Rosie’s Book review Team #RBRT Alison reviews The Girl In Blue by Barbara J Hancock

rosie3

Today’s book review is from Alison, she blogs at http://alisonwilliamswriting.wordpress.com/

22232481

Alison chose to read and review the Harlequin boxset, today’s book is The Girl In Blue by Barbara J Hancock

22589166

The Girl in Blue by Barbara J. Hancock

This was a fairly quick read, but on the whole an enjoyable one.

Trinity returns to Scarlet Falls looking for answers to the tragedies that have followed her all her life and that have marred the town and its residents. She is surprised to find Samuel living in her parents’ home; the two are connected by the past and by Samuels’ brush with death. He, like Trinity, is looking for answers and they join forces to track down what’s behind the mysterious girl in blue who has been haunting Trinity for as long as she can remember.

There is some great scene- setting in this – creepy moments and creepy places, and the relationship between Trinity and Samuel works well.

My only gripe is that it was too short – I wanted to know more about Trinity, about Samuel and about what really lies behind Scarlet Falls. That said, it’s a great creepy read and if you love gothic and romance then it’s definitely worth giving it a go.

4 out of 5 stars

Now available as individual books

Find a copy here from Amazon.co.uk or Amazon.com

Rosie’s Book Review Team #RBRT Crystin Reviews Echoes In The Darkness by Jane Godman

Today’s book review comes from Crystin, she blogs at http://crystinlgoodwin.wordpress.com/posts/

rosie3

Crystin chose to read and review Echoes In The Darkness by Jane Godman

Echoes in the Darkness by Jane Godman

Echoes in the Darkness by Jane Godman

Everyone has secrets. Some just have darker secrets than others … Dita Varga knows this all too well, having secrets of her own. But when circumstances force her to flee from the looming danger of her past, she encounters a family whose twisted puzzles hide a darkness far worse than anything she’s encountered before. Can she solve the riddle of the Jago family’s past before coming face-to-face with a demon?

Echoes in the Darkness is a wonderfully light read, which I know sounds like an odd thing to say about a gothic romance – but it’s true. The story unfolds beautifully, starting literally on the very first page when the main character finds a naked stranger in her apartment. Talk about hooking the reader! The author also sprinkles in intriguing glimpses into the mystery of Dita Varga’s past, making the reader want to know more. These glimpses weave seamlessly into a full blown mystery, not only about the identity of the serial killer mutilating women, but about the hidden past of the Jago family. I found the story to be completely gripping – especially since I only meant to read the first few chapters and ended up finishing at 1am because I just had to know who the killer was. Always a sign of a good book, in my opinion.

A few disclaimers – there are some mild expletives in this novel, as well as a few sex scenes. (Well, it is a romance, people.) There are also a few slightly gory parts as the bodies of victims are discovered throughout the story. Finally (and this was my only real complaint, if you’d call it that) there isn’t a definite time period in the story as far as I can tell. I assumed it was close to a historical/regency era, since the Jago family is an Earldom, but some of the descriptions felt a little off. That said, there wasn’t anything jarring – like race cars or motor boats – just a lot of ambiguity. Which might have been the author’s intent – as it made the mystery part of the novel even more compelling.

Recommended for any romance reader, the mystery buff, or anyone wanting to try a mild thriller.

Amazon.co.uk or Amazon.com

Echoes In The Darkness by Jane Godman

Echoes in the Darkness (Jago Legacy, #2)Echoes in the Darkness by Jane Godman

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Echoes in the Darkness is an engaging Gothic horror romance. It gives you all the shivers and secrets of a forbidden past and wraps them up with a hot romance.

Dita Varga is on the run and when she gets to Paris she earns money by posing as a nude model, but she refuses to have her face painted in case her followers find her. When news arrives that those who seek her, are closing in Dita rashly accepts an offer from her flatmate to travel to England as his fiancé.

They leave behind them Paris, horrific murders of street girls and the only love of Dita’s life, an unknown man whom she spent one wonderful night with and never saw again. Eddie takes her to his family home in Cornwall, Tenebris or Athal House is his impressive ancestral home full of ghosts and dark secrets, but Dita feels like she is where she belongs.

Not long after their arrival village girls go missing and the fingers start pointing at Cad Vargo, in fact sinister happenings have always been connected to the Jago name. Bit by bit Dita discovers more of the family history and we wonder just how close to home more murders will come before the Jago madness gets the blame.

There were some beautiful descriptions and language used, some books I find myself sliding over the filler descriptions but this book kept me enthralled. Here’s an example of a line I loved “Nature’s clock was chiming the twilight of the year”. I also loved Dita’s beauty it shone out like a beacon against the darker side of the novel. Really enjoyed this, a great sequel to the first book, but easily a stand alone book too.

Find a copy here from Amazon.co.uk or Amazon.com

View all my reviews on Goodreads

Romancing September #RomancingSeptember – Day 14

rosie1

Welcome to Day 14 of Romancing September Across The World Tour. Our guest today is Jane Godman. Catch up with more from Jane in a few hours with the second part of our tour when Stephanie chats to her.

Echoes Original

Where is your home town?

I live in Birkenhead, which is on the Wirral Peninsula in North West England. It’s on the opposite side of the River Mersey to Liverpool and the iconic ‘ferry ‘cross the Mersey’ originates here.

How long have you been writing romance?

I’ve written for as long as I can remember. As a teenager, I lived in South Africa, and my best friend and I discovered the novels of Kathleen E Woodiwiss when we were thirteen. We used to spend our evenings writing books in the style of ‘The Wolf and the Dove’. I had a big birthday (let’s just say it had a zero at the end) two years ago and my friend gave me an amazing present. She had kept one of the books I wrote when I was fourteen! It’s a medieval romance, written in felt tip pen. I’m very proud of it and it gave me the push I needed to start submitting my work to publishers.

Although I’m very proud of the fact that, my fellow Shivers authors and I were recently described as ‘the reigning Queens of Gothic Romance’ by a reviewer, I also love to write historical romances. I like to think my historical romances are in the style of Georgette Heyer, but rather steamier! My career as a published author began in January 2013 when I had a series of historical romances published with a small company which has now, sadly, gone out of business. When the rights for the books reverted to me in April 2014, I undertook to completely re-write the series. Each book in the series features a smouldering, sexy hero eighteenth century hero. Entitled the Georgian Rebel Series, it currently consists of four books and I am hoping to find them a home with a new publisher soon.

My first Harlequin book, Legacy of Darkness, was published in the January 2014. I now have three Harlequin Shivers titles available, with two others due to be published in the next few months.

What is your favourite sub-genre of romance?

I love gothic romance. Crumbling manor houses, gloomy corridors, ghostly apparitions and eerie secrets. Just a few of the reasons why gothic romance has enthralled readers (myself included) for over two centuries!

Gothic romances are all about setting, uncertainty, and an element of creepiness that makes the romance all the sweeter. The hidden story is as important, perhaps more important, than the explicit. Think ghostly shadows rather than chain-saw wielding serial killers. Fingertips of nervous and sensual excitement are trailed down the spine in equal measure. The dark atmosphere is integral to the suspense, and the most frightening elements are often implied rather than stated outright. Our heroines have a tendency to ignore common sense and explore dark houses or stormy cliff-top castles, but they are also brave, loyal, and determined. The gothic heroine will fight for the man she loves, even if she has a sneaking suspicion he may be trying to kill her. Our brooding heroes are misunderstood by everyone, including the heroine at first (see above).

The gothic style allows us an outlet for our darkest imaginings. From the safety of our armchair, we can accompany the gothic heroine as, clad in a clinging white nightdress, with only a single candle to light her way, she climbs the creaking stairs to discover just what those strange noises in the attic actually are. We’ve all seen those scenes in horror films. We’ve all shouted at the screen “Don’t go into the attic!” and shivered with a combination of pleasure and terror when our heroine ignores us.

Tell us about the Gothic period, what does it involve?

Gothic romances can be set in any time period. They can be historical or contemporary. I suppose they could also be set in the future! They are mysteries, usually tinged with horror and the supernatural. Gothics are often set against dark backgrounds such as medieval ruins, mysterious houses or haunted castles. Traditional gothics had a spirited young heroine, peculiar supporting characters, precocious children and darkly handsome men with mysterious pasts. Authors included Victoria Holt, Mary Stewart and Daphne du Maurier.

Harlequin Shivers, the ‘new’ Gothics, have elements of the unexplained, but they are not paranormal romances. Generally, the heroine and heroine are human beings who may have paranormal experiences. Shivers have high levels of sensuality, but their strong gothic story line makes them much more than an erotic romance.

So what can readers expect from a Jane Godman Shivers?

A dark, gloomy and atmospheric setting.

A feisty heroine who pushes the boundaries of her time.

A hero you fall in love with…

…And a villain you fall in love with (for very different reasons)

Dark secrets, the past comes back to haunt the present.

Erotic tension that builds alongside the story. The shivers in these stories don’t come just from the supernatural elements!

Who is Divine Dita?

Dita Varga is the heroine in Echoes in the Darkness, the second book in the Jago Legacy series. It is the 1860s and she models for the artists in the Montmartre district of Paris, but she will only let them paint her naked body, never her face. She is so beautiful that the artistic community nickname her ‘The Divine Dita’. But Dita is a girl with secrets…

Why has she gone to Cornwall?

Dita lives with a gorgeous, dissolute artist called Eddie Jago. Everyone thinks they are lovers, but in reality they are just friends. Eddie gets a letter from his family in Cornwall telling him that he must return home because his father, Tynan Jago, the Earl of Athal, is ill. This coincides with news that the man who has been searching for Dita across Europe is on his way to Paris. Dita must leave France quickly. She agrees to go to Cornwall with Eddie and, so that his family are not suspicious about their relationship, they pretend to be engaged.

What frightens her about the Jago’s house?

Athal House is a beautiful mansion, on the top of a Cornish cliff. It has been built on the site of what was once Castle Athal, the Jago family’s legendary ancestral home. The castle burned down on the night of Tynan Jago’s twenty first birthday, which was also his wedding night. His aunt and uncle were both killed in the fire. Tynan supervised the rebuilding himself and even had some of the original castle walls incorporated into his new home.

When Dita arrives at Tenebris—the name the Jago family give to their home—she is immediately struck by the atmosphere of the place. Although it is beautiful, it is brooding and strange things begin to happen to her. Dita sometimes finds herself in corridors that seem to be from another time. She sees a man with golden eyes riding a black stallion along the cliff top and a woman, also with golden eyes, comes to her room and warns her to stay away before vanishing.

Is there something which drives all the house residents mad?

Tenebris means ‘darkness’ and the Jago Legacy is certainly a dark one, but not everyone who lives there is mad. Tynan and his wife Lucy have managed to escape the legacy, and they hope their three children will too. There is definitely something about the place and about the Jagos, however, that makes it wise to avoid them on a dark night! A reviewer recently said that the Addams Family have nothing on this lot (and I do like to think that the Jago Family are sexier than the Addams Family)!

Tell us what you are working on at the moment.

As well as making sure my Georgian Rebel Series of books are complete, I’m working on a contemporary romantic suspense series. It’s a new venture for me as I haven’t written any contemporary books before. The content is very dark, however, so that’s definitely nothing new when it comes to Jane Godman stories. I like to think I’m the point at which Jane Austen and Stephen King meet and overlap!

Oh, and I have an idea for a horror novella lurking that I really must get down on paper! As you can probably see, I like to keep busy and I like to write in a variety of genre.

Where can readers find out more about you?

Jane Godman

I love to hear from readers and can be contacted at:

Website: http://www.janegodmanauthor.com/

Twitter: @JaneGodman

Email: janegodman@ymail.com

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Jane-Godman-Author/

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/6923685.Jane_Godman

Find a copy of Echoes Of Darkness here from Amazon.co.uk or Amazon.com

Find out more about Jane from Stephanie Hurt’s blog and all our Romance writers http://stephanie-hurt.com/

Guest Author Jane Godman

Today our guest is Jane Godman author of yesterday’s book Legacy of Darkness. Here is a link to the post if you missed it. http://wp.me/p2Eu3u-4X6

Jane Godman

Let’s find out more about Jane.

1) Where is your home town?

I live in Birkenhead, which is on the Wirral Peninsula in North West England. It’s on the opposite side of the River Mersey to Liverpool and the iconic ‘ferry ‘cross the Mersey’ originates here.

2) How long have you been writing? How long have you been writing for Harlequin?

I’ve written for as long as I can remember. As a teenager, I lived in South Africa, and my best friend and I discovered the novels of Kathleen E Woodiwiss when we were thirteen. We used to spend our evenings writing books in the style of ‘The Wolf and the Dove’. I had a big birthday (let’s just say it had a zero at the end) two years ago and my friend gave me an amazing present. She had kept one of the books I wrote when I was fourteen! It’s a medieval romance, written in felt tip pen. I’m very proud of it and it gave me the push I needed to start submitting my work to publishers. My first book, The Rebel’s Promise, was published by Front Porch Romance in February 2013.

My first Harlequin book, Legacy of Darkness, was published in the January 2014 Shivers digital box set. My second (the sequel to Legacy of Darkness) is called Echoes in the Darkness and will be published in the next Shivers box set on 1st April 2014.

shivers

3) How does any author become a Harlequin / Mills and Boon writer?

I think there can be a misconception that there is a ‘magic formula’ to being a Harlequin/Mills and Boon author. When I wrote ‘Legacy of Darkness’ I had no idea that Harlequin were looking for Gothic romances as part of their Shivers line. I wrote the sort of book I wanted to read, in a genre I love. The book was nearly finished when I read an interview in which Malle Vallik, Harlequin’s Director of Editorial Digital Initiatives, said ‘send us your gothics’. So I did. And, just a week later, I got ‘the call’ to say the team at HarlequinE loved my book.

If I had tried to write the book to a perceived formula, I don’t think I would be a Harlequin author today. The old adage ‘write like a reader’ still holds true. If you write the stories you believe in, your passion will shine through and an editor, whether they are a Harlequin editor or in another company, will see that. It will jump off the page.

The other thing I would say to anyone trying to get published is ‘dare to be different’. There are a lot of books out there. There is a key element in Legacy (I won’t say what it is as it would spoil the story for anyone who hasn’t read it) that I thought might put an editor off. Instead, because it pushed the boundaries, it was actually one of the things that the Harlequin team loved. So my advice is ‘never play safe’!

4) Your book is written as a “Gothic” romance, can you briefly explain what Gothic means?

Gothic romances are mysteries, usually tinged with horror and the supernatural. Gothics are often set against dark backgrounds such as medieval ruins, mysterious houses or haunted castles. Traditional gothics had a spirited young heroine, peculiar supporting characters, precocious children and darkly handsome men with mysterious pasts. Authors included Victoria Holt, Mary Stewart and Daphne du Maurier.

Harlequin Shivers, the ‘new’ Gothics, have elements of the unexplained, but they are not paranormal romances. Generally, the heroine and heroine are human beings who may have paranormal experiences. Shivers have high levels of sensuality, but their strong gothic story line makes them much more than an erotic romance. They can be historical or contemporary.

So what can readers expect from a Jane Godman Shivers?

1.         A dark, gloomy and atmospheric setting.

2.         A feisty heroine who pushes the boundaries of her time.

3.         A hero you fall in love with…

4.         …And a villain you fall in love with (for very different reasons)

5.         Dark secrets, the past comes back to haunt the present.

6.         Erotic tension that builds alongside the story. The shivers in these stories don’t come just from the supernatural elements!

5) I briefly touched on the attractiveness of Uther in my review, can you describe him in more details to tantalise the readers?

Oh, Uther! My favourite character from ‘Legacy of Darkness’, perhaps

my favourite character ever, has to be Uther Jago. He is described on the back cover of ‘Legacy of Darkness’ as ‘Uther: a commanding, seductive presence whose leonine power radiates from his every word and gesture’.

Uther is everything a gothic character should be. Handsome, sexy, smouldering…He has dark secrets and innocent Lucy is utterly enthralled by him from the moment they meet. But can she trust him?

I think this excerpt gives the reader a little teaser of Uther’s character:

Unexpectedly, he grasped my hand and held it against the cold stone. “These walls have memories of their own. Feel them, Lucy,” his voice rippled through my mind. “Lords and ladies in their jewelled velvets…sunshine warming pennants and spears…shouts of the joust…the maiden meeting her forbidden love …”

I obediently closed my eyes and heard the rustle of skirts, the soft clandestine whispers of long-dead lovers, and the strains of a lute signalling reckless dance and wild romance. Uther’s low sound—somewhere between a growl and a purr—roused me from my trance. My eyelids fluttered.

“Your face—” his voice was a whispered caress, warm breath stroking my ear “—has the look a woman usually wears only once. When she first succumbs to orgasm.”

I stepped back in shock, the ready tinge of roses staining my face. He turned and walked away as if the searing words had never been spoken. I wondered if they had. Or had this new, brazen creature—the one I had just discovered within me—merely wished them spoken?

6) What was the actual family relationship between Lucy and the others?

Lucy and Tynan call each other ‘cousin’ and Demelza asks Lucy to call her ‘aunt’, but their actual relationships are more distant. Lucy’s mother was a second cousin to Uther and Demelza, so Lucy describes her own relationship to the Jago family as ‘tenuous at best’. Which, for Lucy’s sake is probably just as well! As one reviewer recently commented: ‘If ever there was family with skeletons in their closets it’s the Jago’s, who I might add can rival the Addams family in their creepiness and kookiness.

7) The plot had my mind spinning off in all sorts of directions when I read it, did it change much for you when you were writing it?

Yes! Without giving too much of the plot away to someone who hasn’t read it, Uther Jago was one of those characters who just would not conform to the plans I originally had for him. He dictated the pace of the story and I very much went along with it. My original plan for a classic gothic set in a Cornish castle still held true, but some of the plot twists and turns came out of the machinations of Uther Jago. And he definitely took charge when it came to some of the eroticism in the story, as well!

8) You had some fun using old Cornish words, which were your favourite?

I like to bring some authenticity to a story by having the characters use words and phrases that relate to their home and culture. When I researched the story, however, I was surprised to find that, even in 1837, just as Queen Victoria is ascending the throne, the Cornish language was dying out.

I wanted Tynan to use a Cornish endearment as a nickname for Lucy, something that was unique to them. The one that I liked the best was hweg which means ‘dearest’ or ‘darling’. But then I came across kegis hweg, which is celery. So for most of the book Lucy, who is very slender, thinks that Tynan is comparing her to a stick of celery rather than calling her ‘darling’.

9) I enjoyed reading about the trip to Tintagel, what is so special about Merlin’s cave?

Tintagel castle is the legendary birthplace of King Arthur and is believed by some to be the site of Camelot. Merlin’s Cave is situated on the sands below the ruined castle and was made famous by Tennyson who described waves carrying the infant Arthur to the shore. It is said that the wizard Merlin emerged from the cave and carried him to safety.

The cave is very atmospheric, and you can imagine Merlin approaching, with his staff held up to light up the darkness of the cave. It does feel like a place of magic and mystery, and those Arthurian legends come to life along that rugged stretch of Cornish coast.

10) What are you writing at the moment? Will it be another Harlequin romance?

I’m so pleased with the way the Shivers line is developing. HarlequinE has some amazing authors writing gothics and I am thrilled to be in such talented company. My next Shivers, Echoes in the Darkness (the sequel to Legacy in the Darkness), is part of the second Shivers box set which is released on 1st April 2014. It is set about thirty years after the end of Legacy of Darkness and features the next generation of dastardly Jagos.

The blurb for Echoes in the Darkness reads: Not betrothed, but beguiled.

In artistic circles she is the Divine Dita, Paris’ most sought-after nude model. But now she’s not so much posing as playing a role: fiancée to the next Earl of Athal. The charade is a favor to Dita’s friend, Eddie Jago, a dissolute painter…and the aforementioned heir. As deceptions go, it is innocent compared with what will come.

On the grim Cornish coast, from the ashes of a ruined castle rises the Jagos’ sumptuous new manor house. The fresh-hewn stone, however, cannot absorb the blood of centuries or quiet the echoes of past crimes. Dita struggles to decipher the family: the infirm Earl and his inscrutable wife; resentful Eddie; sheltered sister Eleanor. And Cad: the handsome second son whose reputation is spotless in business—scandalous everywhere else.

Drawn by friendship, ensnared by lust, Dita uncovers a sordid tangle of murder, desire and madness. It will lay her bare as no portraitist has done before.

I’m currently adding the finishing touches to the third, and final, book in the Jago series, which is entitled Darkness Unchained.

I also have two ‘stand alone’ Shivers titles due for release over the coming months. Both are set in the 1930s. One is located in a Welsh valley and the other story takes place on an isolated Italian island. I’m really excited about them both because they feature stronger elements of horror alongside the romance in the stories. The contrast really does increase the shivery element. I love writing gothics and, as long as readers want them and Harlequin will have me, I’ll keep writing Shivers!

LegacyOfDarkness_HIRES

Legacy of Darkness is currently available as part of The Shivers Line Box set from HarlequinE, released in January and available until the end of March. From April it will be available as an individual book.

Amazon.com or Amazon.co.uk

Echoes

Purchase Links

http://www.amazon.com/Jane-Godman/e/B00BVK5GWK/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_pop_1

http://www.harlequin.com/storeitem.html?iid=50400

http://www.janegodmanauthor.com/
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Jane-Godman-Author/
Twitter @JaneGodman
https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/6923685.Jane_Godman

Thank you Jane, and Good luck with all the writing.