Sara Lindsey
"The Golden Season" by Connie Brockway
March 2010
"The Chief" by Monica McCarty
"In Bed with the Duke" by Christina Dodd
"Something About You" by Julie James
"Too Wicked to Kiss" by Erica Ridley
April 2010
"The Secret Duke" by Jo Beverley
"The Stolen Bride" by Jo Beverley
"To Catch a Rogue" by Amanda McCabe
"Mistress by Mistake" by Maggie Robinson
May 2010
"To Deceive a Duke" by Amanda McCabe
"One Dance with a Duke" by Tessa Dare
"Sex and the Single Earl" by Vanessa Kelly
"His at Night" by Sherry Thomas
June 2010
"Ten Things I Love About You" by Julia Quinn
"To Kiss a Count" by Amanda McCabe
"Married By Morning" by Lisa Kleypas
"My Reckless Surrender" by Anna Campbell
"The Irish Warrior" by Kris Kennedy
"Twice Tempted by a Rogue" by Tessa Dare
"Tempting Eden" by Margaret Rowe
"The Forbidden Rose" by Joanna Bourne
The Mammoth Book of Regency Romance
July 2010
"A Kiss At Midnight" by Eloisa James
"Lady Isabella's Scandalous Marriage" by Jennifer Ashley
"Three Nights With A Scoundrel" by Tessa Dare
"Last Night’s Scandal" by Loretta Chase
August 2010
"The Hawk" by Monica McCarty
"She's Gone Country" by Jane Porter
September 2010
"The Devil Wears Plaid" by Teresa Medeiros
October 2010
"Emily and the Dark Angel" by Jo Beverley
"Where Shadows Dance" by C.S. Harris
"The List" by Connie Brockway, Julia Quinn & Eloisa James
December 2010
"The Ranger" by Monica McCarty
Monday, November 30, 2009
Friday, November 27, 2009
Picture Day Friday
The Stables of Broad Campden are typical of Georgian Cotswolds cottages available for rent as vacation homes. What a fabulous place for a Writers' Retreat. Feel free to dream with me...

Thursday, November 26, 2009
Bookish Gratitude List

1. My dearest friends who're also authors and whose books I adore: Amanda McCabe, Anna Campbell, Diane Gaston, Christine Wells, and Candice Hern. In fact, I started out as their fans before we became friends.
2. One word decriptor of Laura Kinsale, the author and the person: Amazing!

4. Authors new to me whose entire backlists I've now glommed: C.S. Harris, Deborah Crombie, Deborah Smith, Jodi Thomas, Kris Kennedy, Madeline Huntr, Julia Latham, Michelle Willingham, C.J. Lyons, Jo Goodman, Susan Wiggs, and Julie James.

6. Romancelandia on Twitter for making it possible for me to have intelligent conversations during my solitary days.

8. Thanks for my daily source of laughs: Anna Campbell, Teresa Medeiros, Connie Brockway, Christina Dodd, Eloisa James, Keri Stevens, rantyeditor, Esi Sogah, Dave Barry, and Dee Tenorio.

10. Amanda McCabe for being an all-round good egg, the best friend a person could have.
What's on your bookly gratitude list?
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Lessons in French


A light, but emotional read—what Sourcebooks editor Deb Werksman calls "funny and poignant"—it is a significant departure from Kinsale's deeply moving stories that grab you by the throat and never let go till the last word.
And yet from the first two sentences, you know you are in talented hands.
"Lady Callista Taillefaire was a gifted wallflower. By the age of seven-and-twenty, she had perfected the art of blending into the wallpaper and woodwork so well that she never had to dance, and only her most intimate friends greeted her."
By the last sentence of page one, anxiety has set in as you realize this excerpt is only 18 pages long, you're going to get there in a jiffy, and then you're not going to know how you can wait another six months for the rest of the 462 pages.
Lady Callista Taillefaire "Callie"'s meeting with her first and only love of her life—despite three consequent betrothals and jiltings—Lord Trevelyan d'Augustin "Trev" in a public assembly room is everythng to be hoped for: romantic, wry, intriguing, nuanced, and funny.
Lessons in French promises to be another of the Kinsales to go down in history as a work admired deeply and discussed endlessly.
For My Lady's Heart

When people talk about Kinsale, Flowers from the Storm and The Shadow and the Star are what they remember. But for me, it's always been For My Lady's Heart (FMLH) and Shadowheart. FMLH is one of the few seminal books that have changed me as a reader.
Every time a historical book is released, online chatter indicates impassioned debates over the historical particulars, whether the author got them right, misused a nuance here or there, or trampled her way into the modern era. There's not one naysayer about Kinsale's research. She not only gets the pulse of the period right, she seems to live it, to breathe it.

For the most part, FMLH is a story of a man and a woman in the forest alone. But around them, swirl the undercurrents of political turmoil, emotional blackmail, obsessive love, medieval chivalric thought, and singular people with passionate beliefs.
The prose is extravagantly dark and gloriously uplifting at the same time.
And...the characters talk in Middle English and Old Frnch. For a writer of medieval stories this is the sort of thing that reduces me to babbling incoherence: "WOW! OMG!"
In case you haven't realized, I love, love, love this book.
Have you read any books by Laura Kinsale? If so, which ones are your favorites? What do you think of her books?
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
The Diamonds of Welbourne Manor

Consider the Diamonds—the anthology as well as the authors of this Regency-set stories. It's a collection of stories, with print novellas to be followed by print single books, for all six children of the Duke of Manning's blended family.
These talented Diamonds are eminently suited to put together a story of close friendships. Some anthologies are a collection of period-related stories, others are thematic, some have a common story premise, or a recurring character or characeristic. Rarely, is there a collection of stories that seems to have originatedfrom one pen, but in actuality from a group of close friends.
Each author deals with a challenge. Diane Gaston has to not only tell the story of the duke and duchess' forgotten older children, but also introduce all the main characters of the stories. Deb Marlowe and Amanda McCabe have the challenge of keeping the entire cost of characters "in character" while revealing more of their personalities and motivations. Their stories have to turn young, sheltered girls, struggling to deal with a devastating loss, into heroines. Dev does it with her special brand of humor and Amanda with her dash and polish.
I loved this series and am looking forward to the next stories that will follow the newly minted duke Nicholas, his younger brother Stephen, and the oldest Fitz-Manning Leo.
To play a guessing game, let me match up the authors with the characters...
Diane with Stephen
Deb with Leo
Amanda with Nicholas
...Only the Diamonds can tell me whether I got this right.
What about you? Have you read this anthology? Who do you think is going to write whose story next?
Monday, November 23, 2009
RWA National 2010


Nora Roberts: Keynote speaker
Jayne Ann Krentz: Awards Luncheon speaker
Sherrilyn Kenyon: Librarians' Day speaker
Sabrina Jeffries: RITA and Golden Heart Awards Ceremony emcee
Best news for the conference...
All RWA conference attendees will have free wireless Internet access inside their hotel rooms. (The $15/day resort fee will be waived.)
Saturday, November 21, 2009
Dimmed Horizons
[Edit 11/24: Harlequin Horizons rebrands itself as DellArte Press. Improved FAQ, rest stays the same.]
Newspapers across the country are scrambling to report an example of how people's voices do carry a great deal of weight. How a successful and well-known business stumbled amidst its 60th anniversary celebrations, resulting in a rallying cry from its customers (readers and bloggers) and its clients (authors and agents), supported by writing organizations, thereby causing the innovative company to attempt to amend their stance a bit. What is hoped for by the company is that concession will cause the furor to die down; what is hoped for by the people is an undo of the entire decision.
I have no original thoughts of my own to contribute here; I was too busy getting myself educated on the various aspects and implications thereof of the Harlequin decision regarding its Horizons business. So instead, I'm going to include links to blogs and discussions by folks far more informed and articulate than I am. A wealth of information is also to be found in the comment threads.
Smart Bitches: Want to Self-Publish? How about Harlequin?, Postmortem
Dear Author: Shortsighted or Farseeing?, Malle Vallik from Harlequin Asnwers Questions, What's In It For You?
Kristin Nelson: Exploitation or Empowerment, And I Thought the Furor Was Bad Yesterday, Harlequin Newsflash
Jackie Kessler: Harlequin Horizons versus RWA, The Day After Harlequin Blinks, Answering Questions, Harlequin Gets Two out of Four
Shiloh Walker: My Take on Self-Pub / Vanity Presses
Karen Harbaugh: Harlequin vs. RWA and a little history
Twitter Feeds: Robin from Dear Author, Jackie Barbosa
Writers Beware: Another Major Publisher Adds Self-Publishing, Two Deep Questions, MWA Weighs In, SFWA
John Scalzi: Writers' Organizations to Harlequin
Absolute Write: Bewares & Background Checks
Rip-Off Report: Horizons
Thomas Nelson CEO: Why Agents are Opposed to Self-Publishing, Responds to Mike Shatzkin
Newspapers across the country are scrambling to report an example of how people's voices do carry a great deal of weight. How a successful and well-known business stumbled amidst its 60th anniversary celebrations, resulting in a rallying cry from its customers (readers and bloggers) and its clients (authors and agents), supported by writing organizations, thereby causing the innovative company to attempt to amend their stance a bit. What is hoped for by the company is that concession will cause the furor to die down; what is hoped for by the people is an undo of the entire decision.
I have no original thoughts of my own to contribute here; I was too busy getting myself educated on the various aspects and implications thereof of the Harlequin decision regarding its Horizons business. So instead, I'm going to include links to blogs and discussions by folks far more informed and articulate than I am. A wealth of information is also to be found in the comment threads.
Smart Bitches: Want to Self-Publish? How about Harlequin?, Postmortem
Dear Author: Shortsighted or Farseeing?, Malle Vallik from Harlequin Asnwers Questions, What's In It For You?
Kristin Nelson: Exploitation or Empowerment, And I Thought the Furor Was Bad Yesterday, Harlequin Newsflash
Jackie Kessler: Harlequin Horizons versus RWA, The Day After Harlequin Blinks, Answering Questions, Harlequin Gets Two out of Four
Shiloh Walker: My Take on Self-Pub / Vanity Presses
Karen Harbaugh: Harlequin vs. RWA and a little history
Twitter Feeds: Robin from Dear Author, Jackie Barbosa
Writers Beware: Another Major Publisher Adds Self-Publishing, Two Deep Questions, MWA Weighs In, SFWA
John Scalzi: Writers' Organizations to Harlequin
Absolute Write: Bewares & Background Checks
Rip-Off Report: Horizons
Thomas Nelson CEO: Why Agents are Opposed to Self-Publishing, Responds to Mike Shatzkin
Friday, November 20, 2009
Monday, November 16, 2009
The Much-Beloved Enid Blyton

Eight hundred? Yes! In a publishing career spanning nearly 40 years, Enid Blyton (August 11, 1897 — November 28, 1968) published 800-odd books and hundreds of magazine stories and articles. She has sold over 600 million copies and is the fifth most translated author worldwide with over 3,500 translations of her books. Undoubtedly, she was one of the most successful children's storytellers of the twentieth century.









"Dear heart And soul of a child, Sing on!" |


Have you read any Enid Blyton books? If so, which ones are your favorite? If this was your first introduction to the author, would you now be tempted to give it a try?
Friday, November 13, 2009
Picture Day Friday
"Muses" is a 3-D sidewalk chalk art piece produced by Kurt Wenner in Lucern, Switzerland.

(Courtesy of Impact Lab)

(Courtesy of Impact Lab)
Favorite Things
To commemorate her 69th birthday on October 1, 2004, actress and vocalist, Julie Andrews made a special appearance at Manhattan's Radio City Music Hall for the benefit of the AARP. One of the musical numbers she performed was "My Favorite Things" from Sound Of Music. Here are the lyrics she used:
Botox and nose drops and needles for knitting,
Walkers and handrails and new dental fittings,
Bundles of magazines tied up in string,
These are a few of my favorite things.
Cadillacs and cataracts, hearing aids and glasses,
Polident and Fixodent and false teeth in glasses,
Pacemakers, golf carts and porches with swings,
These are a few of my favorite things.
When the pipes leak, When the bones creak,
When the knees go bad,
I simply remember my favorite things,
And then I don't feel so bad.
Hot tea and crumpets and corn pads for bunions,
No spicy hot food or food cooked with onions,
Bathrobes and heating pads and hot meals they bring,
These are a few of my favorite things.
Back pain, confused brains and no need for sinnin',
Thin bones and fractures and hair that is thinnin',
And we won't mention our short shrunken frames,
When we remember our favorite things.
When the joints ache, When the hips break,
When the eyes grow dim,
Then I remember the great life I've had,
And then I don't feel so bad.
(Now, if only this legend were true! The lyrics have been lampooned by a nobody and inaccurately attributed to Julie Andrews, according to Snopes. (sigh) Sometimes ignorance is bliss. The story's cute and the lyrics hilarious.)
Botox and nose drops and needles for knitting,
Walkers and handrails and new dental fittings,
Bundles of magazines tied up in string,
These are a few of my favorite things.
Cadillacs and cataracts, hearing aids and glasses,
Polident and Fixodent and false teeth in glasses,
Pacemakers, golf carts and porches with swings,
These are a few of my favorite things.
When the pipes leak, When the bones creak,
When the knees go bad,
I simply remember my favorite things,
And then I don't feel so bad.
Hot tea and crumpets and corn pads for bunions,
No spicy hot food or food cooked with onions,
Bathrobes and heating pads and hot meals they bring,
These are a few of my favorite things.
Back pain, confused brains and no need for sinnin',
Thin bones and fractures and hair that is thinnin',
And we won't mention our short shrunken frames,
When we remember our favorite things.
When the joints ache, When the hips break,
When the eyes grow dim,
Then I remember the great life I've had,
And then I don't feel so bad.
(Now, if only this legend were true! The lyrics have been lampooned by a nobody and inaccurately attributed to Julie Andrews, according to Snopes. (sigh) Sometimes ignorance is bliss. The story's cute and the lyrics hilarious.)
Auspicious Occasion
On the auspicious occasion of Friday the 13th, nearly a month from my last post, I'm returning back to blogdom with a humorous version of a favorite song. (See next post.) Particularly apropos for me, since my absence here was due to health issues and health issues and more creaky health issues. The less said there the better.