Showing posts with label Kensington. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kensington. Show all posts

Monday, July 30, 2018

The Allure of the Contemporary Novel


By: Marcia King-Gamble
www.lovemarcia.com


I grew up reading  mostly historicals and loved them. Most were set in the UK and featured dukes, duchesses, and nobility on the whole, usually in exotic settings. Meaning - castles, ballrooms, highlands. These characters were people who hobnobbed with the "Ton," Through reading, I entered a world I didn't know existed and learned some fancy words.

For someone  like me, born on a tiny Caribbean island,  theses books were 'Calgon Take me Away' moments, or "Lounge in the tub with Aromatherapy" moments. Makes you wonder how in the world  I made the shift to contemporary romance reading and writing.



Well, I also read Mills and Boon, Harlequin, and Silhouette romances, and this was way before sex came into play in any of these books. Hero and heroine usually exchanged a few dry mouthed kisses and the readers imagination went wild.  These stories dealt with fantasy and strayed far from reality. Overall,  they were feel good books with satisfying endings. We all drooled over the brooding hero, and applauded the besotted heroine, often poorer than the proverbial church mouse. Falling in love with the rich, powerful hero was her way out. He was her savior, and despite all odds, they got together because love conquered all.



I was a true believer. I wanted that great love. I wanted someone who would make my limbs quiver and my mouth go dry, and so apparently did the rest of the world which is why romances are still around, albeit in a different form.

Over the years,  reality crept more and more into these stories, and flawed characters emerged. Today we have heroines that suffered from bulimia and incarcerated heroes given a second chance to redeem themselves. We have powerful white collar women falling for blue collar men making far less then them.  We read about people like you and me. People we can relate to in everyday settings. Most aren't even rich.



What remains constant are the happy endings and  readers wanting to be swept away. They want to believe in forever love.  Despite what the divorce statistics  are telling them, they want relatable characters placed in impossible situations who fell in love. They want to root for these characters when adversity hits. They want to believe their prince and princess will come along. Wasn't that evidenced by the number of people up at an ungodly hour this spring  as the Duke of Sussex married a commoner; and  a woman of color at that. Talk about reality hitting home, and mirroring the real world. It was and is a contemporary dream.

So when did my contemporary  bug bite?  The seed was planted years ago when I had the good fortune to be hired as a freelance reader for Harlequin/Silhouette. What that means is you get sent submissions from the slush pile; meaning unsolicited manuscripts to evaluate. Thousands of these manuscripts come in from unpublished authors hoping to realize their dream. In order to keep up with the volume, the publisher  is forced to hire laypeople like me. After you were done reading, you returned your two page questionnaire with an overall summary of the book, and that was the last you heard, until the next batch of manuscripts arrived.

I read diligently for seven years, and evaluated thousands of submissions, then one day the light bulb came on.  I could do this. Contemporary was what I enjoyed. Fortunately,  a brand new  line was opening up with characters who looked like me. People of color had been for years spending a small fortune on books, and someone realized the untapped revenue stream. Presto, Kensington's Arabesque Line was launched.

One rejection later I was published.



My first book,  Remembrance, later renamed,  Truly Mine is still a reader favorite. To my mind it has flaws, but it was an endeavor written from the heart, and there was that happily ever after as the woman finally got her guy.  The storyline was that of a college reunion set on a cruise ship. There the heroine bumps into the man who has always had her heart.  The sequel, A Reason to love,  later retitled, Mine Forever, followed.



Twenty years, and forty plus books later, I am still writing about love in the contemporary world. All my books still have  happy or at least promising endings. And somewhere along the way I got pigeon-holed as a writer of multi-cultural books; a euphemism for stories written about people of color for people of color. Nothing is further from the truth.  I write for readers of every color and I've written about characters that look like me, and some that don't, but isn't that the real world?  A good story is a good story. Now to convince the publishers to market these books like others, and  not in the "African American Interest" section of the stores.



Still, isn't it nice to know that in a world of depressing media stories, one can still pick up a contemporary novel and escape to a world  where true love is still possible, and happily after endings abound.



About Marcia King-Gamble
Romance writer, Marcia King-Gamble originally hails from a sunny Caribbean island where the sky and ocean are the same mesmerizing shade of blue. This former travel industry executive and current world traveler has spent most of life in the United States. A National Bestselling author, Marcia has penned over 34 books and 8 novellas. Her free time is spent at the gym, traveling to exotic locales, and caring for her animal family.
Visit Marcia at www.lovemarcia.com or “friend” her on Facebook: http://bit.ly/1MlnrIS

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Let Me Enjoy Spring


Dear Readers

August was a very busy month for me and unfortunately my writing took a back seat. I’m now going to be delivering my final book in my Wicked Wagers trilogy, To Challenge the Earl of Cravenswood, a month late. It will be released end of September, instead of the end of August. How did I let the month get away from me?

I didn’t factor in how much travelling I’d be doing during late July and August. I flew to the USA for a few weeks and then had the Romance Writers of New Zealand conference in Auckland. I had three conferences within four weeks – and I was presenting at one! It was tiring but so much fun. I got to meet wonderful people and I learned a lot.

So, here I sit, just as the New Zealand spring is starting, glued to my computer, writing frantically. We’ve had warm mid-winter months of July and August, unusually warmer temperatures, but punctuated with loads of rain. The grass is still soaking and the kids’ sports have been cancelled most of the month because the grounds are too sodden. At least that’s my excuse for not mowing the lawns.
 
I’m also on Jury duty this week which again has eaten into my time. I feel a moral obligation to do my jury service. I’d like to think that if I ever were facing a court that people from all walks of life were my jury pool. 

I have to report each morning to the District Court and we go through a ballot process to see who sits on a jury. I got selected for a jury yesterday, and it was a two – three week trial. There goes my writing! However, luckily for me, a very good friend was one of the lawyers so I was excused! It did give me some ideas for a story though so it wasn’t a complete waste of time.

I hope to have the book completed by the end of September and then I’m going to take a week to enjoy spring. I’m building a house in the sunny Hawke’s Bay (a wine growing region) and I want to go up and spend some time picking curtains and furnishing etc. I’m hoping the spring weather remains warm and sunny while I’m up there.

Then for the rest of the year I’m finishing, Invitation to Passion, book three in my Invitation to Romance series. I’m hoping to get it finished by Christmas so I can enjoy the summer months of January and February in my new home.

BTW, I’ve some good news to share. To Dare the Duke of Dangerfield, book one in my Wicked Wagers trilogy, is now a FINALIST in the 2012 Kindle Book Review Indie Romance Book of the Year. It would be great if you could spread the news!

Let the Wicked Wagers Begin...
Lady Caitlin Southall’s temper has finally got the better of her. She’s challenged Harlow Telford, the Duke of Dangerfield, the most notorious rake in all of England, to a wager. She wants her house back. The one her destitute father lost to Dangerfield in a card game. But if she doesn’t win their bet, she not only loses her home, she loses her dignity and pride and damn it all, maybe her heart... For the handsome Duke has decreed, when he wins, she must spend the night in his bed.

Harlow Telford is amused by his hellion neighbor, Caitlin, or Cate to her friends, who seem to encompass everyone on earth except him. When she bursts into one of his private gatherings, he mistakes her for the entertainment. Her slap across his face sets him straight and raises the absurd desire to seduce the unconventional beauty into his bed. When she issues her daft challenge to win back her father’s pile of rubble, the terms are set. And he’ll do anything to win—except fall in love...


Click here to buy Amazon or B&N or Smashwords

What plans are you making for the next few months? Northern hemisphere readers will be heading toward winter. Is it hard to be perky about the change in season when it’s autumn, or are you a winter fan? I suspect the regions that have very hot, muggy weather are looking forward to cooler days.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

I've an INVITATION...to Scandal


I live in two worlds. The real world where I spend my physical days and nights, and then the Regency world that swims in my head and makes me have to type my stories. 

I love both worlds. I often find story ideas by comparing the day I’ve had and thinking about what my day would have been like in Regency times.

For instance, I’ve been away at a conference for several days and I’ve come home to a pretty messy house and loads of washing. So I’ve spent the morning doing the washing, vacuuming and dusting, and cleaning bathrooms. It only took me a couple of hours.

But in Regency times it would have taken me all day! For a start I’d have to heat the water as there were no taps I could simply turn on.  The washing would have been done by hand and that in its self would have taken me all day and rubbed my skin raw—no rubber gloves.
I would have had to take rugs outside and beat them thoroughly to get the dirt and dust off and I’m not sure dusting would really have gotten rid of much dust as there was nothing to shift it outside. i'd have simply stirred it all around.
If I had been born a ‘Lady’ I would never have had to lift a hand to clean anything. My servants would have done everything for me, including washing my hair if I’d wanted.
I suppose I could hire a cleaning lady in today’s world, if I wanted (not sure I’d want them to dress me or wash my hair though.)

Rheda Kerrick, my heroine in my new Regency romance, INVITATION TO SCANDAL, released later this month, is a ‘lady’ but she is forced to ‘work’ to save her family home for her younger brother. No house cleaning for her though. Smuggling and horse breeding are on her agenda. It’s such a pity that the extremely handsome, Rufus Knight, Viscount Strathmore, is set on catching a certain smuggler. It’s making Rheda’s life more perilous than she’d wish.
Here is the RT Book Review 

RT Rating 4 Stars
With snappy dialogue, lively action, a hero that believes in honor above all and a strong heroine who loves fiercely, Evans’ story will have readers laughing and crying, savoring every scene.

Rheda Kerrich has been helping the townspeople and trying to hold on to the family home for her brother in her own unconventional way, as local smuggler “Dark Shadow.” She has one last shipment to deal with before retirement, but then Rheda gets stuck under a barrel of French brandy and is found by Rufus Knight, Viscount Strathmore.

He is immediately attracted to Rheda, thinking she is a simple village girl. Rufus is in Kent to find the smuggler and decides to seduce Rheda, but he will not rest until he finds the Dark Shadow — the only one who can clear his father of treason. But the closer he gets to Rheda and the truth, the more dangerous things become. (BRAVA, May, 320 pp., $15.00)
 Reviewed By: Jill Brager

Think about the day you’ve just had. Compare it to the early 1800’s. How would it have been different for you if you lived in that time? The best answer wins a copy of INVITATION TO SCANDAL. Open internationally, in book or eBook format.