Penny Black
asked
Grace Burrowes:
This question contains spoilers…
(view spoiler)[I've started reading Will's True Wish, and for some reason, Worth Kettering is repeatedly referred to as Sir Worth. But, at the end of his own book, Worth was to be awarded a barony of Trysting.
"I want you for my wife and for my lady—I’m to suffer a damned barony for this summer’s folly. A knighthood simply won’t do when Prinny’s in a magnanimous mood."
Did Prinny change his mind in the end? (hide spoiler)]
"I want you for my wife and for my lady—I’m to suffer a damned barony for this summer’s folly. A knighthood simply won’t do when Prinny’s in a magnanimous mood."
Did Prinny change his mind in the end? (hide spoiler)]
Grace Burrowes
Penny, I think I should send you a signed copy of Will's book! Email me at graceburrowes@yahoo.com. You are the first reader to call me on this boo-boo, which woke me up in the dead-a-night, right after the galleys had gone to print for Will. I think we will have to agree that Worth successfully argued the Regent into inflicting on him the lesser honor. We can also agree my subconscious must have been arguing for Worth's preferred outcome, to the detriment of cross-book continuity. Oops! Worth shows up in subsequent books (I have plans for old Hessian), so I'll have to figure out whether to boot Worth up to baron, or let him remain a knight. Any suggestions?
More Answered Questions
Doris Lee
asked
Grace Burrowes:
Dear Grace, once you have finished writing about the Haddonfield sisters, will you finish writing about Mary Ellen and Dora Flynn as well? Also, will any of the Victorian descendants of your Regency heroes and heroines have their own HEAs? After all, you did reintroduce Gayle in Asher's story, which I see as a sign of the Wyndham series moving into the Victorian era :)
April Beckett
asked
Grace Burrowes:
Grace, hello. I'm reading "Lady Eve's Indiscretion" (paperback); on p. 128 Eve makes a list of what her sister calls "your white marriage knights". The list of potential white knight husbands that Lady Eve is drawing up are men who do not impress her. I've never heard this expression white marriage before, and there are a few references to it in the earlier part of the book; what does it mean? Thank you.
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