Showing posts with label Carol Townend. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carol Townend. Show all posts

09 March 2008

The Novice Bride Winner

We have a winner for Carol Townend's The Novice Bride giveaway: LIMECELLO! Contact Carol to give her your address. The book must be claimed by next Sunday or another winner will be drawn. Please stop back later to let us know what you thought of her novel! Congratulations!

02 March 2008

Guest Blogger: Carol Townend Returns

Let's welcome back our guest blogger Carol Townend as she celebrates the release of her newest Mills & Boon historical, The Novice Bride.

The Novice Bride by Carol Townend
Innocent bride, conquering husband!

As a novice, Lady Cecily of Fulford's knowledge of men is non-existent. But when tragic news bids her home immediately, her only means of escape from the convent is to brazenly offer herself to the enemy...as a bride!

With her fate now in the hands of her husband, Sir Adam Wymark, she battles to protect her family. Suspicions and betrayal are rife, yet their convenient marriage offers Cecily much more than comfort in her knight's arms...
***

The heroine of this novel is a novice at the time of the Norman Conquest. How did you find her character?

Since I spent my schooldays in a convent in the wilds of Yorkshire, I suspect that some of the inspiration may have come from there. One of the main themes of the novel is innocence. This story needed a heroine who had very little experience of men and Cecily, having been sent to St Anne's convent when very young, is a total innocent. That is her weakness, but also it is the source of her strength, and it is one of the things that attracts the hero to her. Cecily is no cipher. In the convent she finds it a struggle to follow the nuns' Rule to the letter and she is often doing penance for her sins. Convent life was harsh, but then life was harsh for almost everyone in the eleventh century.

What makes St Anne's particularly hard for Cecily as a novice is that she does not have a true vocation. A life ordered by bells is not for her, and when the chance comes for her to leave the convent she seizes it, even though it means alienating the mother superior. I feel I should add that none of the sisters at my school resembled either Cecily or Mother Aethelflaeda--the characters sprang into my head fully formed when I was developing the novel!

The hero of this novel is Breton, not Norman. Did many Bretons come over with Duke William at the time of the conquest?

Yes, footsoldiers and knights came from all over France to offer Duke William their service before he left for England. (Brittany is the neighbouring duchy to Normandy.) The Breton cavalry was feared throughout Europe, it was famous for its wild charges and startling battle tactics--which sometimes included faking a retreat and then swirling round to bear down on the enemy when they were in disarray. The horsemanship of the Breton knights was second to none, and the hero’s name, Wymark--means 'worthy of a horse'. Sir Adam was not born to his title, he earned it the hard way, by working his way up through the ranks.

Do you spend much time choosing your characters' names?

It is a vital part of the research and character development. I love choosing names for my characters, both first and last names. People did not have surnames in the eleventh century as we do today, but they were often given second names to help distinguish them one from another. These last names might be earned as Adam's was earned, thanks to his skills as a knight. Lady Cecily's second name Fulford, simply refers to the name of her village, so place names were used too. I guess my own name of Townend must mean that at some time my ancestors must have lived in a house at the end of the town! Sometimes a person's character might give them a name, such as Eadric the Wild or Alfred the Great. At other times names of occupation might be used, like Eustace the Monk, or Rosamund Miller.

Over the centuries, some of our surnames have developed from these names. Proudfoot, Steward, Falco...names are intriguing. Of course the first name is equally important, it must have the right resonance for the character to 'take' on the page. As a writer, the novel just doesn’t start to come together properly until the names are right.

On the cover blurb it says 'Wessex Weddings.' Is novel this one of a series?

The Novice Bride is a stand-alone novel, but it is the first in a mini-series which looks at the effect of the Norman Conquest on various characters in both England and France. In Anglo-Saxon times Wessex, with the city of Winchester at its centre, was at the heart of England. The action in this novel mainly takes place in and around Winchester. The layout of the centre of Winchester--around the Cathedral--is much the same today as it was in the eleventh century. Of course there have been changes, but a visit to the museum just off the Cathedral Close points up the similarities.

There is a scale model of Winchester in 1066 and you can see the street layout, exactly as it would have been in Cecily and Adam’s time. My husband took a picture of the model, which came in most useful when Cecily was running up and down the town, trying to hide from Adam. Here is a picture of another model at the Museum, of later in the eleventh century. You can see the Cathedral in the centre. Again the street layout is much the same, but this second model is useful because it shows the Norman castle that was built soon after the Conquest. (The brownish area at the bottom left.)


You won't be surprised if characters in other Wessex Weddings stories--such as An Honorable Rogue and His Captive Lady--find themselves passing through these streets...

***

The Novice Bride (ISBN: 9780263862492) is published by Mills & Boon in March and is available in on their website and via Amazon.co.uk. Reviews may be found at the Pink Heart Society, Romance Reader at Heart, and Red Roses for Authors.

Prize Draw: Leave a comment and you're in with a chance to win a copy of the UK Edition of The Novice Bride. Carol has one, waiting to be mailed...

01 March 2008

Weekly Announcements - 1 March 08

Bonnie Vanak will be attending the Romantic Times convention where she'll be signing copies of her May release The Scorpion and the Seducer. Anyone else going to be there?

***

Michelle Styles' Sold and Seduced has been translated into Spanish. Called Siete días sin besos, the title refers to a wager between Lydia and Aro.

***

Crossed Swords by Marianne LaCroixMarianne LaCroix's historical erotic romance, Crossed Swords, got a 4.5 star review from "Romantic Times BOOKClub" magazine and a coveted Top Pick! Here's a snippet of the review appearing in the April 2008 issue:

LaCroix has outdone herself. This swashbuckling tale will have you offering to swab the decks, if it will put you in good graces with the wickedly handsome pirate captain! There's plenty of action in and out of the captain's quarters to keep you flying through the pages of this sizzling story. ~ Romantic Times BOOKClub
Broken Hero by Anne WhitfieldCrossed Swords is available now for download at Ellora's Cave, and coming soon to paperback in Pirate's Mistress.

***

Anne Whitfield's newest release, Broken Hero, has been release by The Wild Rose Press. Anne is also hosting a multi-author contest on her blog that runs through 16 March. Check it out!

***

Sundial by Carrie LoftyCarrie Lofty received 5 out of 5 books from Long and Short Reviews for her time travel short "Sundial."
Mark is a sensual young man, yet immature, sad and lost. Amber is a perfect match for him: older and worldly, passionate and strong. The love scenes are hot and well written, balanced perfectly with the tension of the situation the lovers find themselves dealing with. The chapters leading to the final climax will have readers flipping the pages to find out what happens when Mark and Amber discover a way to leave Italy and return to the future.
Carrie's also guest blogging this week at Caren Johnson's agency blog and KristieJ's Ramblings on Romance.

***

The Novice Bride by Carol TownendJoin us Sunday when we'll feature the return of Harlequin author Carol Townend. She'll be discussing her 7 March UK release of The Novice Bride.

We'll also draw the winner of a copy of Delia DeLeest's newest release Eye of the Beholder and her debut It Takes Moxie. We haven't had many commenters, so don't miss your chance to try out Delia's wonderful writing. Leave a comment for your shot at winning.

***

Have a good weekend. If you have an announcement to make for next week, email Carrie! See you next week...

10 February 2008

An Honorable Rogue Winner

We have a winner for Carol Townend's An Honorable Rogue giveaway: Maya! Contact Carol to give her your address. Your prize must be claimed by next Sunday or another winner will be drawn. Please stop back later to let us know what you thought of her novel! Congratulations!

02 February 2008

Weekly Announcements - 2 Feb 08

Erastes' historical novella "Chiaroscuro," a 19th century Florentine story about a painter and his subject, was released in a m/m vampire anthology from Aspen Mountain Press. She has also sold "Drug Colours," a short story based in 1970s punk London to Lethe Press for their inaugural Best Gay Short Stories, and has been commissioned to write an article for After Elton regarding gay historical fiction. Congratulations on a busy week!

***

Highland Press is going to reissue Beats a Wild Heart, Jean Adams' contemporary novel set on Bodmin Moor, Cornwall.

***

A Noble Captive in Michelle StylesMichelle Styles' book A Noble Captive has been translated into Polish, and was released yesterday in French as La Maitresse du Tribun. The Roman's Virgin Mistress is going to be an April release in France as well.

***

The winner drawn for last week's contest for a copy of Annie Burrows' My Lady Innocent already has a copy! Soooo... we have a new winner: JOYE. Contact Annie to give her your address. Your prize must be claimed by next Sunday or another winner will be drawn. Please stop back later to let us know what you thought of her novel! Congratulations!

***

A Honorable Rogue by Carol TownendJoin us Sunday when our guest author will be Carol Townend. She'll be discussing her book An Honorable Rogue, set in Brittany and Wessex during the tumultuous time of the Norman Conquest. We'll also draw the winner of a copy of Anita Davison's book Duking Days Rebellion. Leave a comment for your chance to win.

***

Have a good weekend. If you have an announcement to make for next week, email Carrie! See you next week...