Showing posts with label Barbara Monajem. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barbara Monajem. Show all posts

2/18/2016

Regan Walker's Best of the Regency: Barbara Monajem

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?

Buy on Amazon

Keep in touch with Barbara on her website, Facebook, Twitter and Goodreads 

3/26/2015

Barbara Monajem confesses her love for the OXFORD Dictionary #historical #interview


Imagine: your second RWA conference and your first KOD Death by Chocolate event and you meet a nice lady sitting next to you, little knowing this person would be a friend since. 
Ladies and Gentlemen, I give you 
Barbara Monajem!!!

Barbara Monajem is the award-winning author of the Bayou Gavotte paranormal mysteries, Sunrise in a Garden of Love & EvilTastes of Love & Evil, and Heart of Constantine, as well as several Regency novellas. Her latest novel, Lady of the Flames, is a Regency romantic suspense with magic. She lives near Atlanta, Georgia with her husband and an ever-shifting population of relatives, friends, and feline strays.




Lord Fenimore Trent’s uncanny affinity for knives and other sharp blades led to knife fights, duels, and murderous brawls. Five years ago, he faced a choice: marry Andromeda Gibbons, the woman he loved, or find a safe, peaceful use for his blades by opening a furniture shop—an unacceptable occupation for a man of noble birth. The choice made itself when Andromeda turned to another man. The furniture shop prospered, but now Fen’s partner has been accused of treason. In order to root out the real traitor, he may face another unpalatable choice—to resort to the violent use of his blades once again.

Once upon a time, Andromeda Gibbons believed in magic. That belief faded after her mother’s death and vanished completely when Lord Fenimore, the man she loved, spurned her. Five years later, Andromeda has molded herself into a perfect—and perfectly unhappy—lady. When she overhears her haughty betrothed, the Earl of Slough, plotting treason, she flees into the London night—to Fen, the one man she knows she can trust. But taking refuge with Fen may mean far more than getting help. 

Can Andromeda learn to believe in love, magic, 
and the real Andromeda once again?

Find an excerpt from Lady of the Flames at: Excerpt

Find Lady of the Flames at: Amazon   Barnes and Noble


And now for the Fun!!! QUESTIONS:

Vicki:  I’m a huge handbag girl. What is your favorite accessory? Barbara: Do socks count as an accessory? I adore socks – thick, thin, short, long, wildly colorful or purely practical. The only item on my bucket list is to become successful at knitting socks. Since I hardly ever get any time for knitting, I’m not sure I’ll ever succeed, so maybe this is just a way of staving off the inevitable…?
Vicki: Okay, you ca get by with the socks especially since you crafted them. I love warm wool socks (hint-hint)!


Vicki: How often do you get lost in a story?  Barbara: Every day! (Whether I’m reading or writing one.)

Vicki: What was the first story you remember writing? Barbara: I wrote one about apple tree gnomes in third grade. An embarrassing number of years later, I still put little magical creatures in my stories, even though they’re adult romances these days.
Vicki: That is so cute. 

Vicki: Be honest, when reading...do you put yourself in the heroine’s role? Barbara: Yes, to some extent. Often I think, I would never have the guts to do that! or, What, is she crazy? Sometimes, I fall in love with the hero, but just as often, I think he’s a great guy for the heroine but wouldn’t do for me. 

Vicki: Is writing or story-telling easier for you? Barbara: Writing. I don’t enjoy talking. I have an occasional, unpredictable stammer, which makes talking sort of nerve-wracking and too much work.

Vicki: If you couldn’t be a writer anymore, what profession would you take up? Barbara: Retirement? LOL. Actually, I’m a total nerd about words—their origins and meanings and how they change over time—so I would love to work on the Oxford Dictionary. That was always my dream job.
Vicki: Wow, Barbara, that would be interesting.

Vicki: What’s the first thing you do when you finish writing a book? Barbara: Jump eagerly into writing the next one.

Vicki: If you were given a chance to travel to the past where would you go and specifically why? Barbara: It depends on whether I could also be invisible if I chose, invulnerable to disease, and could beam myself back to the future anytime I liked. (I’m a wimp, so danger wouldn’t work for me.) Anyway, to answer the question, I’d like to see Anglo-Saxon England. This is due to reading lots of historical novels about that era. The ones that spring to mind are the Saxon Chronicles by Bernard Cornwell. Ancient Rome and Roman Britain would be great, too. Again, it’s because of books I’ve read: The Eagle of the Ninth and other stories by Rosemary Sutcliff, and the Marcus Didius Falco mysteries by Lindsey Davis.  Also, after reading The Doomsday Book by Connie Willis (time travel to the mid-1300s) and The Vizard Mask by Diana Norman (17th Century), I would like to try either of those eras when the plague was raging. I know it sounds ghoulish, but for some weird reason it fascinates me. I’m pretty sure I would come home in a hurry because seeing the suffering and being unable to help would be so horrible. OK now, enough dark stuff for today…

Vicki: What do you do to unwind and relax? Barbara: Duh! I read, of course.

Vicki: Do you read reviews of your books? If so, do you pay any attention to them, or let them influence your writing? Barbara: Yes, I read them. If they’re complimentary, I’m happy. If they’re not, oh well. And sometimes I learn something helpful, so why not?

Vicki: What are the next five books on your ‘to be read’ pile? Barbara: The Soldier’s Dark Secret by Marguerite Kaye (Regency romance). Wicked My Love by Susanna Ives (Victorian romance). Why Kings Confess by C.S. Harris (Regency mystery). An Early Wake by Sheila Connolly (contemporary mystery--in Ireland). Night at the Vulcan by Ngaio Marsh (a reread of a mystery by one of the greats). There’s not one paranormal in the lot, so that’s what I’ll be looking for after that.

Vicki: What drew you to write in the genre(s) you do? Barbara: I enjoy romance, mystery, and magic (which can be anything paranormal). I love writing stories that combine all three. J


FIND Barbara Monajem at:

UP NEXT: It will be an anthology in the summer, but I don’t have a final cover yet. The title is Passionate Promises, and the authors are all from the Embracing Romance bloggers.


PREVIOUS RELEASES: The Christmas Knot, my Regency Gothic mystery romance novella (I admit, I really have a hard time sticking to one genre at a time), is in the boxed set, Captivated By His Kiss, which is still available for 99 cents (but not for much longer).

WILL YOU HAVE A DRAWING FROM THOSE LEAVING COMMENTS?
 A drawing would be good. I will give away a Regency novella duet (two related novellas) OR one of the Bayou Gavotte paranormal mysteries, winner’s choice. E-books only, Amazon or Barnes & Noble. Please leave your email address in the comments to be eligible. 

Thank you, Barbara, for being my guest today 
and many hugs!

8/03/2011

Barbara Monajem

Barbara Monajem has been a joy to watch as her writing takes center stage. Equally passionate about paranormal and historical romance, she joins GLIAS to talk about her August 1st release, THE WANTON GOVERNESS, part of Harlequin Historical Undone series.
What's happening in Barbara's world...

Sunrise in a Garden of Love and Evil
finaled in the Daphne du Maurier Contest, and Tastes of Love and Evil received an Award of Merit from the Holt Medallion Contest!

Both Notorious Eliza and Tastes of Love & Evil finaled in the Golden Quill Contest, and Sunrise in a Garden of Love & Evil, the first book in my Bayou Gavotte series, finaled for the New England Reader's Choice Bean Pot Award.

Notorious Eliza won in the Historical Romance category of the Epic e-book contest.

What the critics are saying:
Bayou Gavotte Series
"...a fresh and sultry voice joins the paranormal romance genre..." -- Romantic Times

"...charming, offbeat characters..." -- Patricia's Vampire Notes

"A breath of fresh air, in the spirit of Charlaine Harris's Dead Until Dark."
-- New York Times Bestselling Author Susan Squires


ABOUT THE WANTON GOVERNESS:

In exchange for a few days’ shelter, dismissed governess Pompeia Grant pretends to be the wife of a man who spurned her years earlier. James Carling, the man in question, is in America, so he’ll never know. And it’s only for a couple of days. And she’s helping a friend, so she’s doing a good deed… But the next day, James comes home.
Setup for the excerpt: Clarabelle is James’s mother. Sally is his sister, who asked Pompeia to pretend to be James’s wife for a couple of days. The Wanton Within is the voice of Pompeia’s sensual nature, which she has tried very hard to suppress for years…
“What in hell’s name were you thinking?”
At this furious bellow all the ladies froze, then gaped. “Who was that?” Clarabelle faltered.
Pompeia rose in horror. She would know that enraged shout anywhere. She had heard it only once before, and she would never forget it.
But this time it was surely directed at her.
Footsteps hammered on the staircase, and her heart abandoned itself to terror. She had to run. She had to flee.
No! She had to do something.
“James, wait!” That was Sally’s voice. “Please, just let me—”
“James wasn’t supposed to be home yet,” Clarabelle moaned, and meanwhile the footsteps pounded down the passage.
Think, think! There must be some way to avert disaster. Not to Pompeia herself—that was impossible—but to Sally, to whom the vouchers for Almack’s meant so much. But there wasn’t time, because it would mean convincing Sir James to talk to her privately before exposing the deception. It would mean making him want to. Inexorably, the footsteps approached the drawing-room doorway.
I know how to make a man want to, said the Wanton Within.
Not that! Pompeia’s rational mind screamed. Not now! But after a second’s furious pause, she realized that for once the Wanton might be right. She got her feet moving and went straight for the door.
Too late.
Maybe for Pompeia.... But not for Readers... Let's learn about Barbara!!
DONNELL: If you could live anywhere on earth, where would it be?
BARBARA: Sigh. I want to go home – Vancouver, that is. I really, really miss the mountains and ocean. I’m not usually a sentimental person, but I get tears in my eyes when I see Vancouver from a plane – especially when I’m leaving. Sniff.
DONNELL: What/Where’s your favorite room in your house?
BARBARA: The kitchen – so much good stuff happens there!
DONNELL: Have you ever written a character who wasn’t meant to be a hero but he wouldn’t go away?
BARBARA: This happens all the time. In the historical romance I’m working on right now, I dreamed up a mean, nasty, downright horrible cousin of the hero to try to steal away the heroine and debauch her – who turned out to be a real sweetheart the minute I started typing. He’s so adorable he’ll have to be the hero of his own book, even if he does some questionable stuff in this one.
DONNELL: Do you read reviews of your books?
BARBARA: LOL. Yeah, because the good ones make me really, really happy, and the not so good ones… well, I don’t like being told that my story’s “ho-hum,” but I sometimes feel like that about books that others love, so it’s bound to be the same with mine.
DONNELL: You’re trapped in a building about to be demolished. Who’s with you?
BARBARA: No, I’m not, and neither is whoever’s with me. Just not going to happen. On the other hand, if it’s one of my heroines, she might be with a brawny, kilted Scotsman with a magic stone that transports them both to the 13th century. I’m not planning to write one of these dudes, by the way, which makes it even more fun – historical accuracy not required.
DONNELL: What’s in your refrigerator right now?
BARBARA: You want a list? Last year our electric power went out during a storm, and was out for several days while we happened to be out of town… so by the time we got back both the fridge and freezer were full of rotten food. We had to compile a list to give to the insurance company, so I called the items out piece by piece while putting them in trash bags, while my daughter (safely in the other room away from the stench) wrote the long, long list.
DONNELL: Are you an organized individual or a packrat?
BARBARA: It depends. If I have to be organized, I am, but as soon as I don’t have to be…pfft. I learned this the first time I left home. Without my mother telling me to clean my room… LOL. What a mess! I wouldn’t say I’m a packrat, though. I don’t want to keep all that junk – but I’m not interested in going through it, so there it stays.
DONNELL: Is Elvis really dead?
BARBARA: He may be dead, but he’s not gone. I hope he has a good time on whatever plane of existence he finds himself.
DONNELL: High heels or Tennis Shoes?
BARBARA: Depends on who’s wearing them. I love looking at high heels. In a moment of madness before an RWA conference one year, I bought a pair of gorgeous black high-heeled slip-ons covered with shiny beads, size 8. Anybody want them?
DONNELL: What was your proudest moment as a writer?
BARBARA: My proud moments slip by so fast I don’t notice them. I’m more likely to fret about what’s coming next.
DONNELL: What do you do to unwind and relax?
BARBARA: I don’t remember. No, I do, sort of – I used to read. I used to sleep. Now I agonize over the next plot hitch, take some melatonin, and hope for the best.
DONNELL: Do you ever suffer from writer’s block? If so, what do you do about it?
BARBARA: Not really. Sometimes I don’t know how to get out of a fix I’ve written myself into, but usually I just push and push and push until I find my way. Thank God for willing-to-listen daughters and editors.
DONNELL: Are you superstitious?
BARBARA: I am very stubbornly Not Superstitious, but some freak occurrence could easily feed my deepest fears, shatter my determination, and make me wallow in guilt for life because I didn’t give in to some dumb superstitious impulse.
DONNELL: What was one of the most surprising things you learned while writing/researching a book?
BARBARA: That sex was mentioned, joked about, and generally seen as normal and enjoyable in the “olden days.” There have been both repressive periods and permissive ones in the past. When I was young, I thought sexual liberation was something new -- but now I see it as cyclical.
DONNELL: Which era would you least liked to live in, fashion-wise?
BARBARA: The Victorian era. Even when I was young and scrawny, I had a biggish waist.
DONNELL: You've entered a time machine. Where are you going?
BARBARA: Wherever Dr. Who takes me!
DONNELL: If you could interview anyone for a day (and it doesn’t have to be a writer) who would it be?
BARBARA: There’s a good reason I’ve never interviewed anyone and probably never will – I would run out of steam in about ten seconds. Hi, how are you, I feel really, really uncomfortable asking personal questions…Bye now. Now, if Paul McCartney wanted to chat, I’d listen. And, since I enjoy British history, I’d love to spend some time as a fly on the wall in the courts of William the Conqueror, Henry the Second, and Charles the Second. Oh, and I’d like to see what John Donne and the Earl of Rochester were really like. And so on, all in the name of historical research.
DONNELL: If you could tell Readers one thing about you, what would it be?
BARBARA: I wouldn’t. I’m shy about talking about myself, but stuff I care about comes out in my books.
Barbara, thanks for such great answers. We promise not to make you interview anyone, save one. It's time for you to ask the readers one little ol question. Readers, Barbara would like to know:
I’m always looking for something new and different to read. What books have you enjoyed recently? (Any genre, fiction or non-fiction.) Thanks!
Mentioning to Barbara what you've enjoyed recently will enter you in a drawing for a free download of THE WANTON GOVERNESS, either from e-Harlequin or Amazon, winner's choice.
Note: Offer void where prohibited. Prizes will be mailed to North America addresses only. If an electronic Advanced Reading Copy (ARC) is available, the author may utilize that option for International participants. Odds of winning vary due to the number of entrants.
To learn more about Barbara, check out: http://barbaramonajem.com/ or follow her on Twitter @BarbaraMonajem
Tune in tomorrow Friday when Superromance Author Angel Smits joins us.