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The Riskies are happy to welcome Cara Elliott (aka Andrea Pickens) to the blog to talk about her “debut” series! Comment for a chance to win a copy of To Sin With a Scoundrel

An enjoyable romance peopled with charming characters that demonstrate her strong storytelling gift! –RT Book Reviews

Riskies: Welcome back, Andrea! Tell us about To Sin With a Scoundrel and your new series as Cara Elliott!

Cara: The Circle of Sin trilogy, which marks my debut as Cara Elliott, centers around a small group of female scholars who meet each week to share their knowledge–and their friendship. The 3 heroines of the trilogy, Ciara, Alessandra, and Kate, are beautiful and brainy. And they each have a scandalous secret…

The 3 stories are all about past deceptions, dark secrets, and hidden passions. Each of the heroines must draw on her own cleverness and courage–as well as help from a sinfully sexy rogue–when a past sin stirs up a mix of deadly intrigue and dangerous desires.

To Sin With a Scoundrel, the first book in the series, features Lady Ciara Sheffield, a reclusive widow. Because of her expertise in chemistry, she’s been shadowed by rumors that she poisoned her late husband. When his relatives try to gain custody of her young son and his inheritance, her friends decide she needs a rich and influential fiance to help quell any scandal. The rakish Earl of Hadley doesn’t seem to be an ideal choice. A fun-loving, hell-raising devil he is her exact opposite–but in science there’s the old adage “opposites attract”…

Riskies: What was the inspiration for the stories, and what kind of research did you do? Did you base your scientific circle on real women of the Regency era?

Cara: The inspiration for the series came a few years ago when I saw a couple of exhbits on women of the Romantic era. They showcased a wonderful array of real-life females, from scientists and writers to artists and explorers. Their stories and accomplishments were truly amazing, and it brought home to me how much courage and conviction these women had to dare to defy the conventions of their time in order to pursue their passions.

For example, there was Mary Shelley, who eloped to Europe at 16 with married poet Percy Shelley–and then went on to become a famous writer of her own. And then there was Augusta Ada Byron, Countess Lovelace, daughter of Byron, who was a mathematical genius. She survived an abusive childhood and went on to work with Charles Babbage, helping to develop the precursor to the modern computer.

So I knew right then that I wanted to write a series that celebrated the spirit of these smart, brave women.

But even though my heroines are smart, they don’t live in an ivory tower! There are some pretty steamy scenes in Scoundrel, but they certainly weren’t difficult to write. I just call in Johnny Depp or Orlando Bloom for a little rehearsal, and then it’s no problem at all! (Sometimes I have to settle for Daniel Craig, but what’s a girl to do?)

Riskies: What is “risky” about the book?

Cara: Well, I tend to write offbeat, unconventional heroines, maybe because I tended to be a tomboy as a child and was often chided to “act more like a normal young lady!” (To her credit, my mother was not one of those voices. She always encouraged my enthusiasms, whether they involved cutting out cardboard swords and crowns, or making bows and arrows, for which I am profoundly grateful). In any case, none of my heroines are demure, dainty demoiselles swathed in layers of satin and silk. They’re more the sort of women who don’t mind rolling up their sleeves and getting their hands dirty, both physically and metaphorically. I enjoy creating characters who are both strong and vulnerable. To me, that dichotomy adds depth and texture to a story.

Riskies: When did you know you wanted to be a writer?
Cara: Oh, I always had stories bubbling around in my brain! I wrote my first book at age 5, a cowboy story with brightly colored drawings of horses and gunslingers. (Since I now write Regencies, I must have a thing for Men In Boots!). My other childhood memory of storytelling was a 5th grade English class. I had a wonderful teacher who gave us really interesting projects. One day he walked in with a sheaf of pictures cut out of magazines, and handed one to each of us. The assignment was to spend the next half-hour writing a short story based on the picture. Then we all had to show our picture and read our stories aloud. After class, as we were filing out to math or some other odious subject, he took me aside and said that he had been sitting in the back of the room, half listening to everyone as he corrected papers, but when I started to read he put his pen down. “You have a real talent for this,” he said with a pat on my shoulder.

So I’ve always had a vivid imagination…so much so that I think at times it worried my parents that I was so happy in my own little world, drawing, reading, playing with toy soldiers. My teachers would tell you that I was the class history geek, even in grade school. In high school, my interest in art sort of took over and steered me away from writing. I remained a voracious reader, and as a history minor in college I wrote reams of non-fiction essays, but storytelling got put on the back burner.

Then about 12 years ago the Muse started whispering in my ear again. I sharpened my pencil and opened a blank notebook–and despite the craziness of the publishing world I can’t imagine my life without writing!
Riskies: What’s next for you?

Cara: I’m working on a new trilogy for Grand Central, and I also have some historical mystery ideas taking shape….

And in June look for the second “Circle of Sin Book” To Surrender to a Rogue!
Riskies: You’re currently teaching a seminar on Regency romance at Yale! What’s that been like? What’s the reaction of your students to romance fiction? Has it had an effect on your own writing?

Cara: Teaching the seminar with Lauren Willig has been an amazing experience! Our students come to class each wekk with such interesting reactions to the book assignments. Their comments have been fresh, witty, unexpected, amusing, and it’s made me look at my own views from a whole new perspective. The dialogue and debate are exciting and inspiring.

We’ve been tracing the development of the Regency romance from Austen to the modern American practicioners, and we talk about such things as what makes a compelling hero and heroine, as well as plot tropes and the nature of love and romance. So in drafting the lesson plans for each week I’ve had to read (or re-read) the books not just for enjoyment but with a critical eye, looking at language, structure and characterization. I’ve learned a lot about writing, and I hope the students have too. I’ve really enjoyed every minute–but I have to say, I had forgotten how much work school is!

For more information on Cara’s books, and the syllabus and reading list of the class, you can visit her website! Comment for a chance to win a copy of To Sin With a Scoundrel


I’m back from the dead (or at least not feeling all pooky and sick anymore), and am so psyched I’ve been able to write this week.

This week, I was also lucky enough (and not sick!) to go to Lady Jane’s Salon, a monthly romance event held in New York City. Romance readers get together to socialize and listen to authors read from their works. This Monday was even more specialer, ’cause Cara Elliott (who’s guesting here on Sunday) read from her book, To Sin With A Scoundrel.

What I really like about what Cara read (and I have the book in house, haven’t read it yet–the TBR pile is taller than my 10 year-old) is the fix she so clearly had on her characters. If I met either one of those folks on the street, I would TOTALLY know them. Even if they weren’t wearing Regency clothing. And the two characters, while seemingly familiar, had stuff about them that wasn’t quite–something that made them each distinctive in their own ways. Very, very cool.

That was in juxtaposition to something else I’ve read recently, where I wouldn’t know the characters at all, except they are so two-dimensional they’d likely be flat in real life (it’s a Euclidean reference, people!). The eeeevil villainess was so eeevil she had yellow teeth, just in case you missed her pointed dialogue; the villain guy was a rotund lech; and the heroine was a Mary Sue in the worst way. Yuk. My life is too short to continue past the first chapter, so I didn’t.

Everyone has dealbreakers in books; I can ignore almost any number of egregious faults and errors if I like the characters. Even if the characters do things that make my eyes widen (see: Lilith Saintcrow, Harry Pearce in MI-5, Season 7. Harry!). I wouldn’t like to hang out with that many of my favorite characters, but I love reading their stories. My dealbreakers happen when the characters are lifeless, cliched or do things, without explanation, that they would never do (it IS fun to have a character do something she would never do, but you have to set it up right).

Do I know where I am going with this? As usual, nope.

I am just glad to be back writing, not feeling lousy, and glad that there are so many awesome books in the TBR pile. Come back on Sunday for a lucid interview with Cara E.

Megan

As soon as I read Mrs Darcy vs The Aliens I promised myself I would invite the author, the Real Mrs Darcy as s/he is known on Twitter, to the Riskies (thus giving myself the day off for my birthday). Imagine my surprise when I find that the Real Mrs. Darcy is in fact our very first male guest! Yes, we’ve tried in the past, but they’ve shunned our bastion of female accomplishments.

So let me introduce the Real Mrs Darcy aka Jonathan, who will tell you about his creation and answer your questions.

Welcome!

First of all, I’d really like to thank you all for inviting me here. I believe that I’m the first guest of the male persuasion to be welcomed into your charming and respectable abode, so I will be on my best behavior and try not to resort to oafish mannerisms or indelicate language. Not that I do that sort of thing in any case. Oh no.

I guess the reason for the invitation is Mrs Darcy vs The Aliens, which I’m running as a serial here. It’s been described as “not so much a sequel to Pride and Prejudice as its bastard offspring following a one-night stand with the X Files”, and I think that just about sums it up.

I first had the idea back in late 2007, when I’d just finished reading Suzanna Clarke’s rather wonderful Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell. I described that book to a writer friend of mine and we agreed that it was essentially a Regency novel with added wizards. From there it was a comparatively short leap to conceiving of a Regency novel with added aliens.

It was a slightly longer leap to actually writing it. In fact, the idea was so preposterous that I didn’t do a thing until early 2008, when I christened it Mrs Darcy vs The Aliens and threw together a synopsis and opening prologue for a competition. The critique I received for it was surprisingly complimentary – except that it included the sentence “This is a brave venture!”

Brave.

Brave is not a good word for a debut novelist to have attached to their work in progress. Brave means “stupid”, “foolhardy” and “no publisher is going to look at this stupid idea in a million years.” So I put it to one side until December of that year, when a friend of mine, Kate Nash, was setting herself up as a literary agent. I jokingly suggested that she might like to consider Mrs Darcy, fully expecting her to hate it, as she is herself a published author of proper Regency romances, under the name Kate Allen.

Somewhat to my surprise, though, she loved the idea, and said that if I could come up with three chapters in time for the London Book Fair in March, she would test the water with a few publishers. So I got writing.

And then the zombies arrived.

At this point, I almost gave up, because the last thing I wanted to write was something that looked like it was jumping on a bandwagon. I had a load of other plans for Mrs Darcy (I’d worked out a plot by now, and I could see a whole series of sequels), and I didn’t want the first thing that anyone said when I described the project to be “Oh, like that Pride and Prejudice and Zombies thing.” Because I was pretty sure that would be the reaction, not only of Joe and Jane Public but also of any potential publisher. If I’d had the thing written and ready to go, then it would have been a different story. But of course, I hadn’t wanted to be “brave,” had I?

Looking back, it was completely the wrong reaction. I should have just swallowed my pride and got stuck in, recognizing it as an opportunity instead of a threat. But instead I put Mrs Darcy to one side and got on with other things. Every now and then, however, I would come back to it, cajoled by both my agent and my wonderful writers’ group, the Verulam Writers’ Circle, and eventually I had my three chapters ready. Amazingly, my agent still liked it (bless her), but at this point the bandwagon was well and truly trundling out of town and it was looking unlikely that I would even manage to jump on that.

The trouble was, by now I’d fallen in love with the project. I’d got a whole load of themes up and running (including Mr Darcy’s plan for an heir, Mr Collins’ mission for prostitutes in the East End, Jack the Ripper, Lord Byron, Charlotte Collins’ laudanum issues, Wickham’s work as an undercover secret agent and loads of tentacled aliens, to say nothing of a sub-plot involving the financial ruin of the Bingleys) and I wanted the world to read it, whatever happened.

Then I had an idea. Why not take a leaf out of Dickens’ book and publish it first as a serial? That way, using my presence on Twitter, Facebook and various writers’ forums, I could muster grass-roots support and use that as leverage to get the interest of a publisher. Almost as soon as I had the idea, I bought the www.mrsdarcyvsthealiens.com domain and reserved the @RealMrsDarcy account on Twitter. Having checked that my agent was happy, I went ahead and published the prologue on December 16th, 2009.

I had no idea that December 16th was Jane Austen’s birthday. None whatsoever. If ever I believed in fate …

It’s been running twice a week ever since, and I think I can say that it’s been pretty successful. Its fans range from complete strangers that I just happened to follow on Twitter in my @RealMrsDarcy guise to serious writers on forums that I frequent who I would have expected to have been a bit sniffy about it. I also get quite a few people coming in from sites like Austenblog and Jane Austen Today, as well as quite a few steampunkers (which is nice).

A couple of weeks ago I also had the idea of putting together a trailer for it (I’m really making all this up as a I go along). My initial idea was to do one of those videos where they add new subtitles to the bunker scene from Downfall, but there have been over 200 of those already, so I needed something a bit different. I wondered if it might be possible to find a version of Pride and Prejudice dubbed into a foreign language, but that proved impossible. So I thought, why not dub it myself as well as do the subtitles? Which is what I did. The literary blog Lit Drift has described the result as one of the weirdest book trailers they’ve seen, and I’m taking that as a compliment:

I’m not entirely sure what other stunts I can pull to top that, but I’ll see what I can come up with …

That, then, is the story of Mrs Darcy vs The Aliens. I do hope you’ll be sufficiently intrigued to take a look at it. It’s up to Episode 22 by now, but if you don’t want to go through all of it from the beginning, there are regular “Previously …” type posts and you can simply read on from one of them, maybe catching up on the earlier stuff later. Or you can treat it the same way as a soap opera that you’re just joining and pick it up as you go along.

It only remains for me to thank Janet and her colleagues again for inviting me. I do hope I haven’t disgraced myself.

Now.

Any questions?

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged | 22 Replies

For anyone new to the blog or just serendipitously dropping by, the Riskies are doing a Read Along. Over the next couple of weeks we’ll be reading Georgette Heyer’s Venetia and discussing in the comments. Anyone and everyone is welcome to join. The only requirement is that you read Heyer’s Venetia.

We’ll start reading next Wednesday, March 10 so now’s the time to be picking up the book if you haven’t all ready.

Next week, I’ll post some things to think about as we’re reading. You will NOT be obliged to actually think about these things if you don’t want to.

Venetia has 21 chapters, so if we read 7 chapters a week, we can be done by the end of the month. Let’s start with that as a reading goal.

Don’t stress or drop out if that goal doesn’t work out for you. You can still chat about what parts you have read. You’re not obligated to post big long comments, but of course we will love you if you do just as we will love short comments.

I’m looking forward to learning about people’s opinions, reactions, AND analysis. If you don’t want to analyze, don’t. If you do, that’s awesome!

Don’t forget, we have some prizes available, and if you don’t comment, you have ZERO chance of winning.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged | 9 Replies
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