Posts Tagged ‘romance’

Isn’t it Romantic?

(an article by Corey Holst)

Defender of the Realm is a romance novel?

Several female friends of mine were surprised to find that “Defender of the Realm” has a romantic theme as well as all the medieval battle stuff and asked why I didn’t market it that way. I suppose it’s because the moment you say that a book is a “Romance Novel” you automatically think of those muscle man/ heaving bosom stories of heavy breathing and explicit sex. “Defender of the Realm” isn’t like that. Yes, there is a romantic thread. The characters actually fall in love without jumping in the sack! I suppose if Hollywood ever gets hold of it, they will probably include something steamy, but I have this wacky notion that love does not necessarily mean sex. I suppose if I ever wrote something like “Basic Instinct” sex would be prevalent because it’s relevant. For the story I am telling in the Defender books, sex is not what drives the characters, so it’s not included. But the fact that my main character falls in love with someone above his station, IS relevant. It creates some of the drama or tension that needs resolution. That’s what makes a book fun for me, wondering all along and ultimately finding out… how is this going to end? Don’t you want to find out too?

Enhanced by Zemanta

Not Tonight, Josephine

(This is a reprint of an article by Colin Falconer, from his blog.)

“I awake full of you. Your image and the memory of last night’s intoxicating pleasures has left no rest to my senses.”

Napoléon Bonaparte will be remembered as one of history’s greatest generals; yet the one victory that seemed always to elude him was the battle for the affections of his own wife.

She was born Marie Josèphe Rose Tascher de La Pagerie, the daughter of a wealthy Creole sugar baron in Martinique. But after hurricanes destroyed the family plantation, she was married off to the Vicomte de Beauharnais in Paris in October, 1779, in order to preserve the family fortune. It was an unhappy marriage, but it produced two children, Eugène and Hortense.

During the Reign of Terror, in 1794, her husband was arrested as an aristocratic ‘suspect’ by the Jacobins; Joséphineherself was imprisoned a month later. He was guillotined and she herself was only saved from the same fate by the timely overthrow of Robespierre, just one day before her scheduled execution.
As a widow with two children to support, she chose her lovers with her head rather than her heart. She became mistress to several of France’s political and financial luminaries. But Joséphine was a shopper of the first rank and ran up enormous debts during her life.

In fact, when she met Napoléon it was rumored that her present lover, Paul Barras, was very happy for the other man to take her off his hands. He simply couldn’t afford her. He had met his financial Waterloo. Read the rest of this entry »