Monday, August 24, 2020

Kindle Deals Monday August 24, 2020

Mae falls in love with her billionaire boss through their video chats, but when she finally gets the chance to meet/date him, he mistakes her for someone else because she actually makes an effort with her appearance. Which version will Slade Steele fall in love with? Not my favorite Checketts, but a fun read. FREE!




Billionaire Judd Hoffman returns to his hometown to give the keynote address at his high school reunion and reconnects with his high school crush. But before he can explore the relation ship too much, his daughter is caught in a dangerous situation and only the local firefighters can help him. The prequel to the Jackson Hole Firefighter series. Not a horrible book, but I'm glad it's FREE!





Country superstar Sloane Kent is in Jackson Hole to write his next album in peace when he notices a woman who appears to be in trouble. Following his gut he boards the same bus to Las Vegas. With road problems and her stalker ex on their trail, will it be possible for Sloane to not only find inspiration for his next album, but a love to last a lifetime? This is my favorite of the FREE books today and it's one I've enjoyed reading multiple times. 




A-List actor Grant Kent is helping at a drama camp for underprivileged kids when he becomes intrigued by the camp host--who calls him a hack. Undeterred, he inserts himself into her life and into her quest to find her birth mother, creating a fake engagement as a cover story. Not his finest moment, but hopefully he can get her to fall for him by the end of their short trip together. $1 Countdown Deal.





Before being arrested by the police in occupied France during WWII, young Sarah locks her brother in a cabinet to save him from the police. Unfortunately, her family does not return in a few hours like she expected. Fast-forward sixty years and a reporter begins digging into Sarah's past and life under the occupation. What secrets will be revealed when her research is concluded and how will the events of so long ago shape her life now? You can also watch an adaptation of the book on Netflix. $3 Today.




Hugh Conway is a man who has seen too much war, so he rejoices when his plane lands in Shangri-La, a paradise of peace. But he may not be able to stay there forever and must return to a world at war. Also made into two movies. $2 Today.


A Quick Guide to Buying Classic (Clean) Regency Romance



If you are a fan of today’s Regency Romance writers such as Sarah M. Eden, Sally Britton, Jennifer Moore, Heather B. Moore or a host of others, you may grow bored as you wait for them to write more amazing new romances. In the meantime, you can find a plethora of older Regency Romances from authors who published for the thirty or forty years prior to this millennium. But where do you begin???

Where Can I find Older Clean Romances?


After Georgette Heyer, whom I covered in my previous post, many authors followed in her footsteps with much humor and action, though perhaps not as much substance and historical accuracy. You may not be able to find these authors in your local bookstore, but if you have a used bookstore close, the shelves can be full of them. Local paperback book exchanges are one of your best resources to find these titles for a cheaper price tag, especially if you trade in books you no longer want to receive a discount. 


If you can’t find any locally, check PaperbackSwap. If you haven’t heard of this site and you’re an avid reader, you are missing out. You can list books from your own bookshelves that you want to get rid of, mail them off when they’re requested by others, and then use your credits (from mailing books) to request books from others. Sometimes it’s hard to hold on to your old books long enough to wait for them to be requested, but the site really does work and hundreds nationwide use this site to trade books. If you have a plethora of movies instead, you can list movies on DVDSwap and transfer the credits into your PBS account. Especially for older books, you can find members who will give you discounts on multiple books ordered or boxers who will send you a mix for minimal money. If you find the right member, you can score up to four books for one credit. If you don't care about the shape the book is in, you can also receive damaged books free from other members.


Another helpful resource is Thriftbooks.com where you can order lots of books from a network of digitally-connected bookshops across the country. Shipping is only $1 an item until you reach $10 worth of merchandise and then it’s free. Most of those same bookstores also post on Amazon, but there you have to pay $4 separate shipping for each item. You can also try Abebooks.com, but they may have many of the same offerings. For harder-to-find authors you have no recourse but to use eBay or another seller site, but only a few authors are really worth that price.



In the last couple years many older Regencies have become available in a digital format. You can buy them on Amazon or another platform at $4-7 a piece. Or, if you have a local library card you can check out digital copies from the Overdrive App (or Libby by Overdrive) and even have them sent to your Kindle. You can also request physical books from your library through Interlibrary Loan if you don't mind paying the occasional shipping fee. You don’t have to buy them before knowing whether you will like them or not! But I'm sure the authors appreciate your support of their newly-digitized novels.


Which Authors Should I Start With?

So how do you know which authors are safe to check out (without encountering bedroom scenes, language, etc)? As a general rule, anything published before 1980 is pretty clean and you should be safe with those titles. If the publisher is Zebra, Signet, Fawcett, Coventry, or Bantam books, 95% of those titles are clean and you shouldn’t encounter any problems. Even Harlequin was pretty tame before 1980 (possibly stretching to 1990) and you can read most of their earlier offerings.


Which authors are worth reading? Yes, it’s easier with technology to find the older clean romances, but which authors are really worth reading? Barbara Cartland was prolific (and was sued by Georgette Heyer for plagiarism), but I couldn’t read more than a book or two from her collection. I prefer authors who only published 20-30 books in their career because I find them better-written than the serial authors. Over the next few weeks I’ll be posting my favorite books by these authors, but if you just want a quick list of enjoyable authors to get you started on your Regency journey, here are my favorites:


Goodreads links:                                                                          

Georgette Heyer                                                 

Elizabeth Mansfield                                                 

Joan Smith

Mira Stables

Dinah Dean (some passionate kissing)

Barbara Hazard 

Carla Kelly (non-Harlequin titles)

Carola Dunn

Jean R. Ewing

Candice Hern (6 classics)

Shannon Donnelly

Jenna Mindel

Susannah Carleton

Sylvia Thorpe

Clare Darcy


Available on Kindle:

Heyer
Hazard ($1 each)


I'll be mentioning more books and authors later, but if you have a favorite you think I'm missing, feel free to comment.





Friday, August 21, 2020

Classic Regency Romance Introduction: Georgette Heyer

When I was fourteen, I snuck into my grandma's room for a new book to read and saw The Quiet Gentleman by Georgette Heyer on her nightstand. As a lover of mystery, the back blurb of attempted murder intrigued me, but I thought Grandma might be mad if I stole the very book she was reading. So I read the backs of another five or six Heyer novels until I found another one that sounded interesting and fled to my room to illicitly read. The book was Arabella and I was immediately sucked in to the setting, wit, and glamor of Heyer's world, even though I had to keep my dictionary close because I was coming across words I'd never encountered. (Honestly, if I haven’t read Heyer in a while I still need a dictionary.) Thank goodness for context clues for the rest! I stole two more books before I got up enough courage to confess to Grandma and ask for more recommendations of Heyer novels to enjoy. I devoured most of her books over the next year, enjoying my conversations about favorites with my mom and grandma and then recommending them to my friends.

For the next couple of years I had a list of twenty-two Heyer novels that I would constantly re-read and quote from, exasperating my high school friends with antiquated phrases that I loved. I would tell choir friends that I was "sick as a cushion" and enemies, "The prospect is naturally alluring, but even these treats in store don't tempt me" conveniently leaving out the rest of the line "to matrimony." Eventually, I decided to branch out from Heyer (the acknowledged queen of the genre) but had a hard time finding clean Regencies written in the last twenty years. Then I had the great fortune to discover thenonesuch.com (which unfortunately no longer exists) which categorized 'classic Regencies' by author, plot lines and tropes, location, and general review. I raided my local used bookstore and purchased another 100-200 books over the next few years.

Luckily clean romance has had a resurgence in the last decade and readers are all clamoring for the latest releases from Sarah Eden, Sarah Ladd, Sally Britton, and many others. But I've found as I've spoken with many fans of current Regency authors--and even a few of these authors themselves--that they don't know where to start looking for classic Regencies to read. Over the next few weeks I hope to write a few posts to help Regency Romance fans discover (or re-discover) old favorites that remain timeless clean reads for enthusiastic lovers of the genre.

So what continues to set Georgette Heyer (pronounced Hay-er or Hair) apart from her modern competition? First of all, her wit is what grabbed my attention from the first. Overt or tongue-in-cheek, Heyer is hilarious to read. You will laugh out loud at the antics of her lively characters, the roguish impertinence of her thieves, the daft beauties of the beau monde, and the sparkling repartee and comebacks from the dashing heroes and heroines. Aside from Shakespeare, few authors have so many brilliant insults in their repertoire! I would venture to say that of the current (clean) Regency authors, the one that comes closest to Heyer’s wit would be Sarah Eden, which is why I was drawn to her immediately.

Another thing that makes Heyer a joy to read is her complete accuracy in historical events, modes of address and hierarchy, popular styles of dress, and the language of the time. Her personal shelves were filled with hundreds of reference books and she became the proclaimed expert on the era. For one who has read Heyer for so long, it’s easy to spot problems in current Regencies and firmly wish these authors had done such research! If you also want to better understand the times and her extensive knowledge about it, you can read Georgette Heyer’s Regency World.

Aside from her wit, vocabulary, and impeccable historical accuracy, the one thing Heyer does that I can’t find an equal for in all of my voracious reading is her ability to create a world and amazingly real heroes and side characters to inhabit it. While it may be hard for readers of modern romance to wait for the meet-cute, so many Heyer novels have longer expositions, truly immersing the reader in a world for her characters. The setting and thoughts of all characters are integral to the storytelling and your understanding of the plot. Few of her creations are flat characters--they all breathe with vibrancy and life. Unless modern authors are creating a series based upon characters in the same setting, most side characters are made disposable and unmemorable. Not the case with Heyer! Even persons present for ten pages are fascinating and relatable.

As for my top ten list (in fluid order):

Devil's Cub
Venetia
The Nonesuch
Frederica
These Old Shades
The Quiet Gentleman

The Corinthian
Arabella
The Masqueraders
The Toll-Gate

























All-time favorites from fellow Heyer-ites also include:

Sylvester, The Unknown Ajax, Cotillion, and The Grand Sophy.


To read Heyer novels you can visit your local library, check out Heyer’s list on Goodreads, or purchase from Amazon and B&N: Georgette Heyer is always in print! If you prefer your books on the Kindle, you can currently pick up three great novels for $2.50 on Kindle (normally $10 each) or $2.99 on Nook.

For more information on Georgette Heyer you can visit the Wikipedia page here or her fan website here.

To join the conversation of the Facebook fan club, click here.

You can also read two biographies published about her: Georgette Heyer by Jennifer Kloester and The Private World of Georgette Heyer by Jane Aiken Hodge.



Saturday, August 1, 2020