Romantic Novels and Working Class Characters
A writer friend of mine commented once that it is difficult to have romance when you don’t know where your next meal is coming from.
A writer friend of mine commented once that it is difficult to have romance when you don’t know where your next meal is coming from.
I am a bit perturbed (I’m good at being perturbed, aren’t I?) at a New Age view which has infiltrated popular thinking. A recent blog
As above, my Gothic Historical darkly comic tale of a family curse ‘The Vilainous Viscount Or the Curse of the Venns’ is free on
Now for some comic relief. Who’s for a Gothic historical romance, full of anachronisms (which the re-cycled characters know too well). Scene: A castle in
I am happy to say that my latest ‘The Peterloo Affair’, is now out oon Amazon.com here and Amazon.co.uk here I wrote this tale primarily as
In my last post, I wrote about the influence of Mary Renault, whose fictional interpretation of Ancient Greece has become so famous. I commented
I never get much in the way of writing done in the summer and early autumn; family matters always take precedence. I feel guilty about
I wonder what people’s writing resolutions for 2017 are? My personal writing resolution is to finish the sequel to ‘That Scoundrel Émile Dubois’ and then,
One of the complaints often aired by romance readers is that the genre is despised as escapism, and yet this insult is not so often
I saw some posts on Facebook recently on romantic novels and the HEA (for anyone uninitiated, that notorious Happy Ever After). The posters said that
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