Victoria Leybourne's Blog

October 23, 2018

RESCUING THE PRINCE interview!

I answered a few questions about RESCUING THE PRINCE from author Quinn Edelson over at my shiny new blog today! Head over there to find out how I chose Cor and Rhian's names, which characters might be getting their own stories, and more!

Read the interview
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Published on October 23, 2018 14:28 Tags: rescuing-the-prince

April 6, 2018

A Royal Romance Freebie

Hello Goodreads! How is everyone?

Personally, I'm super nervous, because I have a book coming out this month. It's called Rescuing the Prince, and it's a sweet contemporary royal romance. I'm so excited (and nervous) about this book, and I can't wait to share it with you.

In fact, I got so excited while writing it that I accidentally wrote a 27,000-word prequel to it. It features a different (but related) couple and is basically a whole romance, just shorter. And you can download it for free if you join my mailing list.

Here are the details:



It’s the party of the year...

This could be event planner Sophie’s big break: the chance to plan a birthday party for a high society client. The catch? She’ll have to work with Prince Evariste, former heir to the throne of Seingalt. Evar is handsome, charming, funny—the perfect prince. He’s also Sophie’s ex-boyfriend.

Evar has never loved anyone but Sophie. When she walks back into his life, he can’t believe his luck—and, this time, he’s determined not to let her go. But love is complicated, especially for the royals. Can Evar win back his princess? Or will they break each other’s hearts again?

By Royal Appointment is a sweet contemporary romance novella for fans of fairytales, tiaras and happy endings.

Go here to grab your copy!

Thanks for reading! If anyone needs me, I'll be biting my nails off in a dark corner somewhere and trying not to think about the release. <3
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Published on April 06, 2018 01:17 Tags: free-book, royal-romance

November 14, 2017

Casanova and Real Fake Magic

This is a little bit of bonus material for people who’ve read The Rose and the Mask: A Beauty and the Beast Retelling or The Murano Glass Slipper: A Cinderella Retelling, my fairytale retellings set in 18th Century Venice. I hope it’s interesting!

the cover of the rose and the mask - a gold, flower-covered mask against a purple background the cover of the murano glass slipper. A watercolour image of a glass slipper surrounded by pink and blue flowers, on a dark blue background.

Both those books feature Giacomo Casanova. He’s the brother of Faustina, the heroine of The Rose and the Mask, and goes on to feature prominently in The Murano Glass Slipper. What I discovered, while writing the first one, is that not everyone knows that Giacomo Casanova really existed. Actually, quite a lot of people don’t know this, so please don’t feel bad if you didn’t, either! I feel as though I’ve always known, but I’m not really sure how. It’s not like there was a “Libertines Through History” textbook at my school or anything (although I think we would have studied the heck out of it if there had been, just saying). Most people are familiar with the word “casanova", but some people apparently think it refers to a mythical figure and, to others, it’s just a word.

He was a real person, though—one who became famous for his affairs. Here’s his autobiography and, if you don’t have time for that, I thoroughly recommend his Wikipedia page. It’s got everything: sex (obviously), spying, elaborate pasta-based escape plans, you name it.

Only a small part of Casanova’s life story made it into my books—he lived to be 73, and he’s only in his twenties when the stories take place. And, of course, I’ve fictionalised a lot of things. But his story gave me a lot of the inspiration, and I was able to work in a few things from the early chapters of his autobiography. For example:

1) Giacomo Casanova really had a sister called Faustina who was six years younger than him. Sadly, she died during childhood (which would have been common back then), but I like to think that she would have grown up to be pretty cool. He had five other siblings, who don’t appear in the books, including two brothers who were successful painters—a talent I borrowed for Faustina.

2) He really did leave Venice to go on the Grand Tour, returning in 1753. Of course, that wasn’t actually to escape an old enemy who wanted to steal his magic powers. But…

3) …He did claim to have magical powers! In fact, in The Rose and the Mask, Faustina wonders about the fact that her disreputable brother enjoys the patronage of a well-respected senator, Bragadin, who has even given Giacomo a suite of rooms in his house. Eventually, Giacomo explains how he used magic to earn Bragadin’s favour. This story is true—or very nearly true. Casanova saved Bragadin’s life, then convinced him that he had supernatural abilities, and Bragadin became his patron.

That last one is really what convinced me to try to work him into my story somehow. See, Casanova didn’t actually believe he had magic powers, but he was able to convince other people that he did, which repeatedly worked out pretty well for him. There’s a line from his autobiography that I quoted at the beginning of The Rose and the Mask:

Sorcerers have never existed; but their power has, for those who have had the talent to make others believe they were sorcerers.

Casanova didn’t have magic, but that didn’t matter. All he needed was for other people to believe he did, and he got whatever he wanted. That idea actually became the basis for how magic works in the books.

I went back and forth over whether to include this information as a note in The Rose and the Mask, but eventually I decided that the novel should stand on its own, without me having to explain it. But I was telling a friend about it the other day (I promise I don’t make people listen to this stuff all the time, but she was being very kind!) and she thought it was something readers might be interested in. So, here it is. Let me know if you like it and I’ll try to do more posts like this in the future!

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