Archive for August, 2010

And the winners are…

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

The Season One Year Anniversary Wednesday winners are:

Sharon Knight
Trin R
Sherry Taulbee
Kim Cagle
Sandra Lynne
Jackie Wisherd

Congratulations, ladies! Please email your top 10 picks in preference order to me at contests at theseasonforromance dot com. I will try my best to get you as much as I can from your list. You will be emailed about your prize. You have one week to claim your books.

Authors under the radar: Shana Galen

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

This recommendation comes from Sophie Jordan, a New York Times and USA Today bestselling author (and one of my faves). She told me how much she adored THE MAKING OF A DUCHESS. So that is how the name of Shana Galen came to my attention. And because of Sophie’s recommendation, she is this month’s Author Under the Radar.

In doing this post I learned several things about Shana:

1. She was first published in 2005 with HarperCollins. That book was WHEN DASHING MET DANGER.

2. Shana also wrote contemporaries for HarperCollins under the name of Shane Bolks, the first of which was THE GOOD, THE BAD, AND THE UGLY MEN I’VE DATED (Hehehehe. Come on, you gotta chuckle over that title).

3. Her historical, BLACKTHORNE’S BRIDE was nominated for a RITA in 2008.

Currently, Shana is writing a new historical romance series for Sourcebooks, the first of which is the aforementioned THE MAKING OF A DUCHESS. I also see her tweeting on Twitter but I’m told that’s part of her job…you know, networking. :) In all seriousness, not only did I pick Shana because of Sophie’s recommendation, I did so because her new series sounds great as well as her back list, and because she’s a real sweetheart. All of which go a long way to courting me as a reader.


The Making of a Duchess
Author: Shana Galen
Publisher: Sourcebooks
Pub. Date: June 1, 2010
ISBN-13: 978-1402238659
Retail: $6.99
Pages: 384

Twelve years after fleeing their burning chateau, Julien Harcourt, Duc de Valère, searches for his lost twin brothers. His frequent travels between England and France at a time when the exiled Napoleon is reported to be marshalling his troops raises the suspicions of English authorities who set secret operative Sarah Smith on his trail. A risky game of cat and mouse leads the two from the ballrooms of London to the prisons of Paris and into a fragile love that neither dares to hope for.

The first in a trilogy of three brothers struggling to reconnect and restore their noble heritage in the aftermath of the French Revolution, each losing his heart along the way.

In October, the second offering in Shana’s Sons of the Revolution series, THE MAKING OF A GENTLEMAN, will be out in the book stores. And I, being as impatient as one can be, have already scored the eARC for this one while waiting impatiently for USPS to deliver THE MAKING OF A DUCHESS to my mailbox. As I know it’s a series, I must read them in order. :D


The Making of a Gentleman
Author: Shana Galen
Publisher: Sourcebooks
Pub. Date: October 5, 2010
ISBN-13: 978-1402238666
Retail: $7.99
Pages: 384

Twelve years in a French prison have left the once dashing Armand Harcourt, Comte de Valere a hollow shell of his former self. Though safely back on English soil, Armand remains locked in a prison of his mind, unable to interact with the glittering social world that was his rightful place.

When his family hires the beautiful and determined Felicity Bennett to teach Armand, he is shaken by the onslaught of desire Felicity awakens in him. As Felicity slowly helps reclaim Armand, their passion begins to blossom into a transcendent love capable of healing the scars of both their pasts.


Shana has generously offered an autographed copy of THE MAKING OF A DUCHESS to a commenter. If you have questions for Shana, ask away as she’ll be stopping by. And don’t forget, comment and you will double your entries to win 5 books from Wednesday’s selection of The Season One Year Anniversary Giveaway.

Wednesday’s Question

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

Today’s Question:

What specific sub-genre is Meljean’s Brooks’ novella Here There Be Monsters in the BURNING UP anthology?

Email your answer to contests at theseasonforromance dot com. Please include your first and last name.

**Hint: Answer can be found in the pop up review on the website. Double quotes around the search string helps limit the results.

And the winners are…

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

The winners of The Season One Year Anniversary Giveaway for Tuesday are…

Kisah Jackson
Stephanie McCarthy
Heather D.
Jane Cheung
Emily Spahn
Susan Cote

Congratulations, ladies!  Please email your top 10 picks in preference order to me at contests at theseasonforromance dot com. I will try my best to get you as much as I can from your list. You will be emailed about your prize. You have one week to claim your books.

Comfort Zone

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

Comfort zone. Do you have one? I’d say we all do. Have you ever read outside your comfort zone with good results? Bad results? In romance novels, where do you have no desire to go or fear to tread?

So far this year, the one book that comes to mind that so fits the criteria of ‘out of my comfort zone’ is TEMPTING EDEN by Margaret Rowe. For me, it was one of those books that both shocked and drew me at the same time. The subject matter (as I state in my review) is disturbing to the extreme. It dealt with something so taboo, my immediate reaction was to shrink away from it and say, “I just can’t”.  But I did. And I must say the experience of reading TEMPTING EDEN really toughened my sensibilities. At the time I was reading TEMPTING EDEN, I was still terribly squeamish about reading medievals despite the wonderful experience I’d had with Margaret Mallory’s KNIGHT OF DESIRE. You see Margaret Mallory’s book must have been an anomaly. Boy did I ever read my next medieval with a thicker skin. Physical torture, being pursued by evil men out to kill my hero and heroine somehow didn’t disturb me the way it used to after reading TEMPTING EDEN.

All in all, I’m glad I read Margaret Rowe’s book. At the end of the day it was a love story that moved me, opening my eyes and giving me a deeper understanding of the heroine and someone–anyone in her same plight. Would I read something in that vein again? Not readily, but I will never say never because the right story can always pull me in. Right now, Margaret’s alter ego Maggie Robinson’s books are much more my style.

Comment and double your chances of winning a spot in Tuesday’s winners’ circle.

Today’s Question

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

Today’s Question:

In Penny Warner’s HOW TO CRASH A KILLER BASH, what nickname does Presley have for Brad?

Email your answer to contests at theseasonforromance dot com. Please include your first and last name.

**Hint: Answer can be found in the pop up review on the website.

And the winners are…

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

Monday’s Winners

Carol Luciano
Brynna
Nicole Synder
Jennifer Mathis
Cindy Warner
Julie H Steeles

For the truths I find to be self-evident post, the winner of the 2 books is… Louisa Cornell

Congratulations, ladies! The six Monday winners, please email your top 10 picks in preference order to me at contests at theseasonforromance dot com. I will try my best to get you as much as I can from your list. Louisa, please email your top 5 picks from Monday’s selection.

Another Taste

Monday, August 16th, 2010

Today, as I continue my countdown to the release of my second historical romance, A TASTE OF DESIRE, the on going acrimony between my heroine, Amelia and hero, Thomas continues…
Comment below and double your chances of winning 5 (five) of Monday’s Picks.

SHE CHALLENGED HIS PRIDE

Lady Amelia Bertram may have a reputation as the most brazen beauty of the ton, but she shocks even herself when she accidently—and loudly—derides one of society’s most eligible bachelors in the middle of a crowded ballroom. The timing of her faux pas couldn’t be worse, for her father is seeking someone to take her off his hands that very night…

HE CHALLENGED HER WILLPOWER

But when Thomas Armstrong overhears the so-called “Lady” Amelia slandering his sexual prowess in public, he cannot help but accept the dare implicit in her words. To her father’s great delight, he offers to take her to his secluded country estate—properly chaperoned, of course—to teach the girl a lesson in ladylike behavior…

In this scene, Amelia has just entered her father’s study and in the process bashed poor Thomas in the head with the door. She has offered him a cool, “Pardon me.”

“I didn’t expect someone would place themselves so near a closed door,” she added in case he’d misconstrued her statement as an apology.

Her father’s face seized up as if in the midst of an apoplexy. Lord Armstrong’s mouth flattened, his regard narrowing to a squint. Amelia returned his stare placidly. He could stare—or glare, as it were—at her all he wanted. She didn’t give a whit, ignoring her heart knocking a frantic beat beneath her breastbone.

“It is also customary to knock before opening a closed door,” came the viscount’s glib reply.

“Might I remind you, my lord, it is ­I who resides in this house.” The gall of the man, trying to chastise her. Who told him he should situate himself thus? Hinges on doors were not meant as frivolous ornaments; they did have a purpose.

“Amelia is regrettably sorry,” her father hastily interjected.

.

Like hell she is! The bloody woman had probably parked herself outside waiting for the opportunity to bash his head in. Thomas wouldn’t put anything past her.

Tamping down his growing irritation, he replied smoothly, “Yes, Harry, I am quite certain she is.”

“I do hope I’m not preventing you from leaving. You were on your way out, were you not?” she asked in dulcet tones, a smile curving her lips.

If it had been any other woman, Thomas could have envisioned many other uses for such a mouth; plump lips the deep pink of a man’s erotic dreams. And if one were dealing purely in aesthetics, who could fail to appreciate the dark-haired beauty’s jaw-dropping figure shown to its best advantage in a gown the exact sapphire blue of her eyes, the fitted corsage allowing for the glorious display of creamy skin. But as stunning as she was, he wouldn’t have her if she begged him. Not that he would mind the begging part. That he would relish if only to have the pleasure of refusing her.

“Er…Thomas, thank you for calling. I expect I shall see you again before my departure.”

Thomas issued Harry a curt nod. “Yes, I expect you will.” He returned his attention to her. “And as always, Lady Amelia, it was a pleasure,” he said, managing to remain quite straight-faced, for surely Judas could not have told a grander lie.

For a brief moment, something sparked in her blue eyes, breathing life into the flawless, glacial beauty of her countenance and hinting at a slumbering fire. If he gave a damn—which he most assuredly did not—it’d give him cold satisfaction to see her icy hauteur reduced to a puddle on the floor.

“Well, as we are both well aware, if I claimed likewise it would be a blatant untruth.”

The cheeky little piece!

The sound of Harry’s sharp intake bounced off paned glass and dark paneled walls. “Amelia—”

Thomas held up his right hand to forestall Harry’s coming reprimand. She must always have the final word. God, he’d sooner strip naked and immerse himself in a vat of leeches then spend a minute in her company, which meant he’d already remained in her presence at least four minutes too long.

“That’s quite all right Harry. I certainly wouldn’t want your daughter to lie.”

“I’m glad we can agree on that,” she said tartly.

Not trusting himself to issue her another word—at least not a civil one—Thomas dipped his head in a shallow bow, giving her one final glance. Lord, what was it about her that always had his control splintering under the weight of her acerbic tongue? And just what was her grievance against him? In dealing with him, she was more than merely cold—as was her reputation—she wore the requisite pointed black hat and rode about perched on a broom like her sisters of the dark craft.

Women, ladies, matrons, the female population as a whole, simply did not despise him on sight.

Lady Amelia had.

Many claimed even children were not immune to his brand of wit and charm.

Lady Amelia most definitely was.

Annoyed at the direction of his thoughts, as if he gave a damn about her opinion, Thomas turned to address Harry. “I will see myself out. Good day, Harry…Lady Amelia.” He then calmly took his leave.

Day One: First Anniversary Giveaway

Monday, August 16th, 2010

Welcome to The Season’s One Year Anniversary week long giveaway.

Along with the week long giveaway going on on the site,  I’ll be posting a daily question on the blog. Correctly answering all 5 (five) questions this week will immediately enter your name to win 1 (one) of 2 (two) $25 Amazon Gift Certificates. All answers can be found on the website (using the search feature is the easiest way).

**Hint: Make full use of the pop up reviews.

Today’s Question:

What city and state are the setting for The Lawman’s Redemption by Pam Crooks?

Email your answer to contests at theseasonforromance dot com. Please include your first and last name.

Polls are nearing a close

Saturday, August 14th, 2010

Don’t forget to vote for your favourite historical August release.  The winner’s book will be displayed on the sidebar for the month of September! Click here to vote.