2008-10-23

reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
2008-10-23 11:18 am

Romance History: Jean S. MacLeod

Jean S. MacLeod began writing for Mills and Boon in 1939, aged 31, shortly after she gave birth to her only child, David Walton. Ms MacLeod, who also wrote as Catherine Airlie, continued writing until the age of 87, by which time she had clocked 130 novels.

Jean says: “Money was not a motivation for writing – we were only paid on a royalty basis,” she insists. "Even now I still pick up around £68 a year in royalties. But the joy of knowing people were, and still are, enjoying my books is payment enough. Michael Boon, the original proprietor’s son, gave me advice that shapes my style to this day. He told me never to write anything a mother wouldn’t want her daughter to read.”

She continued to write for Mills and Boon after the publisher was taken over by American company Harlequin, but was uncomfortable with its request to "sex up" her books. And 70 years after her work first hit the shelves, she is proud to say: “I never use the word ‘sex’ in my novels – that is not what romance is about. It’s about love and emotion.”

Jean was a co-founder of the Romantic Novelists’ Association with that doyenne of the bodice-ripper, Barbara Cartland, and she recalls: “Mills & Boon always had a champagne tent on Ladies’ Day at Ascot for their authors. One year Barbara sauntered over and dismissively asked, ‘Wearing the same outfit twice, Jean? Are things really that hard?’. I didn’t dignify it with a response – she was known for her sharp remarks.”

To read more:

http://rosaromance.splinder.com/post/18811770/
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
2008-10-23 11:18 am
Entry tags:

Romance History: Jean S. MacLeod

Jean S. MacLeod began writing for Mills and Boon in 1939, aged 31, shortly after she gave birth to her only child, David Walton. Ms MacLeod, who also wrote as Catherine Airlie, continued writing until the age of 87, by which time she had clocked 130 novels.

Jean says: “Money was not a motivation for writing – we were only paid on a royalty basis,” she insists. "Even now I still pick up around £68 a year in royalties. But the joy of knowing people were, and still are, enjoying my books is payment enough. Michael Boon, the original proprietor’s son, gave me advice that shapes my style to this day. He told me never to write anything a mother wouldn’t want her daughter to read.”

She continued to write for Mills and Boon after the publisher was taken over by American company Harlequin, but was uncomfortable with its request to "sex up" her books. And 70 years after her work first hit the shelves, she is proud to say: “I never use the word ‘sex’ in my novels – that is not what romance is about. It’s about love and emotion.”

Jean was a co-founder of the Romantic Novelists’ Association with that doyenne of the bodice-ripper, Barbara Cartland, and she recalls: “Mills & Boon always had a champagne tent on Ladies’ Day at Ascot for their authors. One year Barbara sauntered over and dismissively asked, ‘Wearing the same outfit twice, Jean? Are things really that hard?’. I didn’t dignify it with a response – she was known for her sharp remarks.”

To read more:

http://rosaromance.splinder.com/post/18811770/
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
2008-10-23 02:07 pm

Best Laid Plans by Cat Kane

Best Laid Plans is a truly sweet romance with a little erotic taste. Liberally inspired to "The Wedding Planner" movie, it tells the story of Elliot, a man too good to be true. Not overly handsome, Elliot is a catastrophic wedding planner; actually he is not so bad, but everything seems to plot to ruin the wedding he plans. On his personal life, Elliot is no much more lucky: he always seems to have to prove himself, at work and with his family, and being gay is only another one of his failure in front of his family; plus working as wedding planner seems like an hobby to his parents, who are waiting for him to put his mind on the right path, both for work than for life style choices...

When one of the most sought soon-to-be married couple choices him to plan their wedding, Elliot takes it as his last chance to prove that he is good at his work. Veronica and Dylan are the perfect couple, young, wealthy, beautiful... maybe even too much beautiful, since Elliot seems unable to not stare to Dylan, and Dylan seems a little too bit interested in him. When Elliot and Dylan start a clandestine relationship, Elliot is eat alive by remorse, above all since Veronica seems a so nice girl. But the strange thing is that Veronica is not at all against the idea the Elliot spends a lot of time alone with Dylan...

The story is more romantic than angst, probably since it's true that Elliot is not so comfortable playing the role of who ruins families, but it's also true that he doesn't protest too much when Dylan makes his move with him. On the other hand Elliot is so absorbed in planning the perfect wedding that maybe he refuses to see the obvious signs around him. Dylan maybe doesn't say the things as clearly as they are, but he even plays the role of the devoted fiancee... so yes, he is guilty of omission, but he is not a liar.

The story is not very long, less than 100 pages, but it's light and enjoyable.

http://www.king-cart.com/cgi-bin/cart.cgi?store=linda018&cart_id=8600413.26452&product_name=Best+Laid+Plans&return_page=&user-id=&password=&exchange=&exact_match=exact

Amazon Kindle: Best Laid Plans
Publisher: Liquid Silver Books (August 4, 2008)

Reading List: http://www.librarything.com/catalog_bottom.php?tag=reading list&view=elisa.rolle


Cover Art by April Martinez
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
2008-10-23 02:07 pm

Best Laid Plans by Cat Kane

Best Laid Plans is a truly sweet romance with a little erotic taste. Liberally inspired to "The Wedding Planner" movie, it tells the story of Elliot, a man too good to be true. Not overly handsome, Elliot is a catastrophic wedding planner; actually he is not so bad, but everything seems to plot to ruin the wedding he plans. On his personal life, Elliot is no much more lucky: he always seems to have to prove himself, at work and with his family, and being gay is only another one of his failure in front of his family; plus working as wedding planner seems like an hobby to his parents, who are waiting for him to put his mind on the right path, both for work than for life style choices...

When one of the most sought soon-to-be married couple choices him to plan their wedding, Elliot takes it as his last chance to prove that he is good at his work. Veronica and Dylan are the perfect couple, young, wealthy, beautiful... maybe even too much beautiful, since Elliot seems unable to not stare to Dylan, and Dylan seems a little too bit interested in him. When Elliot and Dylan start a clandestine relationship, Elliot is eat alive by remorse, above all since Veronica seems a so nice girl. But the strange thing is that Veronica is not at all against the idea the Elliot spends a lot of time alone with Dylan...

The story is more romantic than angst, probably since it's true that Elliot is not so comfortable playing the role of who ruins families, but it's also true that he doesn't protest too much when Dylan makes his move with him. On the other hand Elliot is so absorbed in planning the perfect wedding that maybe he refuses to see the obvious signs around him. Dylan maybe doesn't say the things as clearly as they are, but he even plays the role of the devoted fiancee... so yes, he is guilty of omission, but he is not a liar.

The story is not very long, less than 100 pages, but it's light and enjoyable.

http://www.king-cart.com/cgi-bin/cart.cgi?store=linda018&cart_id=8600413.26452&product_name=Best+Laid+Plans&return_page=&user-id=&password=&exchange=&exact_match=exact

Reading List:

http://www.librarything.com/catalog_bottom.php?tag=reading list&view=elisa.rolle


Cover Art by April Martinez
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
2008-10-23 06:07 pm

Life Prison (Mercy's Prisoner 1) by Dusk Peterson

Life Prison is a tale on the Mercy's Prisoner series; it's setting in a fantasy world which resembles the Victorian period. In this world, life in prison is regulated as in the Dante's Inferno, every circles (prison's level) hides an atrocity for the prisoners who deserve to be there. Mind this last point: the prisoners are not innocents hold in captivity for some unbelievable injustice, they are guilty and sometime of an atrocity maybe even worst of what they now suffer in prison.

Merrick is a murder of the worst type: he consciously killed his three years old niece. He didn't act on the spur of the moment, he planned the kill; and now he replies it in his memory as the best moment of his life. In prison Merrick is not thinking at freedom, he is thinking at death; he wants to die but the only rule the guards have is to not kill the prisoners, or to not help them to kill themself. Other than, guards can do whatever they want, and they have no problem at follow this rule. Prisoners are no more than free whores for the guard who have them in hold.

To Merrick is assigned a new guard, Thomas. Thomas is young and idealist and the truly thinks that life in prison, even if a forever captivity, could be dignified for the prisoners. The initial incredulity of Merrick turns at first in opportunity: maybe Merrick can manipulate this man, maybe he can reach his purpose. But Thomas, for how young he is, it's not so naivee as he seems. Merrick will learn that a firm hold can be more tight than a strong one.

It's not a romance what happens between Merrick and Thomas, but it's a relationship. They build something together, even if it's not love. Reading the play of minds is almost as good as reading the sexual interaction between the two.

Life Prison is the tale of what the title tells right: the life in prison; it's not a journey toward freedom, or better it's not a journey toward the freedom outside the prison, but it's the journey of a man who learns to "live" in prison. Till he meets Thomas, Merrick is not living, he is waiting to die. Merrick is not a man who can live outside: he finds in prison, and in the confinement of prison, a suitable environment for him; outside he would be a criminal, a reject of the society; inside he is a man.

Amazon Kindle: Life Prison
Publisher: Love in Dark Settings Press; 1 edition (September 28, 2008)

Reading List: http://www.librarything.com/catalog_bottom.php?tag=reading list&view=elisa.rolle
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
2008-10-23 06:07 pm

Life Prison (Mercy's Prisoner 1) by Dusk Peterson

Life Prison is a tale on the Mercy's Prisoner series; it's setting in a fantasy world which resembles the Victorian period. In this world, life in prison is regulated as in the Dante's Inferno, every circles (prison's level) hides an atrocity for the prisoners who deserve to be there. Mind this last point: the prisoners are not innocents hold in captivity for some unbelievable injustice, they are guilty and sometime of an atrocity maybe even worst of what they now suffer in prison.

Merrick is a murder of the worst type: he consciously killed his three years old niece. He didn't act on the spur of the moment, he planned the kill; and now he replies it in his memory as the best moment of his life. In prison Merrick is not thinking at freedom, he is thinking at death; he wants to die but the only rule the guards have is to not kill the prisoners, or to not help them to kill themself. Other than, guards can do whatever they want, and they have no problem at follow this rule. Prisoners are no more than free whores for the guard who have them in hold.

To Merrick is assigned a new guard, Thomas. Thomas is young and idealist and the truly thinks that life in prison, even if a forever captivity, could be dignified for the prisoners. The initial incredulity of Merrick turns at first in opportunity: maybe Merrick can manipulate this man, maybe he can reach his purpose. But Thomas, for how young he is, it's not so naivee as he seems. Merrick will learn that a firm hold can be more tight than a strong one.

It's not a romance what happens between Merrick and Thomas, but it's a relationship. They build something together, even if it's not love. Reading the play of minds is almost as good as reading the sexual interaction between the two.

Life Prison is the tale of what the title tells right: the life in prison; it's not a journey toward freedom, or better it's not a journey toward the freedom outside the prison, but it's the journey of a man who learns to "live" in prison. Till he meets Thomas, Merrick is not living, he is waiting to die. Merrick is not a man who can live outside: he finds in prison, and in the confinement of prison, a suitable environment for him; outside he would be a criminal, a reject of the society; inside he is a man.

Amazon Kindle: Life Prison

Reading List:

http://www.librarything.com/catalog_bottom.php?tag=reading list&view=elisa.rolle