Showing posts with label author interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label author interview. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Blog Tour: Interview and Giveaway of Miss Molly Robbins Designs a Seduction by Jayne Fresina


Today I have the honour of hosting the lovely Jayne Fresina on my blog for an interview! I really enjoyed her new release Miss Molly Robbins Designs a Seduction and will have a review up soon!

1. Tell us 3 things not a lot of people know about you:
I am a lapsed vegetarian. I am addicted to Sudoku puzzles for relaxation. I love the smell of rubber bands, gas stations and old ashtrays!

2. Have you ever designed anything yourself like Molly does?
I love designing and sketching, but I am hopeless at sewing. Sewing machines actually terrify me! I so admire anyone who can sew their own clothes and wish I could do that. My sisters are all handy with a needle, so I'm the odd one out.

3. Do you have any pets? And if so, what are their names and did any of them ever chew on your shoes?
Yes, I have dogs and they have never chewed on my shoes, but a dog I once had chewed up a pair of my friends shoes when she came over one evening. We didn't even realize until she was looking for them to leave! I had to give her a pair of my shoes to wear home. My dogs have chewed other things of mine though! Including a coffee table. I've also had hamsters (several - all called Bean)and a lop-eared rabbit called Molly!

4. What do you do for fun aside from writing?
I love to go out for dinner and martinis with friends. And if the weather is good I like to go running. Apart from that there isn't much I do beyond writing. Between that and my "real" job, it takes up a lot of the day. Even when I'm not writing, I'm researching and taking notes. That's often fun too.

5. Describe your favorite dress:
It's a calf-length, floaty, very feminine, lilac and white halter dress I bought on Bluefly a few years ago. It's by the designer Diane Von Furstenburg. I would say it's my favorite really because it's much fancier than anything else I have - that said, however, I've only had the chance to wear it once so far. I do look at it in the closet though and run my hands over it every so often!

6. What was growing up with 3 sisters like?
Very noisy. Extremely educational. Sometimes frustrating. Always a comedy/drama. Never a dull moment.

7. Tell us about the last book you loved:
Emily Greenwood's "Gentlemen Prefer Mischief". I rarely have the chance to sit and read a book lately, but I took a break over the holidays to catch up on some reading. I thought it was a lovely romance with wonderful fully-drawn characters that just had me hoping for them all the way through.

8. What did you want to be growing up? Did you always know you wanted to be a writer?
I wanted to be many things including a lawyer, a waitress, an assassin, or an actress. Actually I wanted to be Sophia Loren though, not just any actress. LOL!

9. Tell us about one of your pet peeves:
Dirty dishes left in the kitchen sink. (That was hard to pick just one!)

10. What is your favorite genre in books?
Historical romance!


MISS MOLLY ROBBINS DESIGNS A SEDUCTION BY JAYNE FRESINA – IN STORES FEBRUARY 2014

She Designs Dresses for London's Leading Ladies…
Molly Robbins is finally stepping into the spotlight. Her unique dress designs have caught the eye of London's elite. And if it means her own dress shop, proper Molly will make a deal with the devil himself—the notoriously naughty Earl of Everscham. But becoming his mistress is not a part of their arrangement. It's right there in the contract's fine print: No Tomfoolery.

He's an Expert at Taking Them Off…
Carver Danforthe has a reputation for beautiful mistresses, cutting remarks, and shirking his responsibilities—not for indulging the ambitions of his sister's maid. He must have been drunk when he signed that blasted contract. The stubborn female may thing she's gotten the best of him, but what this situation calls for is a little hands-on negotiating...

All's Fair in Love and Fashion…

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Historical romance author Jayne Fresina sprouted up in England. Entertained by her father’s colorful tales of growing up in the countryside, and surrounded by opinionated sisters, she’s always had inspiration for her beleaguered heroes and unstoppable heroines. Miss Molly Robbins Designs a Seduction is the fourth book in her Sydney Dovedale series. She lives in upstate New York where she is working on a brand new regency romance series, the Book Club Belles Society. Visit www.jaynefresina.com for more information.

To Purchase Miss Molly Robbins Designs a Seduction:
Amazon
Barnes & Noble
Books-a-Million
iBookstore
IndieBound
Sourcebooks
Discover a New Love


But wait! There's more! The publisher is being all kinds of wonderful and is offering the following up for grabs for one lucky winner:
-The 4 book set of the Sydney Dovedale series

·The Most Improper Miss Sophie Valentine
·The Wicked Wedding of Miss Ellie Vyne
·Lady Mercy Danforthe Flirts with Scandal
·Miss Molly Robbins Designs a Seduction

-A box of tea and mug

-And a tin of English Butter Fudge from Jayne

US/Canada residents only!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Friday, October 11, 2013

Blog Tour! Interview with Juliet Grey, Author of Confessions of Marie Antoinette


Today I have the honor of hosting Juliet Grey, the author of Confessions of Marie Antoinette!

1. Tell us 5 (random) things about yourself that many people might not know about you:

(1) Juliet Grey is not my real name; (2) I feel more at home in older, more picturesque, cities and buildings; (3) that said, I am a native of NYC and it’s my favorite place in the world. (4) I love to sing Broadway show tunes; (5) I also write nonfiction books about the loves and lives of European royalty under the name Leslie Carroll.

2. Have you always wanted to be a writer? Did you ever dream of doing something else?

I enjoyed writing when I was a girl and my maternal grandfather and my father’s sister were writers, so the gene is on both sides of my family,. But I hadn’t considered it as a profession when I was young. I always wanted to be an actress, so that’s what I became; and I am still a professional actress, trained in the classics. One of my favorite jobs is to marry my two professions by narrating audio books.

3. What drew you to Marie Antoinette? What made you decide to tell her story?

In the course of researching the royal marriage of Marie Antoinette and Louis XVI for a chapter in my nonfiction book Notorious Royal Marriages, written under my real name, Leslie Carroll, I discovered how maligned the pair of them have been and that a lot of what I had originally thought about them was wrong, or skewed by the propaganda that found its way into the history books, repeated over the past two centuries as fact. Marie Antoinette in particular remains condemned as one of history’s most frivolous villainesses, tone-deaf to the plight of her subjects; and for the most part that wasn’t true at all. I felt that her story had to be told; and the best way to do it was in the form of a novel (or three—because the events of her life are too complex to shoehorn into just one novel: one book would barely skim them, covering only “the greatest hits.” So much would have had to be omitted and there would have been scant page time for character development, which was imperative, because Marie Antoinette’s journey was so spectacular. Many of the events of her life were so colorful and incredible that they seem invented by a novelist, which is one reason her story makes such an interesting novel. I have written scenes that sound incredible—but they are totally grounded in fact and based entirely on the historical record! Fiction also gave me the freedom to use my imagination to fill in the gaps where the historical record closes the door, and to bring emotion to the story, allowing readers to connect to it in a more meaningful way.

4. I'm fascinated by the things Marie Antoinette created for her hair with whole forest scenes and such! If you'd been a courtier at the time, what kind of elaborate hairdress would you have picked?

It would depend on my mood. Many of the “poufs” were political statements, and I can be very outspoken in that respect. I might have done something clever pertaining to women’s rights or healthcare! Or else I might celebrate a changing season; with autumn upon us, I could see a whole creation with a riot of color in changing leaves, and some of them might be hammered bronze and gold, which would complement my red hair. However, I would probably want to change the style every week. I would see another woman’s hairstyle and it would spark an idea I’d want to emulate.

5. If someone gave you control of a time-travelling machine and you could go back to any period in time, which one would you choose and why?

I would choose an era in which women’s wit was prized and their independence was not looked upon askance: the English estoration, or the Enlightenment, or pre-Revolutionary France in the mid-18th. century. I would have to live in an era when education and the free expression of ideas was encouraged, rather than an age of repression and religious intolerance. I am also drawn to the fashions of the 1660s and 1750s-1770s.

6. Which of the three books in this trilogy was the hardest for you to write?

The final one. I had spent years learning everything I could about these historical figures and their life and times. I came to love and understand Marie Antoinette and Louis and care about them deeply. It was very hard to let go, especially as things of course ended so tragically and violently. And the brutality of the Revolution was so undeserved. But I had to tell the story the way things really happened because I’m not sure readers realize how bad things were for the royal family and how much Marie Antoinette was a victim of propaganda (for example, those who still credit her with the tone-deaf remark “Let them eat cake,”—and that includes professional journalists and political pundits!—is horrifying bordering on embarrassing in this day and age when a little fact-checking goes a long way). People tend to romanticize the French Revolution.

7. What do you do for fun when you're not writing?

Fun? Not writing? I’m almost always writing because I write in more than one genre and always have a project going on. And I find writing tremendously fun. I love what I do. And I love the research it entails as well. But since I don’t think that’s what you’re angling to know, I’m also an actress and I love the theatre, whether it’s performing or attending theatre, ballet, museums. I am inspired by art, by looking at the water, by traveling. And I cherish every moment I get to spend with my husband.

8. Tell us about the last book you loved:

I’m actually still in the middle of reading it, but I keep having to put it down as work-related projects with tight deadlines keep coming up: I rarely have time for pleasure reads. But I am drawn to novels with a strong author’s voice (like those of Hilary Mantel and Sarah Dunant) and recently discovered those of David Blixt. I am reading Her Majesty’s Will, a wonderful Elizabethan romp full of espionage, swordplay, and wit, starring William Shakespeare and Christopher Marlowe. Because I am also a trained Shakespearean actress I get all of Blixt’s inside jokes (it’s just an added bonus in the novel if you know your Shakespeare) and find myself laughing out loud.

9. What/who is your all-time favourite book/author?

Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen is the perfect novel

10. Tell us in one sentence why people should read Confessions of Marie Antoinette:

Because you’ll be surprised at the empathy you’ll feel for one of history’s most maligned women; and even though you already know the ending, you won’t be able to put it down.

Thanks so much for answering all my questions and we share a love for Pride and Prejudice! :)