Blog

Birthday Club!

Birthdays are special. After all, we each only get one per year. I’d love to celebrate your birthday with you. Sign up for my Birthday Club–exclusive to fans like you–and I’ll send you a birthday surprise. Plus, you’ll be automatically entered to win a birthday gift basket with lots of fun stuff! (one person per month) You don’t have to buy a thing and none of the information you enter will ever be used for…

Wacky Valentine’s Day Trivia

Here’s some wacky and fun Valentine Day’s trivia: Valentine’s Day was once a Saint’s Day named after two (or three, depending on the source) different martyred priests all called Valentinus, a common Roman name. Some legends also claim a priest named Valentinus performed illegal Christian marriages when Rome was in power so he was executed as a criminal. The  Shakespearean “Hamlet” mentions Valentine’s Day.  Ophelia sings, “Good morrow! ‘Tis St. Valeintine’s Day; All in the…

Valentine’s Day in Regency England

Celebrating Valentine’s Day in Regency England was very different from the way we celebrate it today. It consisted of gentlemen and ladies–even people of all classes–exchanging hand-made cards with hand-written verses. During the Victorian Era, Valentine’s Day cards became mass produced, but in the Regency, such a gesture required more thought and care. Cards sent were as varied as the senders. Some made their cards with gilt-edged paper, trimmed with lace–real lace, not paper lace…

Thanksgiving and Gratitude

This thanksgiving day, here are 10 things for which I am grateful: my husband my 6 children and their loving spouses my granddaughter and wee grandson turkey feasts and all the trimmings including whipping cream which makes pumpkin pie edible hot apple pie and ice cream loyal fans who buy, read, and recommend my books a Thanksgiving Season that reminds me to feel gratitude for my abundance religious freedom surviving 2020 without loss of life…

Have a Little Class — Social Classes in Regency England

The social structure in Regency England was a lot more complicated than it is in today’s world. As an American who is an Anglophile as well as a certified history geek, I delved into this topic like Alice going into the rabbit hole and found a plethoria of fascinating tidbits. At the top of the social structure is royalty. These include the monarchy and their offspring, and siblings who were often royal dukes. According to…

Macaroons, macarons, maca-what?

If you’ve never had a macaron, you are missing out. This is seriously the best little tasty treat ever! If you’re an American, you probably pronounce mac-a-roon, and call it a cookie. If you’re British, you probably pronounce it mac-a-roh, and call it a biscuit. If you’re French, you probably swallow the last n and give it a nasally sound that still manages it to make it sound elegant and sophisticated. However you pronounce it…

Thank You to My Readers!

Thank you to all of you who purchased my newest book on Kindle or paperback. The good news is that the response has been tremendous: Goodreads has a review average of 4.44 out of 5 and Amazon has a review average of 4.7 out of 5. Hooray! The bad news is there aren’t as many reviews at either place as I had hoped to see by now–both have less than 100 verified reviews. If you’ve…

The legacy of Bow Street Runners

MYSTERY AND INTRIGUE OF BOW STREET Next to Robin Hood’s Merry Men, few other groups inspire images of mystery and intrigue quite as well as Bow Street Runners. They were a unique and unprecedented fighting force that paved the way for London’s modern police, Scotland Yard. They are also no longer in existence, and very little is actually known about them. Hence the mystery. And the tragedy. A LITTLE HISTORY Before the Magistrate of Bow…

Announcing a New Release!

The long-awaited book 5 of my Rogue Hearts Series is here! NOT A FINE GENTLEMAN is the story of Margaret, the eldest of the Amesbury family, children of the Earl and Countess of Tarrington. Here is the official back cover blurb: for NOT A FINE GENTLEMAN Lady Margaret secretly yearns for love, but fate has exchanged wedded bliss for a lie. When she is caught hovering over her cheating husband’s dead body, she is instantly…

Mister, Doctor, or hey you? Medical personnel in Regency England

As a modern-day American, I was surprised when I first discovered that characters in Regency-set books and movies address doctors as “Mister.” Today in the US, anyone with a doctorate is a doctor and is addressed as Dr., and specialists such as surgeons, are also addressed as “doctor.” However, in Regency England, only a physician was addressed as “doctor”. Other medical personnel was addressed as Mister or Mr. In addition, most of the men in…