I am excited to welcome historical romance author, Susanna Fraser, here to The Maiden's Court today - please help me to welcome her! Although I don't typically read a lot of historical romance but her newest novel, An Infamous Marriage, sounds very interesting. Stay tuned after the interview for a giveaway.
Northumberland, 1815
At long last, Britain is at peace, and General Jack Armstrong is coming home to the wife he barely knows. Wed for mutual convenience, their union unconsummated, the couple has exchanged only cold, dutiful letters. With no more wars to fight, Jack is ready to attempt a peace treaty of his own.
Elizabeth Armstrong is on the warpath. She never expected fidelity from the husband she knew for only a week, but his scandalous exploits have made her the object of pity for years. Now that he's back, she has no intention of sharing her bed with him—or providing him with an heir—unless he can earn her forgiveness. No matter what feelings he ignites within her…
Jack is not expecting a spirited, confident woman in place of the meek girl he left behind. As his desire intensifies, he wants much more than a marriage in name only. But winning his wife's love may be the greatest battle he's faced yet.
I noticed from your website that you like to write about the period revolving around the Napoleonic Wars. What is it about this period that captures your attention?
Much of it is the incredible amount of upheaval that took place between 1789 and 1815. I imagine what it would’ve been like to be born in France or Britain in the 1760’s or 70’s, into a relatively stable world. Then, just as you’re coming of age or establishing yourself as an adult, what you’d always thought of as the natural order of the world explodes in a chaotic reinvention, and stays unstable and almost constantly at war for a good quarter century. I’m drawn to writing characters negotiating their lives and loves in the midst of that shifting world.
Was writing something that you always aspired to do or was it something that snuck up on you? Why did you choose to write historical romance as opposed to another genre?
I dreamed of being an author from the time I wrote a long story for a fourth grade class assignment. But all through middle school and high school I fell into a pattern of starting stories but never finishing them, and by my early 20’s I’d concluded I wasn’t really meant to be a writer, or I wouldn’t keep stopping 50 pages in.
Then, right around my 30th birthday, I had an idea for a story that I couldn’t get out of my head. Eventually I started writing it just to get the characters to shut up, thinking I’d get three chapters in and stop just like every other time. A little over a year later I had my first completed manuscript, and I haven’t looked back.
As for why historical romance, it’s one of the main genres I read--the others being mystery, fantasy, science fiction, and adventurous historical fiction (think Sharpe and Aubrey/Maturin). I write the kind of books I like to read. So far that’s meant historical romance, but I could definitely see myself branching out into fantasy or historical fiction in the future. (Mystery NSM--I rarely figure out whodunnit before all is revealed, so I’m not sure I could produce a sufficiently twisty plot.)
When you set out to write a novel where do you start - with a historical storyline or event that intrigued you or with a romantic storyline that you want to pursue and the historical part just will fall into place?
Somewhere in between. I’ve done enough general research on the era to have a rich mental stock of interesting facts and events, and I’m always thinking about character types and story tropes I’d like to explore. So my initial brainstorming process is putting my character/trope file next to my history file and figuring out which combinations would work well together. For example, An Infamous Marriage was marriage-of-convenience/infidelity-and-forgiveness/Waterloo.
How has the experience of writing your newest novel, An Infamous Marriage, differed from your previous novels? Anything that has become easier to do or something that you encountered with this subject that was difficult?
An Infamous Marriage was the first time I’ve sold a book on proposal rather than as a complete manuscript. That made it the first time I had to commit to and deliver by a deadline, all without deviating too much from the synopsis my publisher had accepted. The feeling of triumph I got from delivering it to my editor on schedule was almost as great as the first time I finished a manuscript.
Are you working on anything currently and if so, can you tell us anything about it?
My first novella will be coming out in 2013. Its title and release date remain TBD, but it’s an interracial romance set in the aftermath of the Battle of Vittoria in 1813, with a black British soldier for a hero. I’m working on a proposal for a full-length sequel to the novella, and I’m planning to try my hand at a Christmas novella as well.
When you are not writing, what do you enjoy doing with your free time?
I like to cook, read, and go to Mariners games. I never miss a new episode of
Castle or
Chopped, and lately I’ve been catching up on
Doctor Who. When I had more spare time I used to sing alto in a choir, and I’d like to get back to that someday. For now I just try to find a sing-along Messiah or two every December.
I
look forward to replying to your comments, but it’ll be late in the evening in
most North American time zones before I get a chance. I have a full-time 8-5
day job and don’t get much time online till the evening.
Susanna Fraser wrote her first novel in fourth grade. It starred a family of talking horses who ruled a magical land. In high school she started, but never finished, a succession of tales of girls who were just like her, only with long, naturally curly and often unusually colored hair, who, perhaps because of the hair, had much greater success with boys than she ever did.
Along the way she read her hometown library’s entire collection of Regency romance, fell in love with the works of Jane Austen, and discovered in Patrick O’Brian’s and Bernard Cornwell’s novels another side of the opening decades of the 19th century. When she started to write again as an adult, she knew exactly where she wanted to set her books. Her writing has come a long way from her youthful efforts, but she still tends to give her heroines great hair.
Susanna lives in the Pacific Northwest with her husband and daughter. When not writing or reading, she goes to baseball games, watches Chopped, Castle, and The Legend of Korra, and cooks her way through an ever-growing cookbook collection.
You can find Susanna on her:
Website,
Facebook,
Blog, and
Twitter
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Now for the giveaway - there are 2 parts to this.
Hosted here, on The Maiden's Court, there is a giveaway for 1
E-book copy of
An Infamous Marriage by Susanna Fraser (you can indicate the file type you want). Open
Internationally. The giveaway ends
December 16th. You can enter to win by filling out the Rafflecopter below -
please be advised, there is one mandatory entry - leave a comment on this blog post!
Also - there is a *grand prize* giveaway following the completion of Susanna Fraser's blog tour. One commenter selected from
all commenters throughout the tour will be selected for the grand prize - a $50 gift certificate to Amazon, Barnes and Noble, or Powell's Books
(see why the note about commenting above is so important). You get one entry per blog tour stop that you comment on. You can follow along with the blog tour at
Susanna Fraser's blog.
a Rafflecopter giveaway
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