Historical

Stories set in the past.

  • Historical

    Historical: The Lady and the Highwayman @AMChristman #RLF Blog

    Lady and the Highwayman

    Ashley Christman writing as Charlotte Davila, welcome to Romance Lives Forever. Let’s talk about your book, The Lady and the Highwayman.

    Genre: Historical Romance
    Publisher: Entranced Publishing
    Cover artist: Suzannah Safi
    Length: Novella, 28 pages
    Heat rating: erotic romance
    Blurb:
    Lady Elizabeth Bennington has the perfect life: she’s the daughter of an earl and betrothed to her childhood friend, William Hartley, the second son of a duke. But, when her sister’s indiscretion leads to an unplanned pregnancy, and the subsequent disgrace of Elizabeth’s entire family, her idyllic life is thrown into disarray.
    First, her fiance is prohibited from marrying her. Then she receives word that William has been killed by thieves. To top it all off, she gets abducted by a highwayman. Can Elizabeth find love again, and with the most unlikely of people?
    Buy links:
    Kobo http://kobobooks.com/ebook/The-Lady-and-the-Highwayman/book-EUbs6khXfkGohnKD32VYeg/page1.html?s=pmY-ryxgBkWd0P2Fp1bcfw%3D1
    Amazon http://amzn.com/B00C3U1TAU/
    Barnes and Noble http://barnesandnoble.com/w/the-lady-and-the-highwayman-charlotte-davila/1114964686?ean=2940016688732

    Interview

    What do you enjoy most about writing?
    I enjoy the act of creating something. Words are magical and to be able to create worlds, people and situations is amazing.
    If you could choose anyone to be your mentor who would it be?
    Neil Gaiman. He’s an incredibly intelligent talented man.
    If you could give the younger version of yourself advice what would it be?
    Learn to be comfortable being you. You actually grow up to be a great human being.
    Do things your family or friends do ever end up in a book?
    Of course. There’s an unspoken agreement that if it’s something interesting, it will end up in a book.
    What are some jobs you’ve done before (or while) you were a writer?
    Editing, Nursing, college student
    What kind of books do you read when taking a break from your own writing?
    I like to read a bit of everything, especially if it’s interesting. Right now I’m reading a historical fiction novel about Marie Antoinette.
    What do you think is the future of traditional publishing?
    I think it’s evolving as it should. Digital is becoming more and more the norm and while authors do like to see their books on paper, I think more and more are realizing there’s a big shift in reader demand from paper to digital.
    Imagine you get to go on a dream vacation, but you have only one hour to pack and leave, and it starts as soon as you finish this interview. What will you take with you and where will you go?
    My Kindle, Laptop, cell phone, credit cards and cash, and a few clothes. I’d buy everything else I needed in Paris.
    What is your favorite holiday and why?
    Halloween because it’s entire holiday where we get to play make-believe and no one thinks anything of it.
    What do you like to do when you’re bored?
    I’m never bored. I think boredom comes from an inactive imagination. There’s always something to do.
    Please underline which statement is more like you:
    “I am a vacation spa because I am laid back and relaxed.”
    “I am a ten-countries in ten-days tour vacation, because I do things as fast as possible.”

    Please complete the sentences

    I love pizza with…I’m not a fan of pizza.
    I’m always ready for the zombie apocalypse. I’ve got a plan.
    When I’m alone, I entertain myself.
    You’d never be able to tell, but I love karaoke.
    If I had a halo it would be misplaced for the millionth time.
    If I could get a cabin in the woods, I’d be a happy hermit as long as there were internet.
    I can never relax because my mind doesn’t shut off.
    Charlotte Davila

    Find Me Here

    Author Website and Blog: http://ashleymchristman.com
  • Historical

    Historical: Victorian London @tashamash #RLFblog

    Luminous Memories of Alexander Vile

    Today we’re interviewing N Jones, author of The Luminous
    Memories of Alexander Vile. Tell us about this book.

    In 1891, in the suburbs of Victorian London, a tragedy took
    place. Here is a tragic tale compiled by the Maid, who worked her whole life
    for Alexander Vile, and his late family. She remembers as she wanders up the
    cobbled streets that echo her every footstep and underneath the over-bearing
    trees which give her sunless days. She paces through the open market squares
    where strangers are living their life as if no event took place, all gathering
    to find out about the innovations, all dressed in blacks and greys. While the
    world is whizzing by, she reminisces over a chain of events so romantic and so
    woeful that you’ll wish you could re-write the ending…
    Genre: Historical Fiction
    Buy links:
    Book is out March 25, 2013

    Interview

    What is the most
    important thing you do for your career now, as compared to when you first
    started writing?
    I network! I think networking is important both in terms of
    becoming more culturally and inter-culturally aware, but also as you don’t know
    who could make impact on your career.
    What websites do you
    visit daily?
    I’m always on Twitter! I check YouTube, Facebook, and Tumblr
    regularly too, but Twitter is a guarantee!
    If you could change
    something about your first book, what would it be?
    I would probably research more in-depth at the start of the
    project. I would use a plan at the beginning too – boring answer!
    What do you enjoy most
    about writing?
    The freedom! How it takes over your time, every moment is
    thinking about that character, the storylines intertwining and where the story
    will go. I would say it’s exhausting in a positive way!
    If you could choose
    anyone to be your mentor who would it be?
    I would love to say Oscar Wilde, Jane Austen, or Stieg
    Larsson but unfortunately they are all no more. I would really like to meet
    Jeff Lindsay; he wrote/writes the Dexter novels which made a big impact on me!
    If you could give the
    younger version of yourself advice what would it be?
    Don’t worry; you’ll be more confident in a few years.
    How do you cope with
    stress as an author?
    I’m not sure I’ve reached that level yet! I’ve spent the
    majority of the past few years stressed because of University; I think that’s
    good preparation for a career in the media – University!
    Do things your family
    or friends do ever end up in a book?
    Not in this novel, but my second novel which I’m currently
    writing is a modern story which will feature some of my friends and family
    stories and anecdotes, and maybe a character or two will be based on someone I
    know!
    Which of your books
    would you recommend to someone who doesn’t normally read your genre, and why?
    My debut novel ‘the Luminous Memories of Alexander Vile’,
    although is thwarted with suspense, grotesque scenes and a lot of imagery has
    an underlining romance about it. Infact the romance scenes are my favourite
    moments of the novel and the most personal to write. There’s definitely a
    subtle emphasis on the romance elements.
    What kind of books do
    you read when taking a break from your own writing?
    I read too many genres! I just finished reading the Great
    Gatsby. I plan on reading ‘Persuasion’, the new book from Lucy Robinson and the
    latest Dexter book soon!
    What was the proudest
    moment of your life so far?
    Graduating was quite amazing! I think the release date will
    be the best day for me though!
    What was your favorite
    vacation and why?
    It was California
    – hands down! I loved everything about the place! I saved up my University loan
    and wages to go there, and it’s geared me to try and achieve success ever
    since!
    Favourite Dip?
    Hummus!

    Find Me Here

    Website: http://tashjones.co.uk
    Goodreads: http://goodreads.com/tashamash
  • Historical

    Sky Tinted Water by Keta Diablo @ketadiablo #RLFblog

    Cover Love at Romance Lives Forever is a short intro to a
    book and includes only a blurb, buy links, and social media contacts for the
    author. Today’s featured book is: Sky Tinted Water by Keta Diablo.
    Genre: Sweet Historical Romance
    Familial bonds, malevolent schemes, and passion collide in
    this sweet historical novel. Set in Minnesota
    during the Civil War and the Sioux uprising, this is the story of Rory Hudson,
    the exquisite Irish lass with an unbreakable spirit and the enigmatic Dawson
    Finch, a man bound by honor, duty, and loyalty.
    When Dawson
    enlists in the army to bring peace to nation divided, Rory’s world plummets
    into a tailspin. War, distance, and time separate them, but nothing can dispel
    the haunting memories of their love. Not even death can destroy their fierce
    passion or a love so strong it beats the odds of the impossible.

    Buy links:

    Barnes and Noble: http://bit.ly/UjeU4W
    Kobo: http://bit.ly/11xUc3e

    Find Me Here

    Keta’s Keep, http://ketaskeep.blogspot.com
    Keta Diablo Books: http://ketadiablobooks.blogspot.com
    The Stuff of Myth and Men, http://thestuffofmythandmen.blogspot.com
  • Historical

    Time Travel: Rising Above @toninoelwriter #RLFblog

    Rising Above

    Toni Noel, welcome back to Romance Lives Forever. Let’s talk about
    your book, Rising Above.
    Genre: Historical Time Travel
    Publisher: Desert Breeze Publishing
    Cover artist: Carol Fiorillo
    Length (words): 105,000
    Heat rating: R
    Tagline: A misfit tomboy goes back in time, compromises her reputation
    with a disillusioned Pinkerton man who to her dismay insists on a marriage of convenience,
    while she longs to return to her own time.
    Blurb:
    Bad weather cuts short Wilda Stone’s hot-air balloon race, throwing
    her back into widowed lawman Hal Grantham’s time, the 1870’s. A sand storm forcing
    them off Hal’s horse and into a cave where they spend two nights, compromising Wilda’s
    reputation, and forcing Hal into a marriage of convenience. Once they make love
    Wilda realizes she has fallen in love with the terse lawman and abandons all thought
    of returning to the twenty-first century. Her stoic husband conceals his true feelings
    for her. When diphtheria– the same disease responsible for taking his first wife
    and son — threatens the silver mining town of Cerro Gordo, deep concern for Wilda’s
    welfare drives Hal to send his wife back to her own time in her balloon. His actions
    convince her Hal shuns her love and she departs, whispering a promise to return,
    without revealing her pregnancy. Once her conveyance rises beyond his reach, Hal
    realizes his mistake and launches a futile search for the woman he now readily admits
    he loves.
    Buy links:
    Desert Breeze Publishing http://is.gd/Toni_DesertBreeze
    Amazon: http://amzn.com/B009ZP5JOS
    Or from your favorite eBook store.
    What are your main characters’ names, ages, and occupations?
    Wilda Stone and Hal Grantham. 28 and 32. In her other life Wilda
    was a flag person on a Caltrans road crew. In Cerro Gordo
    the only acceptable work to fill her time is helping out in the kitchen of the American
    Hotel, a totally unacceptable activity for an awkward outdoor girl who can’t cook.
    Hal is a disillusioned undercover Pinkerton agent ready for a
    change.

    Interview

    How do you come up with ideas?
    Inspiration strikes me at the oddest times, and in unexpected
    places. Usually it’s through something I see, or hear. A boarded up house in a ritzy
    neighborhood we were driving through inspired Decisive Moments. A network news story
    about the rising birthrate in a faraway Irish town inspired Fairy Dusted. A weekend
    stay in the refurbished bunk house of a restored silver mining town inspired Rising
    Above.
    What do you enjoy most about
    writing?
    I love the freedom of being my own boss, and the chance to escape
    reality while I write, but I also enjoy the anticipation I feel when a friend buys
    one of my books. I can’t wait to hear how they liked it, whether it made their day
    a little happier or gave them something new to think about.
    What do you enjoy most about
    life?
    The thing I enjoy most is simply being alive. I am so blessed.
    A loving family. Good health. A wealth of knowledge at my fingertips and time to
    explore all of it to the fullest. It’s a great life.
    Where do you start when writing?
    Research, plotting, outline, or…?
    The inspiration comes first, then a character’s name or the novel’s
    setting. Next, as ideas come to me, I list fifty scenes necessary to move my characters
    through the story and reach a satisfactory conclusion. I’m very visual, so I transfer
    the scenes to stickies, arrange those on a story board, and after identifying the
    major turning points and the blackest moment for each character, I’m ready to write.
    The beauty of this method is the stickies can be moved around countless times, and
    the scenes rearranged as I write to give the story ending a satisfying resolution,
    showing ways in which the main characters have changed.
    What are some jobs you’ve done
    that would end up in a book?
    In my teens I called square dances for the Y.M.C.A. and later
    did alterations for a cleaners. When we were without health insurance, and our four
    young children had run up a big debt at their doctor’s, I made drapes for his new
    office to settle our account. I’ve also performed puppet shows and taught crafts
    at nursing homes. Before retiring, I supervised a computerized payroll, and included
    some of my office experiences in Temp to Permanent, a romantic suspense.
    What do you hope readers take
    with them after reading your work?
    I want my readers to feel satisfied with their read. I write
    novels about finding a safe haven for the heart and firmly believe this is what
    everyone hopes to find. I found my safe haven early in life, but it still delights
    me when the book I’m reading ends with the heroine finding her safe haven in the
    arms of her newly found love.
    Picture yourself as a store.
    Considering your personality and lifestyle, what type of products would be sold
    there?
    I would specialize in classically styled upscale dresses and
    suits, go-to outfits a woman reaches into her closet for every day. I’d have a complete
    selection of leather boots in a variety of styles and widths. The leather purses
    I carry will have wide openings and no places for lipsticks and car keys to hide.
    I’d showcase earrings with silver or gold posts for pierced with only snap closures,
    no easily-lost separate parts. In the casual clothing department you’ll find quality
    merchandise for travel, spectator sports and working out all in one place, the huggable
    woolens and cashmeres incredibly soft to the touch, the baby terry and fleece silky
    smooth next to your skin.
    As a child, what was your favorite
    thing about school?
    I loved the countless opportunities for expanding my horizons
    school provided. I had endless curiosity and still question everything. My favorite
    question is “Why?”
    If you came with a warning
    label, what would it say?
    Caution. Contents under extreme pressure and with good cause
    will likely explode. (I inherited my father’s volatile temper.)

    Please Fill in the Blanks

    I love vegetarian pizza with artichokes.
    I’m always ready for fun.
    When I’m alone I eat dinner on our best china. It makes me
    feel like I’m eating out
    .
    You’d never be able to tell, but I was the head cheerleader
    for my high school
    .
    If I had a halo it would be bent.
    If I could crochet I’d own that sweater I’ve been admiring.
    I can never diet for long because I love to eat and
    have no willpower
    .

    My Booklist

    Law Breakers and Love Makers, soon in print, too.
    Temp to Permanent
    Decisive Moments
    Restored Dreams
    Fairy Dusted
    Rising Above

    Books Coming Soon

    To Feel Again
    Fragile Bonds
    Toni Noel
    Homeward Bound

    About the Author

    Toni Noel’s Novels… Safe havens for the heart.
    Toni Noel’s love of books started in childhood, when her
    mother first read The Five Little Peppers and How They Grew to her. She helped
    start church libraries in two rural Tennessee
    towns and appeared before the City Planning Commission and the San Diego City
    Council to urge a site be purchased. As the neighborhood spokesman for the new
    library the City Councilman for her district invited her to turn the second
    shovel of dirt at the groundbreaking for the new library. Toni’s fondest dream,
    to see one of her safe-haven-for-the-heart novels available for checkout there
    may soon be fulfilled. Desert Breeze Publishing will release in print form in
    November the author’s first published novel Law Breakers and Love Makers.

    Find Me Here

  • Author Interviews,  Historical

    Paranormal: Highland Healer @willablair #rlfblog

     

    Highland Healer.
    Willa Blair, welcome to Romance Lives Forever. Let’s talk about
    your book, Highland Healer.
    Genre: Scottish Historical Paranormal
    Publisher: The Wild Rose Press
    Buy links:
    Cover artist: Tina Lynn Stout
    Length: 85,000
    Heat rating: Spicy
    Tagline: Scottish Historical Romance with a Paranormal Twist
    Blurb:
    He needs her for his clan. He wants her for himself. Can he have
    both?
    Toran Lathan never expected to become Laird, and never expected
    to meet a woman like Aileana Shaw. Her healing ability is just what his people need,
    but Toran cannot re-sist her beauty. Yet will loving him destroy her ability to
    heal?
    Aileana Shaw has a healing touch – and a special talent she must
    keep secret. Stolen from her home by a marauding army, she’s kidnapped again by
    the Highland Laird she heals. Is she a prize of war, or the prize of his heart?
    While Toran battles the invading lowland army, he also battles
    his desire for Aileana. And Aileana must decide if she can trust her secrets to
    this fierce warrior who needs her talent, but wants her love.
    What are your main characters’
    names, ages, and occupations?
    Toran Lathan, Laird of Clan Lathan
    Aileana Shaw, Healer
    Gar Colbridge, leads the lowlander army

    Interview

    What is the most important thing you do for your career now, as compared to when you first started writing?
    When I started, learning about the craft of writing and actually
    writing were the most important things for me to do. Now that I’m published, and
    now that my book has won an award and is a best-seller on Kindle, networking and
    promotion/publicity activities such as writing blog posts are important. And writing
    the next book, of course!
    What do you enjoy most about writing?
    Giving my imagination free reign to explore times, places and
    situations that would never occur in my everyday life.
    If you could give the younger version of yourself advice what would it be?
    Finish the damn book! Like a lot of writers, I spent years starting
    several books and pol-ishing the first few chapters over and over again. It took
    a decade for me to settle on one and finish it. Typing “the end” was a revelation.
    A rite of passage. Proof that I could really do it.
    After that, writing a book is not as daunting a task. Yes, it’s
    daunting. Just not as daunt-ing. I finished the second book in under a year and
    I’m working on the third in the series now. When I want a change of pace, I work
    on the outlines of two different contempo-rary novels and a science fiction romance
    series I’m developing.
    What is your work ethic when it comes to writing?
    I am most emphatically not a morning person. Afternoons and evenings
    are the most productive times for writing. When I’m really deep into the book, I
    can spend hours at the keyboard. But when I’m still working on the outline or synopsis,
    I’m easily distracted. Social media is a blessing and a curse. And don’t get me
    started on the lure of Ama-zon’s rankings, especially for a debut author!
    How do you cope with stress as an author?
    The same way most of us do – with chocolate! Or a glass of wine.
    Sometimes both.
    Which of your books would you recommend to someone who doesn’t normally read your genre, and why?
    I’d recommend Highland Healer to anyone who enjoys a good story.
    It has action, ad-venture, suspense, and romance. One reviewer even said that men
    would like the book because of the details of the invading army, the siege, etc.
    Another mentioned the pace and the page-turning action, along with the romance.
    Willa Blair
    What kind of books do you read when taking a break from your own writing?
    I grew up reading science fiction and some fantasy, so I still
    go there when I want a change from what I’m writing, but I also enjoy contemporary
    romance, romantic sus-pense and science fiction romance.
    What do you think is the future of traditional publishing?
    That’s a great question. I don’t claim to have a crystal ball,
    but I think the fact that au-thors have so many options right now will force some
    changes. I think the Big Six, or Five, or Four, or however they end up, will slowly
    adjust to the new realities. Authors can make more money as independents or with
    smaller presses. They can choose any combination of publishing methods, including
    the (potentially) lower pay but greater prestige of traditional publishers. I think
    the big houses will have to woo authors with better royalties and more benefits.
    I know multi-published authors who are self-publishing new material at the same
    time they’re fulfilling contracts with NY editors for new books at the same time
    they’re reclaiming rights to their backlist and e-publishing those books. Options
    are good.
    Imagine you get to go on a dream vacation, but you have only one hour to pack and leave, and it starts
    as soon as you finish this interview. What will you take with you and where will you go?
    I’ll pack layers, comfy walking shoes, a bathing suit and sunblock
    and head for New Zealand to visit
    friends there and for a grand tour, then hop over to Australia and revisit places I’ve been
    as well as adding some new stops.
    What is your favorite holiday and why?
    Hallowe’en. All that candy! Did I mention I’m addicted to sugar?
    My favorite is Brach’s Indian Corn – the candy corn with the chocolate tops.
    Then there are the adorable little kids in princess and pirate
    costumes – SO cute!
    What good book have you read recently?
    Ghost Planet by Sharon Lynn Fisher. Not your usual romance, but
    it will hook you in the first few paragraphs.
    If you were a color, what color would you be?
    Orange – all shades from light and bright to deep and burnt.
    Please underline which statement is more like you:
    “I am a vacation spa because I am laid back and relaxed.”
    “I am a ten-countries in ten-days tour vacation, because
    I do things as fast as possible.”

    Please complete the sentences

    I love pizza with pepperoni and onions.
    I’m always ready for lunch or dinner out.
    When I’m alone, I read, write or nap.
    You’d never be able to tell, but I enjoy city life, at least in small doses.
    If I had a halo it would be crooked.
    If I could be consistent I’d be dangerous!
    Willa Blair
    I can never work in an animal shelter because I’d adopt and adopt and become the crazy cat lady.

    Find Me Here

  • Regency

    Regency: Some Like it Haute @JillianLeigh003 #rlfblog

    Some Like it Haute.

    Jillian Leigh, welcome to Romance Lives Forever. Let’s talk about
    your book, Some Like It Haute. What a great title! Tell us more about it.
    Genre: Historical Romance (Regency)
    Publisher: Boroughs Publishing Group
    Cover artist: Boroughs Publishing Group
    Length: 10,000 words
    Heat rating: Sweet
    Tagline: Too haute for comfort? A stylish gentleman meets his
    match when he wagers he can make a dowdy spinster the talk of the ton in Regency
    England.
    Blurb: Stylish leader of the beau monde Sir Richard Sheridan
    has managed to avoid most forms of vulgarity for almost thirty years, but one evening,
    when he is goaded by a drunken young pup in the middle of a ballroom, Sherry finds
    himself embroiled in the most vulgar of wagers: to turn a dowdy young woman into
    the talk of the ton. Jane Smith, in town as chaperone to her niece, isn’t interested
    in a dandy such as Sir Richard, even if he is the most handsome man she’s ever encountered.
    But when he offers to help make her niece’s season a success, how can she refuse
    his company? Soon, they discover that they are–despite appearances to the contrary–
    more evenly matched than either could have imagined.
    What are your main
    characters’ names, ages, and occupations?
    Sir Richard Sheridan,
    known to the world as Sherry, is almost 30. He’s a Regency gentleman, so
    naturally he does as little as possible.
    Jane Smith is about
    the same age, though it’s impolite to speculate about a lady’s age. Suffice to
    say she’s old enough to play chaperone to her young niece in London society.

    Interview

    Tell us about your latest book, including its genre. Does
    it cross over to other genres? If so, what are they?
    Some Like It Haute is an historical Romance, set during the period
    of English history known as the Regency. It’s my take on traditional Regency. I
    hope I’ve captured some of the elegance and wit that this kind of historical is
    noted for.
    How do you come up with ideas?
    Ideas come from all sorts of places. Sometimes I’ll see a scene
    in my head. I don’t know exactly who these people are or what they’re doing there,
    precisely, but it’s fun to find out. Or I might start with a premise: a what if?
    Movies and books often start little ‘fires’ in my brain. Not all my ideas are suitable
    for turning into stories, though, or they may need to be tweaked and refined a bit
    first. Occasionally I’ll get a kernel of an idea that ends up sounding almost unrecognizable
    by the time I’ve finished with it. But that’s writing for you.
    What do you enjoy most about writing?
    As Dorothy Parker famously said, “I hate writing. I love having
    written.” While I don’t hate writing–or I probably wouldn’t do it–it’s hard work.
    Once the draft is written, though, it’s fun to edit, revise, shudder at what’s on
    the page, then come back and realize it’s not so awful after all. Even though reading
    your own work can be a humbling experience, occasionally you come across a bit of
    dialogue or a scene that you almost forgot you wrote–and it’s not bad!
    Where do you start when writing? Research, plotting, outline,
    or…?
    A great deal depends upon what sort of idea has possessed my
    mind. I do try not to do a lot of research before I start, because it can become
    a distraction. So I either look up something as I need to, or make a note to come
    back later (as long as an important plot point doesn’t hinge on knowing the answer).
    Generally, I try to start with a vague but almost coherent outline. I used to think
    I was a plotter, someone who needed to dot the ‘I’s and cross the ‘T’s before starting
    to write. Somewhere along the way, I came to the conclusion that I was either too
    lazy or too impatient to be a dedicated plotter. So then I decided I must be a pantser,
    who wanted to launch into things and work out the finer points later. Now I realize
    that I’m somewhere in between. I do need some sort of plot to work with, but writing
    outlines and character sheets just makes me grumpy. Does that mean I’m a plantser?
    If you could give the younger version of yourself advice what
    would it be?
    I would tell young me to ‘go for it’–not worry so much about
    what I should be doing and do all the things I want to do, no matter how wild or
    improbable they may seem at the time. I’d tell myself that your regrets tend to
    be about what you wished you’d done, rather than the things you did do. I would
    also tell young me to start writing sooner.
    What do you hope readers take with them after reading your
    work?
    I would love to think that readers are transported to another
    world for a little while, so much so that they forget their everyday existence and
    go along for an entertaining and amusing ride.
    List two authors we would find you reading when taking a break
    from your own writing.
    If I had to choose two only, I suppose I’d have to include Jane
    Austen and Georgette Heyer. But if I could mention more than two–which I’m going
    to do blatantly and unapologetically now–I would want to include writers such as
    Dickens and Trollope. In the genre of historical Romance I enjoy, amongst others,
    the fabulous Julia Quinn and Tessa Dare.
    A biography has been written about you. What do you think
    the title would be in six words or less?
    She was a good girl, but…
    If money were not an object, where would you most like to
    live?
    I’ve often thought, being an Anglophile and a history buff, that
    I’d love to live in the UK. In some picturesque English hamlet, no doubt. I’d grow
    a cottage garden and visit all the places I’ve mostly read about. But then I think
    of how cold it would get and suddenly I’m thankful I live in Australia, where it’s
    warm (no, make that hot). Actually, I’d love to have residences all over the world,
    like Summer and Winter Palaces, that I could drop in on from time to time as the
    mood took me. A girl can dream!
    Picture yourself as a store. Considering your personality
    and lifestyle, what type of products would be sold there?
    My store is a cross between an elegant department store and something
    out of a Dickens novel. You’d find an eclectic mix of old and new. In one corner,
    you can try on the latest fashions, gorgeous shoes, sample makeup and perfume. In
    another, you’ll wade through old collectibles and antiques. In a third corner of
    the store, you’ll find books and DVDs. People will be dancing, performing live theater
    and having debates. Of course there would be a café where you can enjoy a cup of
    something and a great pastry. I don’t know whether my store would make any money,
    but it would be a fun place to browse.
    If you came with a warning label, what would it say?
    Keep Her Fed and Watered Properly

    Please Fill in the Blanks

    Jillian Leigh
    I love
    pizza with almost anything except olives.
    I’m always
    ready for a good laugh or a great conversation.
    When I’m
    alone, I daydream.
    You’d
    never be able to tell, but I can swear with the best of them.
    If I had a halo it would be chipped, dented and slightly
    crooked, but basically intact
    .
    If I could
    go back in time I’d visit the 19th century (of course).
    I can
    never read a map properly because I’m spatially challenged.

    Find Me Here

    Website and blog: http://jillianleighauthor.com/