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Monthly Archives: July 2010

Darling Risky Readers!

I have returned from RomCon and can report back to you all– well nearly all –my adventures. I am very much looking forward to hearing all about Amanda’s experiences, though. I feel it’s safe, however, to announce that our very own Amanda McCabe became a member of the Cucumber Club while she was there. Yours truly was already a member on account of a certain scene in my paranormal My Forbidden Desire. I’ll let Amanda share the details of her initiation, though I will say she was present during a scene of Cucumber mayhem. Make sure you leave congrats in the comments!

My roommie and I flew in Thursday evening, and arrived rather late as our flight was delayed in Las Vegas due to the arrival of Air Force One and the subsequent shut down of all air traffic for half an hour. Thus, our conveyance did not timely arrive in San Francisco to whisk us away to lovely Denver. This is the problem with traveling Post. One is subject to the whims of the road. I mean air.

I was on the Catherine Morland austerity plan (Northanger Abby) so I had with me 12 energy bars so I wouldn’t have to pay for food. (Double Chocolate and Chocolate Peanut Butter, in case anyone is interested … they still taste suspiciously like sawdust but I guess that’s due to all the protein.) Friday morning, my roomie (@SonomaLass — if you happen to be on Twitter, give her a follow!) and I headed down to meet up with Jane from Dear Author.

Jane let me play with her iPad. OMG! We watched a bit of Batman on it and it was awesome. Writing on it would not be horrible at all, especially with the physical keyboard. The software keyboard is much better than I expected it would be. Aside from the cucumber menage, that might well have been the highlight of the con. Then a bunch of us went out to lunch, including Berkley Books executive editor Cindy Hwang, historical author Courtney Milan, Urban Fantasy, Steampunker Meljean Brook, SonomaLass, Jane, of course and several others, including writers, bloggers and readers. Cindy Hwang picked up the tab, which was exceedingly generous.

Then I moderated the Anti-Heroes you Love to Hate Panel. I think I should have had a special hat or maybe an orange vest and some traffic cones. There were 39 people in attendance to hear such authors as Nalini Singh, Jo Beverly, Cindy Gerard and others. No one told me Jo Beverly was going to be on the panel so I didn’t have an introduction for her and when I looked over and saw her among the authors, I had a total fan girl moment and could hardly breathe. If I’d had that orange vest, I could have completed the Carolyn is a Dork moment. I ended up dividing the authors among the tables and letting them have at conversation. Every five minutes the authors switched tables. This gave all the attendees a chance to hear everyone speak in a personal setting. Many prizes were given out.

I attended a couple of events that were on my schedule, most of which were a complete surprise to me. Oh, I’m doing that? Okay! and in between those things I sat around gabbing with folks; bloggers, readers, authors, agents and editors. And it was wonderful great fun! Many of the panels were games and though they might sound silly let me tell you, the games I participated in were a blast. Monster charades with author Carolyn Crane involved participants pulling a slip of paper that contained something to do with paranormal books (authors, titles, characters, creatures etc) for which the person, assisted by an author if needed, gave clues. Good golly, there were women there who know their paranormal romance!

I ran into Julia Quinn several times and I have to say she must be the most charming person in the world. She was very gracious about my gushing over her Ten Things I Love About You, a recent release of hers I read and absolutely loved.

In conclusion, I must say that I would go to RomCon again. It was fun and intimate and really different from most Cons that I’ve been to. I loved the opportunity to just sit and chat with all combinations of readers, bloggers, publishing folks and authors, formally and informally.

I’ve heard rumors the Con date will move to another date, but remain in Denver next year. Having the Con so close to RWA made it a bit tight for me in terms of time off from work and money. Alas, I was back at work Monday. I think having the Con in some month other than July would be a Good Thing. By the end, I was a little sick of energy bars, but they got me through the con without having to pay for any food, except for once when Amanda, Meljean and I decided to order room service Saturday night after the hotel shuttle door jammed, thus preventing us from going off site in search of dinner.

RomCon: Win. If you have the opportunity next year, this is a fun conference for readers, bloggers and authors

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I’m still out of town, but will be back next week with photos and a recap of RomCon and looking ahead to RWA! In the meantime, I’m up in the mountains of New Mexico where Internet is iffy, so I’m leaving some of my favorite fashion history links, which I used in the workshop last weekend. Enjoy–and let us know some of your own favorite sites!

18th Century Blog
Costumers Guide to Movie Costumes (not history exactly, but tons of fun!)
FIDM Museum
Metropolitan Museum of Art (the Costume Institute has a wonderful searchable database)
Worn Through
The Costumer’s Manifesto
Jessamyn’s Regency Costume Companion
Elizabethan Costuming Page
Sense & Sensibility Patterns (great links)
Cathy Decker’s Regency Fashion Page
Demode Couture
Fashion-Era
The Costume Gallery
The Costume Site (tons of great links!)
Tudor Links

And of course these are just the tip of the fashion iceberg…

Have you ever held a yard sale in order to fund a home repair project? Well, that’s precisely what Earl Spencer, brother of Princess Diana, did when he needed ten million pounds to repair the roof at Althorp and fund other home repair projects. Rather than use his driveway and front yard, Earl Spencer used the famous Christies auction house to auction off paintings, furniture, carriages, livery, uniforms, walking sticks, canes, snuff boxes, spoons, linens, porcelain, inkstands, and more.

See all the items here.
Read more about it here.

Too bad the auction is over, because I would have selected these items for myself:


I’m partial to prints and artwork and would not have been able to resist a miniature of Georgiana, the Duchess of Devonshire (1757-1806). Georgiana died before the Regency, but she was a super star of her day, a fashion icon and a political hostess as well as a lady who personified some of the excesses of the Georgian era.

This is Lady Anne Horatia Seymour, wife of Lord Hugh Seymour, one of the Prince Regent’s set, and good friend of Mrs. Fitzherbert. Isn’t she pretty?

This fellow is Colonel Sir Horace Beauchamp Seymour, son of Lady Anne Horatia Seymour. Doesn’t he just look like the perfect Regency gentleman? Look at that hair!

I also love antique porcelain and I thought these Chinese Famille Rose plates (1736-95) were particularly beautiful.

I also could not resist this lovely piece of furniture which the auction house called a “Louis XVI Giltwood Canape.”

There were so many treasures at the auction that it would have been hard to limit myself. As it was, I “spent” about ten thousand pounds. And I noticed that most of what I coveted was Georgian, not Regency. I suppose my Regency world is furnished with Georgian decor.

Did you ever buy a treasure at an auction or a yard sale? When I was at college I bought a desk and a vacuum cleaner worth every bit of the ten dollars I spent!

Which of Earl Spencer’s treasures would you have purchased?


Come visit me on Thursday for Diane’s Blog and next Sunday here at Risky Regencies when my friend Mary Blayney will talk about her latest, Courtesan’s Kiss.

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A big Riskies welcome to Patricia Rice and her July 2010 release, THE WICKED WYCKERLY. In her own words ….

That’s where you’ll find my much-maligned Earl of Danecroft and his…umm…spirited daughter. Poor chap, his irresponsible bachelor’s life has just come to a crashing, nearly fatal, end with the inheritance of a bankrupt earldom and the arrival of a six-year-old dispenser of flaming dragon dung. Where’s a wealthy, understanding woman when one needs one?

Tell us about your inspiration for The Wicked Wyckerly and the 
Rebellious Sons Series.


My editor and I were brainstorming at RWA in San Francisco. I told her I was tired of dukes and lords and wanted to write about younger sons. I also had this idea about a bankrupt hero who grabs his daughter and runs. And another idea about a wealthy widow who grants bequests to deserving spinsters—sort of a Cinderella story. And by the time we were done, the whole series came together!

Your blurb for the book sounds straight out of Heyer (that’s a 
compliment!)–a tribute to Frederica. Who are your influences?

Why, thank you! I came late to Heyer, reading them when I first became enamored of the Walker Regencies in our very limited small town library. I had read and re-read Austen regularly since childhood but didn’t know there was an entire category of Regency romances out there. I fell in love instantly. I believe I read Patricia Veryan, and Jo Beverley, and Loretta Chase first, and once I realized I could buy the paperbacks, I drove thirty miles to a bookstore and haven’t stopped reading them since. I still re-read those old favorites. Heyer is on my bookshelf but to be truthful, I don’t have her memorized, so I had no idea the story was similar!

Did you run into any interesting research for this book?


Exploring bankruptcy among the ton proved gambling was just as ruinous as our books portray. Some of the wealthiest, most powerful aristocrats were so addicted that they died owing more than they ever earned—to tradesmen, because gambling debts had to be paid immediately. Of course, there were others who simply thought money flowed like water and spent it acquiring enormously expensive collections until their debtors came knocking. Aristocrats couldn’t be thrown in debtor’s prison, but their debtors could go to court and seek restitution by stripping their homes of everything they owned. Which is why my Fitz walked such a precarious line…

You’re a very prolific writer, writing in at least three subgenres– 
historical, paranormal, contemporary. How do you get yourself in a 
Regency mindset and set the mood for writing historicals?

I have a weird brain. Really, I’ve been published for over 25 years and I’ve always had a need to switch back and forth between genres to clear my head. For whatever reason, my lizard brain starts percolating Regency stories while I’m writing paranormals or contemporaries, and vice versa. When it comes time to write those ideas, I’m right there in that setting. For Regencies, of course, I have tons of resource material I can dive into to recall the language, but mostly, the writing is a subsconscious act. Perhaps I’ve read so many Regencies over the years, it’s part of who I am. Or maybe I’m a reincarnated Regency servant.

What do you like about the Regency period? Dislike?

I think what I like most is the contrast of politeness of manners to actual behavior. There were all these rules about how to dress for when and where and how to leave cards and even which road a lady is allowed to walk down—and I suppose anyone conquering all these rules felt very secure. But underneath that gentility was a population just coming out of the bawdy Georgian era where once the heir and spare were in place, anything went sexually. So it’s quite reasonable to write about a repressed spinster and a dashing rake, or a polite scholar and a seductive widow, and characters who aren’t certain what is expected of them. Built-in conflict! Oh, and the clothes, of course. Men in skin-tight breeches and boots, women in frail muslin and ribbons… Sigh, all good.

I’m not entirely certain that there’s anything I particularly dislike about the Regency, from an author’s point of view. There was much to dislike in the era itself, from the lack of running water to the crime-ridden slums and the horrendous criminal system. But as a writer, those make for fantastic stories, so I can’t dislike them.

Our standard question: What makes your books risky?


Each book presents a different risk, a different challenge. I get bored if I’m not sticking my neck out and being perverse. Writing a series about the younger sons of aristocracy instead of the usual dukes, of whom there seem to be three per square inch in romance, is a market risk. Writing a romp after my darker historical trilogy was a challenge to myself, and possibly another market risk since everyone is reading dark these days. But if we’re not pushing boundaries, then we’re simply regurgitating what’s already out there, and who wants that?

What do you like to do when not writing?



Read! I need more reading time! I garden and travel and visit with family when I can, but I’m always reading.

When will the next Rebellious Sons book come out and can you give us 
a hint of what it will be about?

The next book is THE DEVILISH MONTAGUE. Blake has a brain like an encyclopedia but nowhere to use it, so he vents his frustrations physically by nearly getting himself killed in duels and races and war, like any good Corinthian. Until he meets his Waterloo in a woman all society calls Ladybyrd and suddenly, instead of endangering his own life, someone else is trying to take it. Trying to protect his woman, her parrot, and his life presents more challenge than he’s ever been up against.

The Riskies will choose one a winner from today’s conversation to receive a signed copy of the book, so let’s chat!

How many of you enjoy becoming involved in a series world? And those who do not, why?

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