Vanessa Kelly's Blog: Regency, Romance, and anything else, page 94

May 12, 2010

Reviews for Sex And The Single Earl

BOOKPAGE – “A Regency Romp”

Sexy and charming, this fast-paced romance will have readers rooting for Sophie and Simon to survive impending scandal and find their happy-ever-after.
--Christie Ridgway

ROMANTIC TIMES

With smart, sassy characters, a fast pace, rapier-sharp dialogue and engaging characters, Kelly captures reader attention with this sexy romance. The traditional marriage-of-convenience plotline is enhanced by the history and background of industrialization.
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Published on May 12, 2010 15:04 Tags: book-reviews

March 3, 2010

Barnes & Noble Heart 2 Heart Bookclub

MICHELLE BUONFIGLIO'S TOP TEN READS FOR THE NEW YEAR:

Number Two - Sex And The Single Earl

Sophie Stanton's loved Simon St. James, 5th Earl of Trask, since she was a child. He knows this, so he figures she won't his marrying her for her land. He doesn't count on her being ridiculously passionate - or on her being more dedicated to her true passions than the love for him Simon thought he would manipulate. His downfall into HEA's a joy to behold.
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Published on March 03, 2010 20:21 Tags: reviews

August 10, 2009

Reviews for Mastering The Marquess

FALLEN ANGELS REVIEWS – Recommended Read

Mastering The Marquess is a perfect gem of a Regency Romance. The characters shine. They’re unique and real and not-at-all perfect. Meredith, having had three parents die, expects everything to go wrong. She paints distressingly dark and rather gory painting. She is also accustomed to being in control and doesn’t give up this control easily. Silverton, in contrast, likes everything to be just so. He arranges his perfect world so no unpleasantness touches him. When Mr. Icy Perfection is faced with the gloomy, controlling beauty, the air between them sizzles. There’s challenge and attraction and real emotion. Mastering The Marquess is what a modern Regency romance should be.

MANIC READERS – 4 stars

I had to read the entire book in one sitting. There was no place in the book where I could say I was going to put down the book: I ALWAYS wanted to know what was next. As for the passion, this was one steamy Regency. I enjoyed Mastering The Marquess so much, I’ve put Vanessa Kelly’s name on my list of “authors to watch.”
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Published on August 10, 2009 18:31

May 24, 2009

The Mad King and the Romance Writer

Fanny Burney (1752-1840) was a highly popular novelist during both the Georgian and Regency eras. Her gift for characterization and her wonderful powers of observation helped her craft deeply felt romances that were also astute commentaries on life in fashionable English society. Although she wrote only four novels over the course of her career, she also penned diaries of her life in the beau monde, which are still regarded as some of the best memoirs ever written by an English author.

Fanny’s popularity as a writer garnered her many honors, including a place at the Court of King George III and Queen Charlotte. This George, of course, was the mad king whose descent into illness led to the appointment of his eldest son as Prince Regent. During the winter of 1788-89, in her role as a dresser to the Queen, Fanny was a privileged observer and sometime participant in the drama of the first Regency crisis. Her presence as an intimate of the Royal Family during the entire length of George III’s confinement catapulted her into the center of one of the great political whirlwinds of English history. During that time she wrote a remarkable and intimate narration of the king’s madness, and of the disorder of the court in the cold and isolated confines of the palace at Kew.

For most of the winter the king was kept from his family, with only doctors and attendants admitted to his chambers. The poor man was often violent (not surprising, given the harshness of his medical treatments - more on that in a later post), and his doctors thought his condition too disturbing for the queen and the royal sons and daughters to witness. Moreover, the doctors absolutely forbade any members of the court to have contact with the king.

One day in February, Fanny was walking alone in the gardens of Kew. She had been ordered by her doctors to take the air as much as possible, since the brutally confining life at court - especially this court - had damaged her health. She described what happened next as an occasion of “the severest personal terror” she had ever experienced. During her walk she had been spotted by the king, who was strolling through the garden under the supervision of his doctors. The king called out to her and then set off in hot pursuit, chasing her down the labyrinthine paths and avenues as she tried to escape (great scene for a romance novel, don’t you think?).

Fanny ran as if her life depended on it. She wrote that, “I should not have felt the hot lava from Vesuvius - at least not the hot cinders - had I run so during its eruption.” She didn’t stop until the doctors commanded her to halt, worried that the king’s insane dash would cause him to collapse. Fanny screeched to a stop and held her ground, trying her best to appear confident as George III rushed up to her.

Much to her astonishment, instead of hurting her the king grabbed her shoulders and pressed an enthusiastic kiss to her cheek. She later excused his less-than-royal behavior as “but the joy of a heart unbridled, now, by the forms and proprieties of established and sober custom.” This surely must stand as the most elegant description of madness ever written.

Now that the mad king had his hands on her, he had no intention of letting her go. “What did he not say!” Burney exclaimed in her diary. “Everything that came uppermost in his mind he mentioned; he seemed to have just such remains of his flightiness as heated his imagination without deranging his reason, and robbed him of all control over his speech...”

Alas, Fanny’s discretion prevented her from telling us exactly what he did say. The doctors eventually dragged the king away, and Fanny never revealed the details of their Alice-through-the-looking-glass conversation, only joking later that the king had promised her eternal friendship and affection. But it’s likely the incident had a tremendous impact on her, since her later novels all feature heroines who suffer serious emotional breakdowns.

Kew was essentially a royal lunatic asylum and Fanny one of the inmates, but her loyalty to King George and Queen Charlotte compelled her to edit or simply omit the most gruesome or humiliating tales of the mad king’s illness. We can only honor her kindness, but the voyeur in me wishes she had been a little less discrete.
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Published on May 24, 2009 11:49

Regency, Romance, and anything else

Vanessa Kelly
Interesting tidbits about the Regency period, thoughts about Romance books, and anything else that may spring to mind.
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