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Georgie-who-is-Sarah-Drew
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Jan 01, 2015 05:31AM

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Okay, I'll eat more of His Lordship's Last Wager and publish fruits and vegetables. For some reason, it's just so ungainly and sprawling at the moment, I can't get my hands around it. But I'm going to wrestle the thing to the ground and make it behave. Then I'll publish (the book, not just a banana).

Thank you! Cheers!

I'm trying to finalize the first draft, the sequence of events in other words. Once I've got that down, I do about 5 months of editing, fact checking, etc. So it's coming along, thank you for asking. I need a kick in the butt every so often to keep up the pace.
Read any great books lately? I'm hoping for Regency reads that aren't the blockbusters by the usual suspects. Every suggestion is welcome…I don't have time to search right now.
Oh, I'm making smoothies out of green things (mulch) and fruit, so I'm doing better that way, too.The Vitamix is a wonder tool.

I'm trying to finalize the first draft, the sequence of events in other words. Once I'v..."
If I could make a suggestion for Regency reads - Megan Bryce's series of short stories is terrific (and her modern books just as good). Start with To Wed the Widow. And The Last Bachelor (Bettina Krahn) isn't too bad either.



I have two of hers on my kindle, but I'm in a British state of mind at the moment. That's why I haven't read them yet. Saving them for a post-self-publishing binge. Thanks for reminding me of them, though!

Cecilia Grant's A Woman Entangled, which I adored. Some readers thought the heroine was unlikable, but I thought she was rather true to the age.
Alyssa Everett's An Heir of Uncertainty was one of my 2014 favorites.
I don't know if you consider them the "usual suspects," but that's all I've got.
It's GREAT to hear that you're writing again.