This is probably a good time to tell you about
my new book Reluctance, released on 6th April. It
is my first release for MuseItUp, and I'm really proud of this book. Writing it was a
good experience, not least because I got to describe the countryside around my
home!
not far from me, where George Bowes
made immense wealth from the coal trade. We often walk by his house and the
orangery, which are roofless shells now, but the stables and the Palladian
chapel are probably just as they were in his day. He had no sons to follow him,
so his daughter inherited everything and was reputed to be the richest heiress
in the country. She made a most unfortunate marriage which scandalised society
at the time. So much is true.
I thought I could use the basic
thread, and the setting, and make a very good story out of it. The reasons
people married then, as now, are many and varied, and I wanted to explore why a
woman might give up her wealth, independence and property to a scoundrel.
My heroine, Frances, was the
character who initially formed in my mind. Well educated, and with an aversion
to marital duties after her first marriage, she had absolutely no incentive to
marry again. Yet she would do so. What was it that changed her mind? That’s the
question that intrigued me.
I think the best thing about the
hero/heroine is that they are first and foremost friends. From that, comes
everything else. He, for different reasons, is also against marriage, but to
say more would give away the plot. There's a villain, and he is very keen on
marriage - but for all the wrong reasons! 1803 is an important year in my
heroine's life and nothing will be the same once it is over.
I’ve always lived within forty miles
of where I am now in the Tyne Valley, Northumberland. The only continent I
haven’t visited is South America – and I’ve no plans to do so! With a degree in
English/History and recently retired from library management, I write almost
every day – usually historical adventures. I’m currently writing about a male
protagonist in sixteenth century France, and have at last got him back to Scotland where both he and I feel more at home.
I send the odd missive to Facebook
and Twitter (@speckledbirds) and that’s about it.
Read Reluctance and let me know what you think of
Frances and Jack. Here are the links:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Reluctance-ebook/dp/B007ROL46Q
Happy reading!
Jen Black
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