Showing posts with label pamela sherwood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pamela sherwood. Show all posts

Monday, 7 October 2013

Author Interview and Giveaway: Pamela Sherwood

Today I have Pamela Sherwood on my blog and there is also a giveaway of her latest book.

Welcome!

1. Tell me about yourself...
I am a third-generation Chinese American and an ardent Anglophile. As a child, I was a voracious reader (and  still am!), which led, naturally enough, into making up my own stories and entertaining myself with them  when I was bored--like on long car trips or the daily walk to and from school.  Eventually, I began committing some of those stories to paper, leading to the discovery that I wanted to be a writer. It took me a number of years to make the transition into writing full-time, but I’m glad that I did!

2. Why is A Song at Twilight the perfect historical romance book for the Fall?
Romance novels often have a seasonal "mood," I've found. Light, frothy books tend to be perfect for spring and summer--my previous novel, Waltz with a Stranger, contained some angst, but otherwise was very "summery" in mood and feeling. Books with somber or more serious tones and subjects seem appropriate for fall and winter, maybe because those tend to be seasons of reflection and thought for many of us. I also feel that an older, more introspective couple revisiting their relationship are  likewise apposite for the fall. A Song at Twilight concerns two lovers whose early romance was blighted by shocking secrets from Robin's--the hero's--past. They meet again four years after their heart-wrenching break, as older, sadder, wiser people. But they're also stronger and more resilient--especially the heroine, Sophie, who's had to grow up a lot in the intervening years. When Robin sets eyes on her again, she's become a successful professional singer, a rising star of the opera and concert stage. She's acquired poise, confidence, and self-assurance--despite never having fallen out of love with Robin. He, in turn, has learned patience, endurance, and self-sacrifice. But when fate hands Robin and Sophie a second chance at love, they're determined to take it--and to fight for the happy ending they were denied the first time around.  

3. How did you decide to go for a Victorian romance?
I love the Regency, but it’s an eyeblink compared to the 64 years that comprise the Victorian period. So many exciting things happened in that era--huge changes in technology, science, art, society, and politics. Inventions like the telephone, electric lighting, and railroads all brought us closer to the world we know today. The role of women changed dramatically: by the end of the 19th century, women could travel, seek employment outside the home, and study at universities.  Laws were changed so they could retain their property after marriage, and, in some cases, custody of their children if their marriage broke down. True equality between the sexes was far off--some would argue that it still is--but an important start had been made. And since I have always preferred historical romances in which the hero and heroine were on a more equal footing, I found myself gravitating towards the late Victorian and Edwardian eras rather than the Georgian and Regency periods.

4.  For something fun:  If you could choose, which era would you time-travel too? :)
The Roaring '20s! Such an exciting time, with exhilarating new freedoms for women to explore. They had the vote in both the US and the UK, they could receive degrees at Oxford and Cambridge, they could party, drink, and let their hair (after bobbing it), with the same abandon as men. And I've always wanted to learn the Charleston … I'd be sure to check out of the '20s before the stock market crash, however!

5. What's coming next from you?
Right now, I'm working on several projects, including a novella featuring Thomas Sheridan and Amy Newbold, the secondary couple from my first book, Waltz with a Stranger. They travel to Newport, Rhode Island for the summer season, where they find romance--and danger. And I'm plotting a novel about Sophie's brother Sir Harry Tresilian, who falls in love with the beautiful but mysterious tenant of his family's summer cottage. And there's an all-new project in the works as well--about a  somewhat dysfunctional ducal family who get together (explosively) for Christmas.

Thank you for hosting me today on Book Girl of Mur-y-Castell!

And now on to the 
GIVEAWAY
1 copy of A song at Twilight

1. Open to US and Canada
2. Ends Oct 13
3. Just enter :)


Tuesday, 4 December 2012

Interview and Giveaway: Pamela Sherwood and Waltz with a stranger


Today I interview Pamela Sherwood and giving away her new book.

First of all, hello and thank you for hosting me today!

1. Tell me 3 fun facts about yourself…
I love to cook. I am a traditional music enthusiast--if it's got bagpipes, bodhrans, and hammered dulcimers, I want to hear it! And I follow--or used to follow--the sport of figure skating obsessively.

2. Could you tell me about your new book Waltz with a stranger?
Set in late Victorian England, Waltz with a Stranger tells the story of twin American heiresses--one beautiful and confident, the other lame and scarred from a riding accident. Amy, the beauty, intends to make a brilliant marriage to an English aristocrat, but it's crippled Aurelia who shares a secret waltz with a dashing stranger that changes her life forever.

3. Could you tell me why everyone will fall in love with James?
There's a quotation attributed to Malcolm S. Forbes, "You can easily judge the character of a man by how he treats those who can do nothing for him." And that accurately describes how James treats Aurelia when he first meets her, hiding in the conservatory at a ball. He has no designs on her or her fortune, he's not seeking advancement of any kind. He sees that she's unhappy and that she feels worthless and undesirable because of her scars. So he asks her to dance--a sudden chivalrous impulse that turns out to have huge repercussions for them both.  I think this kindness, along with his sense of honor, is James's most endearing trait. He's also very straightforward and honest in his dealings: what you see is what you get, with him. He's a gentleman, in the best sense of the word.

4. Aurelia is not like other young ladies of the ton, what was your inspiration?
I was slightly inspired by Consuelo Vanderbilt, the American heiress who married the Duke of Marlborough. Although Consuelo was wealthy and beautiful, she was also gentle and a bit shy, possibly because she had a terrifyingly domineering mother who was determined that she make a brilliant marriage to a titled Englishman or European. Aurelia doesn't have a domineering mother, but she does have visible scars and a limp from a riding accident three years before the story begins. Her first love jilted her afterwards, which has convinced her that no man could ever want her. 

Another inspiration was "The Sisters," an early Tennyson poem about a man who inadvertently falls in love with identical twins. A triangle ensues, which ends tragically when the quieter, more thoughtful twin renounces the man she loves in her sister's favor, and later dies of a broken heart after their wedding. Aurelia is partly based on that twin, but her story ends much more happily!

5. Was it hard to write about these two as they really should not fall in love?
The triangle between James, Aurelia, and Amy lies at the center of the novel, and triangles are always a challenge to write. My goal was to make all three parties sympathetic and fully realized--I hoped that readers would understand the characters' motivations, even if they disagreed with their choices.

As the man in the middle, James has the hardest job because he spends a fair amount of time engaged to "the wrong twin." My defense of him is that he has genuine feelings for both women. He sees Amy first, and is charmed by her beauty and vivacity. By contrast, Aurelia arouses his tender, protective instincts at their initial meeting. So while he is drawn to her, he is not thinking of her in a romantic light at that time. Things get even more complicated when he inherits an earldom. Because he also inherits a mountain of debts, he is convinced by a friend to consider marrying an heiress. Outgoing, confident Amy, to whom James is already attracted, seems like the ideal choice for his future countess--more so than her twin, whom he remembers as fragile and shy. He's knocked off his feet when Aurelia returns from an extended stay at a German spa, so much stronger and more vibrant than the wounded girl he danced with a year before.  Inevitably, his feelings for her take a romantic turn, but he's pledged himself to Amy, whom he does care for and who has entered into their arrangement in good faith. So James is caught between his sense of honor and his heart, not knowing which course to take.

By contrast, Aurelia has an easier task. Her feelings are clear-cut from the start: she falls for James the moment he asks her to dance, and she resolves to get better, partly because she hopes to meet him again on a more equal footing. She's also the underdog--dealing with permanent injuries and disfigurement, trying to defeat her demons and become a stronger person, loving her twin dearly but also envying her for being betrothed to James. I think many readers will be able to identify with her.

And then there's Amy, who is an obstacle to James and Aurelia's happiness but not a villainess by any means. No evil twins, I promise! She's beautiful, ambitious, a touch more cynical than her twin, but she has a good heart and a strong sense of family loyalty. She's not in love with James, but she likes and respects him, and she has every intention of being a good wife and countess to him. And she has her own secret hopes, dreams, and insecurities lurking below the surface of her confidence and charm.

6. What is coming next from you?
A Song at Twilight, a loose sequel to Waltz with a Stranger. The heroine, Sophie, is a professional singer, a rising star in the Victorian music world, and the hero, Robin, is the man she's never been able to forget, in spite of the secrets that tore them apart. Sophie and Robin are introduced in Waltz with a Stranger, where they play supporting roles.

Thanks!

Giveaway
1 copy of Waltz with a stranger

1. US and Canada only
2. Ends Dec 13
3. Just enter

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I am young Finnish woman lost in a world of books.

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I review from most genres on this blog, and those genres are: fantasy,chick-lit, paranormal romance, urban fantasy, YA, historical/+romance, contemporary romance and literary fiction. + some other genres read by my guest reviewers.

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