Showing posts with label angst. Show all posts
Showing posts with label angst. Show all posts

Friday, September 23, 2011

Author Visit with Eileen Dreyer


I am so excited about today's post!  I must be living right, because one of my favorite authors, Eileen Dreyer agreed to visit and answer some questions about her work and her new historical romance series, Drake's Rakes!  The third title in this series, Always a Temptress, will be available on October 1st!  Regular visitors on this blog know that I am absolutely in love with the first two books in the series, Barely A Lady and Never A Gentleman.  This series is the best thing I have read in the historical romance genre in years.  Ms. Dreyer is not afraid to write a big, meaty, complicated romance and if you haven't read her stuff, then stop now and go and do so.  I mean it.  You are truly missing out.  As you'll see from our conversation, Eileen Dreyer is open, funny, irreverent and truly knows her way around the romance genre.  I cannot say how much I appreciated her thoughtful and honest answers to my questions, she didn't shy away from the tough stuff either.  Enjoy!

vp:  You’ve written some great romantic suspense and paranormal titles, both as Eileen Dreyer, and as your alter ego, Kathleen Korbel.  Why the move into historical romance?

ED:  Both practical and selfish reasons. I hit a lull in the suspenses, and was told to stay away from them for a year or two. I really had nothing new to say in contemporary at that moment, and I’d been reading historicals as long as I’d read romance. I love the challenge of writing what is essentially a modern woman with the constraints of a historical setting. And I love history, the early 19th century being one of my favorite periods. The entire world was in upheaval, politically, militarily, socially, scientifically, monetarily…well, you get it. There is so much inherent conflict in the day-to-day life then, but you can also write a book that ignores most of it, if you want. Me? Can’t ignore it at all. It’s like ignoring the color blue on your artists’ palette.

vp:  When you began writing historicals, did the series come to you fully formed or did you make decisions about how to go on as you completed each title? 

ED:  The first three came to me almost fully formed. In fact, the series was originally called The Three Graces. I knew the women, each from completely separate backgrounds, bonded at the medical tents in Brussels during Waterloo. I knew they each had a personal story. But then I decided to add my very favorite fictional element—suspense—into the mix, and I knew I was working with something bigger.

Then the heroes showed up—and the nefarious spies—and the progression of the books was taken completely out of my hands. My Drake’s Rakes began to make appearances, and I fell in love with every one of them. (wait til you see Chuffy in Temptress. He has my absolutely favorite line when he faces off with Lady Kate’s obnoxious brother). I knew that whatever else I wrote, I needed to at least try and write all of their stories. And then I realized what Drake’s back story was, and I knew that it was the most interesting of all---and that it had to be last.

So I had some substance when I started, and have been building the rest off those bones as I’ve gone on. For instance, I suck at organization. But I have an overarcing suspense plot that has to do with the succession to the British throne, and I needed to place each book under that umbrella. I realized that most of these books overlap timewise(Kate’s book begins as Diccan goes flying out of the window towards the end of NEVER A GENTLEMAN, and my next book, ONCE A ROGUE, begins about 3/4ths through ALWAYS A TEMPTRESS. And yes, I’m driving my editor to distraction). But characters appear and form as I go along, so I’m still surprised. And now that I’ve done the basic plotting on the next six books, they are all finding their place. It’s a stone hoot.

vp:  How many titles can we expect from Drake’s Rakes? 

ED:  My greatest wish is that there will be 9  total. I just signed for books 4 & 5, Ian Ferguson and Alex Knight, so it will depend on sales whether or not I get to do more. And yes, I know there are 10 Rakes in all, but Chuffy shares a book. Oh, and wait until you see who he falls in love with(fortunately, that is book 5, TWICE TEMPTED).

vp:  In both Barely a Lady and Never a Gentleman, you have created some situations that take the characters, as well as the readers, through quite a bit of angst and turmoil. Considering that the current trend in historical romances seems to be skewed toward a very light, humorous approach, were you concerned about reader reaction to a more intense, slightly darker storyline?

ED:  The truth? I hoped it would shake things up a bit. Like most writers I know, I write the stories I want to read. And while I love good froth, I was dying for a story I could sink my teeth into: the older Connie Brockways, Jo Goodman, Jo Beverly, Julia London, Liz Carlyle.

I won’t lie. I was terrified. I sent the proposals around to lots of houses that just weren’t ready to dip their toe in the deep water again. God bless Amy Pierpont and the people at Grand Central Forever. I read Elizabeth Hoyt’s THE SERPENT PRINCE and knew that they were taking on more complex writers. I am honored that they have supported me so much.

Now, I have no idea how many of the books will be as intense as the first two. As my good friend and critique partner Karyn Witmer says, “Each book sings its own song.” But I do know that in my career, especially at Silhouette, no matter how light I tried to  be(I mean, I had a hero kidnapped by a trio named Huey, Duey and Louie), there were always, as Karyn calls them, ‘bass notes.’ So I doubt they’ll be missing, even in Chuffy’s story.

vp: Along the same line, did your publisher and/or editor have concerns?

ED:  I have to tell you, I expected lots of resistance. Especially to ‘that scene.’ Nope. Amy loved everything I’ve done. All she has ever done to my work is to push me to focus more, to write better, and make my stories stronger.

vp:  In Never a Gentleman, I was rolling along, loving the angst and I hit on a moment when I thought to myself, she will not go there, she wouldn’t go there…
And then, of course, you went there.  I loved it.  I thought that scene was essential in terms of Grace’s development as well as the growth of Grace and Diccan as a couple.  I felt like you allowed Grace to take control and gain power and respect in Diccan’s eyes. 

ED:  I’ve made a career of knocking down fences. When I started at Sihouette, I was forever asking things like, “Can I have a suicidal hero?” “Can I have a woman with a handicapped child?” And of course, back in the mid 80s, they laughed and patted my head. So I said, “When Sandra Canfield does it, then can I do it?” By my fourth book, they stopped saying no. Then they said ‘Pull out all the stops.’ I know my audience. I respect my audience, mostly because I AM that audience, and I want any author to respect me. But as that audience, I also love to be taken places I didn’t think I could go.

That group of scenes was in the concept for Grace’s book from the very beginning. I fell in love with Grace the moment she stepped on the page of BARELY A LADY. She has such intrinsic courage, wisdom, compassion and strength. And she doesn’t even realize it, because she grew up in an atmosphere that took those for granted, and demeaned her for the only thing she couldn’t control, her looks. I knew it would take something cataclysmic to break her out of the role she’d been molded into, that of caregiver. She had to see that her first duty was to herself.

vp: Did you struggle with the decision to include this scene? 

ED: Yes, actually, I did, because I wasn’t sure if my audience would go with me. And it has definitely caused controversy. A lot of people  felt she was weak for her decisions. That the book was torture porn. I actually went back and read the pertinent areas, just to make sure I hadn’t screwed up the language, because the very last thing I wanted to do was have a doormat for a heroine. But I truly believe that the decisions Grace made were the only ones she felt she could caught in the situation she was during the time she lived. She didn’t stay with Diccan because she would do anything just to be with him. She did it out of obedience to her own sense of duty, and she did it for others, like Kate. It was how she had always made her decisions. But her old instincts are beginning to crumble halfway through the book. The way I read it, she stood up to everything, and did her best to hold onto her own self-respect any way she could.

VP:  In retrospect, would you change it in any way?

ED:  I really have thought of that. And the answer is, no. Many of the people who object to Grace’s character arc, want her to act as a modern woman would. How could she, when she has never been raised or trained to be a modern woman? How can she toss aside a marriage when she committed to that marriage, not for love, but honor? How can she desert Diccan completely, when she has spent her life staying the course during far worse situations? I think it’s obvious that her father thought of her more as a convenience than a beloved daughter. Her mother deserted him, which obviously hurt him terribly. Would Grace? Would she do the same to Diccan, when she had lived with the effects all her life? Grace’s book is about her learning balance. About allowing herself to put her own needs and wants into the equation in equal measure to everyone else’s. I truly hope I’ve shown it.

vp: For many romance readers, infidelity of any sort is a deal breaker. (VP note, Although, I have to admit that I don’t completely understand this viewpoint and I would guess that many other readers don’t either since the list of books featuring cheating heroes is by far the longest I’ve ever seen on the Amazon romance forums) 
Were you aware of this component of the romance world?  Any concerns as to how this might impact the reception of your first two books?

ED:  Infidelity is not one of my favorite plots. I feel there has to be a damn good reason, and that the reason can be understood and forgiven by the spouse. I have to admit that I was surprised by the negative reaction to Jack’s mistress in BARELY A LADY. Jack was divorced when he took his mistress. She made him happy. It was Minette’s specialty, as evidenced by the number of men she knew. She was also his most recent relationship. It shouldn’t be a surprise at all, at least to me, that he would remember her first. Or think well of her, until he recovered his memory. As troubled as his relationship had been with Olivia, how could a woman who made him laugh, not be remembered with fondness? He also thought he had caused Minette’s death. And as he remembers her, he does beat himself up over the fact that he remembers her, when he thinks he’s still married to Olivia. But he has never technically been unfaithful to her.

As for Diccan, I was playing with the Lovelace quote: “I could not love thee, dear, so much, loved I not honor more.”  I know. Infidelity/honor. Doesn’t seem to compute. But if you believe you have a duty to your country, and you can prevent an imminent assassination of the greatest man in the country, what would or wouldn’t you do? Not only that, but he is told in not so many words, that until the plot is uncovered, his wife is in greater danger from his attention than from his disavowal. What do you do? What do you do?

I was also interested in its impact in a society where Grace truly can have no aspiration from her marriage past a comfortable arrangement. Neither she nor Diccan expect love from the marriage. The worst crime he really commits in their world is that he isn’t discreet.

It’s one of the reasons I’m fascinated by marriage of convenience books during historical times. The concept of marriage was completely different. Which means the couple has a higher obstacle to climb on the way to true love. And isn’t that what we read romance for? To see them overcome that very thing?
  
vp: Readers seemed amazed that you were able to make your make your male protagonists into romantic heroes that they could pull for, even as they did some pretty despicable things.  Can you think of any behavior from which a character cannot be redeemed?   Beyond the obvious, such as child abuse, is there anything that would be too much to come back from or do you think it would depend on the context of the behavior within the narrative?  

ED: Ooh, good question. My biggest red flag is rape and physical abuse. I’ve certainly spoken on it enough. And yes, I have read books that were written well enough that as a reader I can get past the behavior(but there has to be an immense amount of groveling involved). But I believe that rape is a complete antithesis of the message of romance. We empower women to believe they have an equal role in a relationship. That they deserve not just love, but respect and honor.  Rape is dehumanizing, demeaning, debasing. It is the objectification of a woman, and that is the last thing a romance hero would do. Even if a hero repents for the rest of the book, I can’t ever believe he will grow enough to never resort to that kind of behavior again.

I’ve heard that with alpha heroes, it’s okay. No. It is not. According to my paradigm of a romance hero, what makes us realize that he is a romance hero, even if he does despicable things, is that if no one else, he intrinsically understands the worth of the heroine and treats her better. He doesn’t rape her. He doesn’t hit her. He doesn’t justify his actions with demeaning language. “You don’t deserve any better. You’re nothing. You’re mine.”

I’ve dealt with a lot of abusive spouses while working the ER. And that kind of language is a bigger red flag than a black eye. It is entitlement language. “My wife. My house. My kids. My rights.” The spouse is no more than another possession he can use or abuse. And regret and remorse are only a stage on the abuse wheel. I can’t get past that in romance. Worse, I can’t tolerate when a heroine not only puts up with it but believes she deserves it. (please remember, this has nothing to do with erotica and consensual BDSM behavior. Erotica is a completely different genre, and the behavior is consensual play).

One of the interactions that sets me off faster than a Congreve rocket is when a historical hero has been verbally and/or physically abusive to the heroine, and she finally hauls off and smacks him. And he threatens physical revenge, or drags her across his knee right there. Really? The hero has all the power, all the strength, all the social advantage, leaving the heroine with no other way to defend her honor, and so he punishes her for trying to defend herself? Bollocks. I think that for no other reason, it’s why I so loved Loretta Chase’s Prince of Soundrels. Because the heroine, having been ruined and humiliated, takes the fight to his arena and just shoots his sorry ass. Brava!! 

 vp: Your books have generated some of the most passionate and interesting discussions that I have encountered from romance readers.  Is it exciting to find that you have stirred the hornet’s nest a bit? 

ED:  I have to admit that I’ve been surprised. I guess I’ve lived with the stories in my head for so long that they aren’t a surprise anymore. And the first reviews I got, from people like Eloisa James, were positive. So when the angry responses started coming in, it took me aback.

I’m thrilled with the discussion. I love it when people feel strongly enough to argue any point. I was raised on debate, and think it is the best way to exchange ideas. I am amazed that my books have generated so much passion, whichever way people read them. And yes, I do admit that I’d far rather people argue over my books than fall asleep over them. I truly hope that people take something away from each book.

vp: The Drake’s Rakes series obviously features a very strong mystery/suspense element, and it certainly provides a great backdrop for the creation of tension and turmoil.  Do you ever see yourself writing a historical title that does not feature those elements? 

ED:  Probably. But suspense is almost a crutch with me as I move into a new arena. I might not know how to write historicals, the period might be a task for me to fit into, but I know how to put a bullet through a window, and I know that will keep things moving along. Besides, it was such an interesting time in history, even after Waterloo, that it’s the easiest way for me to address it without it simply being drawing room conversation. In fact, Prinny’s daughter, Princess Charlotte, makes an appearance in Book 5 and most probably Book 4. After all, the entire suspense plot revolves around putting her on the thrown in lieu of her father and grandfather.

 vp: As I’ve said here on the blog, both of your titles put me in mind of the more complex historical romances that I’ve always loved.  I’ve mentioned you along with writers like Jo Goodman, Patricia Gaffney, Jo Beverley, and Candace Proctor.  Who are some of your favorite historical romance writers? 

ED:  You’ve named some. I’m still in awe of how Jo Goodman in her four direction series surprised me and kept surprising me. That’s hard to do to a veteran author. I have so many favorites, and like I said, several have been urged to write the lighter romances now. I love Julia London, Liz Carlyle. Karen Ranney, Eloisa James, Elizabeth Hoyt, Connie Brockway, Elizabeth Grayson, Ella March Chase….this gives you an idea.

vp: Any favorite titles that you’d like to pass along?

ED:  I just reread Jo Beverly’s Winterfire, and posted about how much I loved it all over again. LOVE me some alpha hero/alpha heroine(who really is alpha and not a poseur who crumbles before the hero’s manliness).

Connie Brockway’s ALL THROUGH THE NIGHT, DEAREST ENEMY, DANGEROUS MAN

Julia London:                   ROGUES OF REGENT STREET series.

Elizabeth Grayson: PAINTED BY THE SUN, MOONLIGHT ON WATER, COLOR OF THE WIND

Elizabeth Hoyt: THE PRINCES TRILOGY

Among so many others….


Eileen, I cannot thank you enough for taking the time to talk about these extraordinary books!  As if that wasn't enough, Eileen has graciously offered one lucky reader a personalized copy of Always a Temptress, along with a super cool set of Drake's Rakes Trading Cards!!!  All you have to do is leave a comment and you're entered!  When you're commenting, I'd love it if you'd share your favorite controversial read with us.  Nothing we love better than a little angst...


Contest Update:  Congratulations to Eris, you're the very lucky winner of a personalized copy of Always A Temptress!!!  Thanks to everyone for your comments and your excellent controversial titles selections.  You guys rock!

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Odi et amo...



Odi et amo. Quare id faciam, fortasse requiris?
Nescio, sed fieri sentio et excrucior.

I hate and I love. Why do I do this, perhaps you ask?
I know not, but I feel it happening and I am tortured.
--Catallus

The very short and poignant poem found above is by the Roman poet Catallus.  It sort of sums up the subject of this Tuesday's Top 5 which is angst. I'm not just talking run of the mill, oh I'm so upset cause you broke my heart, kind of angst.  I'm talking larger than life, earth-shattering, no one is right, no one is wrong, cannot move for the sobbing sort of angst. We romance readers tend to think of this as angst with a capitol A.  I like to call them Angst monsters.  

Finding romance novels that feature this level of angst used to be a pretty easy thing.  Romances tended toward big, overblown scenarios and epic lengths that really leant themselves to putting the featured couple through the proverbial wringer. These days it is way more difficult to find a truly angsty book. The genre has swung toward lighter, less intense novels and very few writers seem to want to let their protagonists be difficult or complex. Currently, I find that most of the angst in the romance world comes from paranormals. Since I am not a huge fan of that subgenre, I am bemoaning the loss of the truly angsty romance or at least one that doesn't involve a shapeshifter or a vamp. I'm looking for humans and all of their nasty habits and faults that, when combined with the right amount of chemistry, desire and passion, create really amazing stories. Stories where maybe there is no easy answer.  Stories where there may not be a right or wrong.   This sort of angst, when done well, provides a backdrop for more emotion and passion than most of us will ever see in our everyday life.  For that matter, we wouldn't want to truly experience these things.  But experiencing it through a well told story, with an interesting hero and heroine from the safety of your couch is one of the angst lovers truest pleasures.  So, be warned.  The list below features books that are not sweet.  They are, for the most part, dark.  They are dealing with gut-wrenching situations or emotions.  They are not for the faint of heart...


To Have and To Hold - Patricia Gaffney
One of my favorite books of all time! This story destroys many of the conventions that one usually finds in a romance novel. The heroine is a criminal, she is downtrodden to the point of almost being a shadow. The hero is a vain, cruel and superficial man. Their relationship is as disturbing and tortured as I have ever experienced. This book is very dark and very deep and many people hate it with a passion, however, if you crave angst, if you're looking for a complex and multilayered story about an almost impossible love, then go and find this book.  Gaffney is a master and this is her best!


The Lily Brand - Sandra Schwab
The premise of this book was unusual to say the least. A young girl's sadistic step mother makes her the gift of a man. A British soldier is pulled from a French prison and made the love slave to the beautiful and chaste young woman.  She is not strong enough to fight her stepmother, but is completely appalled.  The twist here is that the hero is the one who is enslaved and victimized. That a relationship could bloom between these two is unbelievable, but somehow Schwab makes it work. She carefully examines and exposes everyone's motivations.  And that includes those of the wicked and over the top villain. If you're looking for a romance that is truly different, then this might be for you.  


The Coming Home Place - Mary Spencer
This book had several strikes against it before I even opened it.  It is set in America, in the West and I hated the cover. Once I opened it, I found the over the top language very off-putting and the characters almost absurd, but I could not look away.  Spencer is a master of the Angsty romance. She is definitely more storyteller than writer though.  At times while reading this book, I found myself hating pretty much everyone in it but I kept reading. Look for a full review of this book in the near future because I really want to try and break it down and figure out why I read it and why I have since re-read it several times. It is a crazy manipulative, hyper-emotional, passion-filled mess of a book, but if you want Angst, it delivers in a big way!


Tangled - Mary Balogh
Ok, you guys know that I love me some Balogh. Let me say, up front, that this is not one of my favorites.  It is, however,  an Angst monster of the first order. Our heroine finds herself widowed and alone. She makes a decision to marry an old friend who, by the way, she sort of blames for hubby's death. She is bitter and resentful until new hubby begins to make her feel all sorts of good things. Just as she finally comes to accept her feelings for new hubby, guess what happens?  I am pretty darned sure that only Mary Balogh could have written this book.  


Sarah's Child - Linda Howard
I'm going to mix things up a bit and throw in a contemporary angst monster, Howard's very early work, Sarah's Child.  This book evokes the strongest of emotions from readers, but most seem to dislike it intensely. I am fairly new to Linda Howard and this was the first book of hers that I read and I found it pretty darned amazing. The premise is simple, heroine is in love with her dead friend's hubby, who she has worshipped from afar forever.  Hero finally notices heroine and their chemistry is strong, but he is still living with a world of pain resulting from the death of his family. Hero offers marriage of convenience and though they will have sex, they will not have children. Anybody who has ever read a romance can guess what happens.  The beauty of this book is in the way that Howard builds her heroine.  At first glance, Sarah is seen as weak and obsessed, but you finally begin to understand that she loves Rome.  Really loves him. Not just when it is easy and convenient and fun.  But even when she hates what he is doing, she loves him.  There was a real subtle complexity to this book that I haven't seen in any other Howard romance.  I enjoy her work, but she seems to have abandoned this sort of story and I think that is a shame.  This is another one that we may look at more closely.  I think it deserves a closer more thorough look.  

Is there an Angst monster that you love?  That you love to hate?  Either way, I'd love to hear about it...

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Things that go bump in the night...


Halloween is probably my favorite holiday! I love the fact that we celebrate scary stuff and you get candy. What more can one ask of a holiday? To honor the day, I'm going to give you with my scariest suggestions to help you get in the mood. Just a note, today we're going to expand the formats, I'll give you a film and an album as well as a book title. I want this to be a Halloween that provides thrills and chills, whether you choose to read, view or listen...

Naomi's Room by the amazing British writer, Jonathan Aycliffe remains one of the scariest books I have ever read. This book has achieved something of a cult status, and deservedly so. Do not plan to read through the night if you are alone in the house, especially if you have an attic.  IJS. Terrifying stuff and well worth hunting down, cause it is out of print.

Amazing ghost story from writer/director Conor McPherson, starring the equally excellent (and incredibly hot) Ciaran Hinds. No one does ghost stories better than McPherson and this is a doozy.

Even though I am a fan of classic country music (from the 50s through the 80s), I was never big on country crooner Wagoner, except for this classic of dark, violent and depraved love. This is an amazing concept album where every song works to support the idea that life and love is a sad and violent, although passionate, undertaking! With lyrics like "lord, you should have seen their frantic faces, they screamed and cried please put away that knife..." and "I dug and dug for hours and then I planted flowers on the first Mrs. Jones..." this is light years away from the insipid dreck that passes for country music today.  Chilling!

If you enjoy a good fright and a visit with the darker side on occasion then I highly recommend these three titles.  Here's wishing everyone a spectacular Halloween and if you want to leave some scary suggestions yourself, I'd love to have them.

The Eclipse
Naomi's Room
Cold Hard Facts Of Life/Soul Of A Convict

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Gothic Love

I'm back and having survived my recent brush with death (or at least a very bad cold), I thought I'd introduce a new feature for the blog.  I'm calling it Top 5 Tuesday! Basically, every Tuesday I'll put together my top 5 list of something or other. Could be books, authors, genres, etc. I hope that some of you may feel inspired to leave your own top fives in the comments, I'd love to get some new titles or authors to read out of this. For our premiere top 5 Tuesday, I'd wanted to offer my Top 5 Gothic Romances. I adore gothic romance!  I don't give a fig how cliched or insipid they may seem to others, curling up with a gothic and a nice cup of tea on a cold, rainy day is one of life's greatest pleasures.

Top 5 Gothic Romance Titles:

Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte
"Reader, I married him."



Mistress of Mellyn - Victoria Holt
"There are two courses open to a gentlewoman when she finds herself in penurious circumstances.......One is to marry, and the other to find a post in keeping with her gentility." 



Rebecca - Daphne Du Maurier
"Last night I dreamt I went to Manderlay again."


His Dark Kiss - Eve Silver
"To travel on a day such as this was a task only for the addled or the desperate."



Lily - Patricia Gaffney
"What if I were a governess?  She was shouting now.  You'd never marry me then, would you?  Because even if you loved me, I'd be too much like your dead wife, your beloved Maura, the woman who made you this way!  But I'm not like her Dev, I'm me, I'm Lily..."




Monday, September 13, 2010

Lovely, dark and deep...


OK, so you guys know I love angst in my romance, right?  How in the world have I not read an Anne Stuart book before this?  I have always heard about her love for dark and twisted, bordering on outright cruel heroes.  Her books are reportedly some of the angstiest out there, and yet I've not picked one up.  I changed that recently when I read all three of the books in her new House of Rohan trilogy in one week.  The verdict?  I enjoyed them.  I  sort of inhaled them actually.

Stuart definitely skews darker than most of the sugar sweet stuff I've been reading lately and I truly reveled in the slightly malevolent tone of her work. The new series follows various individuals in the Rohan family from Georgian times.  The men in the family are all associated with the Heavenly Hosts, a secret society that supports the pursuit of sin and pleasure above all else. The premise is a little bit hokey, but these societies did exist and since Stuart's characters don't take the groups all that seriously, the reader is allowed the same point of view.  The main thing their membership in the society does, is to allow Stuart to show how heartless and unfeeling her males are.  Sex is just entertainment and love is non-existent in their world, until of course they meet their heroines and fall madly in love.  Of the three, the third book, Breathless seemed the darkest to me.  The hero in Breathless is truly seeking revenge and seems to have little compunction about destroying the heroine, if need be.  The cool thing about Stuart is that she provides her dark heroes with a pretty good reason for being dark. The plot provides a rational justification for them to be jaded and cynical and she allows you to witness their progression and growth, as they begin to change.  Her writing is tight, witty and crisp.  Her characters are beautifully drawn and I loved how intelligent they all were.  No TSTL heroines here. These women are smart, strong and willing to get down and dirty when the situation calls for it.  

The first two books in the trilogy are available and the third is due out in October, so you can read them in order and close together and I think that adds to the enjoyment of the series.  As I understand it, Stuart has not written many historicals in the last few years, preferring to work on contemporary romances.  I hope this new trilogy is a signal that she is turning her talented hand back to historical romances.  Goodness knows we angst lovers need something to counter all that sweetness and light.