The next author up in my Best of the Regency series is Barbara
Monajem, who you can see on the left imbibing her morning coffee.
Winner of the Holt Medallion, Maggie, Daphne du Maurier,
Reviewer’s Choice and Epic awards, Barbara wrote her first story at eight years
old about apple tree gnomes. She published a middle-grade fantasy when her
children were young, then moved on to paranormal mysteries and Regency romances
with intrepid heroines and long-suffering heroes (or vice versa).
Barbara loves to cook, especially soups. There are only two
items on her bucket list: to make asparagus pudding (because it’s too weird to
resist) and succeed at knitting socks. She’ll manage the first but doubts
she’ll ever accomplish the second. This is not a bid for immortality but merely
the dismal truth. She lives near Atlanta, Georgia with an ever-shifting
population of relatives, friends, and feline strays.
Be sure to comment and leave your email as she is giving
away the ebook of the first in the series, To
Kiss a Rake. (If you already have that one, she will substitute another
book.)
The
Meandering Path to My Regency Story
I am not one of those authors who gets
caught up in historical research. I’m too eager to get on with writing each
story to be patient about doing research, so it’s a bit of a surprise to me
when I actually find myself delving deeper than strictly necessary. Often, by
the time I finish a book, I can’t even remember what research I did—but not so
when it came to writing The Rake’s Irish
Lady.
The path I took was a meandering one. It
may have started as far back as childhood, when a family joke said that one of our
ancestors was an Irish horse thief. I never knew whether there was any basis
for this in fact, but it was the first indication that I had a tie to Ireland.
As I grew up, and during my early adulthood when there were so many troubles in
Ireland, I learned a little about the conflicts there. I was told it had
something to do with Protestant vs. Catholic, but that was about all I knew; religious
prejudices made no sense to me. I didn’t learn much about the long history of
the troubles until I read a novel by Diana Norman, The Pirate Queen. Much of the story takes place in Ireland during
the time of Elizabeth I. For me, it was a harrowing introduction to how the
English mistreated (to put it mildly) the Irish.
Some years later, I visited friends in
Derry in Northern Ireland, who lived there when the Bloody Sunday massacre took
place in 1972. I learned a lot from both my friends and from the city itself, and
by the time I returned home, I had decided that someday I would write a book
that dealt with the conflicting loyalties involved. I think the fact that I
have some Irish ancestry way back (thief or otherwise) intensified my desire to
learn more and to write about it.
By this time, I had also realized that
the situation with Ireland was extremely significant in the Regency era,
especially following the French Revolution and during the ensuing wars between
England and France. The Irish hated the English and therefore supported the
French. They sought French aid to further their struggle for liberty.
I
did some research by reading The 1798Rebellion: An Illustrated History. It's a fascinating and sometimes
horrifying account, and it gave me enough information to make up my own little
bit of history that takes place six years later in England, with a very English
hero and a heroine who is half-Irish, half-English—the embodiment of
conflicting loyalties.
And
then all of a sudden, because of a twist the story took, I found myself doing a
completely different kind of research—reading Irish folk tales. Serendipity
played a part in this. The friends from Derry came to visit and brought me a
copy of The Mammoth Book of Celtic Mythsand Legends by Peter Berresford Ellis.
I devoured the Irish myths. I love
folklore because there’s so much magic involved, and I’m quite frankly addicted
to magic. I have incorporated folklore into other stories, such as Lady of the Flames, in which a hobgoblin
is a significant character. There are no hobgoblins or leprechauns or other
magical characters in The Rake’s Irish
Lady, but folklore does play a role, and that was fun—and it helped to
lighten up a story, which deals with a very serious topic.
What surprised me was how many readers
have commented on the funny bits in The
Rake’s Irish Lady. Looking back, I realized there’s plenty of
light-heartedness there. It’s a romance, so of course there’s lots about love
and a happy ending, but there is other fun stuff, too. I guess I was too caught
up in the dark side to notice, even while I was writing it.
So,
tell me, does
your ancestry make you curious about the history of a particular country? If
so, which country, and why?
ONE WILD NIGHT . . .
Widowed and lonely, Bridget O’Shaughnessy
Black indulges herself in a night of pleasure.
After all, she's in disguise. And the baby
girl? An unexpected blessing...until an old flame claims the child as his
own to force Bridget to marry him.
ONE DETERMINED LADY. . .
Many women pursued Colin Warren, but only one climbed in his
bedchamber window. When Bridget does it for the second time, she needs his
help. Colin feels he’s unfit to be a parent, yet he has no choice but to
acknowledge the little girl.
RISKING EVERYTHING FOR LOVE
Together they must solve the mystery of the old flame’s
intentions—but can they reconcile their divided loyalties—Irish and
English—through the power of love?
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