Kathleen E Woodiwiss passed away July 6, 2007.
The news crept in quietly on one of my loops, not from the news on TV, radio, or the newspapers. I searched for a news report online. Nothing.
The world does not appreciate, perhaps, what a monumental loss her death is, but I suspect very soon the romance loops, blogs, and message boards will be registering their shock and grief. We’ve lost our pioneer, the woman who launched our modern genre of historical romance, of romance fiction itself. We’ve lost an icon. A mother.
Her son Heath posted the news on her message board. You can read it here. He said that she died of cancer that returned with vengence after the death of another son. In my search for more information I found the notice of Dorren Woodiwiss’s unexpected death June 17, 2007. He’d been only 44.
The Flame and the Flower by Kathleen E Woodiwiss was released in 1972 and became an immediate sensation. It was the first romance novel to open the bedroom door on the hero and heroine. Woodiwiss forged new territory, one that celebrated strong women and showed strong women enjoying their sexuality. The growth of the romance industry to nearly 5o% of all mass market sales shows that readers were hungry for such books and still are.
For me, Woodiwiss help to nurture my love of historical romance. I am not the only romance author who can trace her love of the genre back to Kathleen E Woodiwiss.
I explored Woodiwiss’s website and had to smile. This icon, this pioneer, this mother, talks of the same things we do! Her FAQs speak of familiar reasons to write romance, familiar visions of what makes a hero and heroine. Further exploration online showed that she suffered the occasional bad review and that she had suffered multiple rejections from publishers and agents when she tried to sell The Flame and the Flower. That she doubted herself and her writing sometimes, but at other times got joy from it.
This week the Romance Writers of America, an organizaton of 9,500 members, gathers for its annual convention. Over four hundred of us will be signing our books to raise money for Literacy. We’ll listen to speeches, attend workshops, discuss policies and procedures. We’ll celebrate our finest unpublished and published books of the year. And I’ll bet in every speech, workshop, signing, and ceremony, we will be remembering Kathleen E. Woodiwiss.
And thanking her.
What is your favorite Woodiwiss book? Do you have a memory of reading her for the first time? What has Woodiwiss meant to you, as a reader and/or a writer? As a woman?
I finally found Woodiwiss’s obituary at the Minneapolis Star Tribune online, and information about the funeral from the Strike Funeral Home. There are links to leave words of condolence both places. Fans are also posting on Woodiwiss’s message board and Jude Devereaux’s message board.
Her funeral will be at 11:30 Wednesday, July 11, when we are all gathering for the RWA conference. Amanda, Janet and I will be in the Beau Monde conference, celebrating Regency Historical Romance, and, I suspect, remembering who helped start it all.
I should tell you all that have a new website! My original plan was to spend this blog talking about it, but some things are more important. Come take a look, enter my contest, sign up for my newsletter, send me an email (although I don’t know how to do the email yet!). Next Monday I’ll post about the RWA conference.
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Diane, I too felt a loss when she passed. I was sort of shocked really. I guess when you have great memories of her stories that lingered. Even when I didn’t get to reread all of them. They still are felt and alive in ones memory. And you think that person will always be there publishing stories. So it was a great loss. I hate it when some writers are never listed in news when they pass away. But to me she will live on, and always will be fondly remembered and greatly admired. She was a true Queen of Romance.
I love all her stories and it’s so hard to choose a favourite really. I have good memories when I think back on reading hers.
On a much happier note: I love your new website look Diane! I couldn’t stop staring at it and going through it. :-)Lovely layout.
Much Love, Mallory P.
Diane, I was shocked when I read this morning that Kathleen Woodiwiss had died. Although I haven’t read any of her later books, The Flame and the Flower was one of the first historical romances that I read, back in the day when Jennifer Wilde and Laurie McBain were writing. I loved it, Heather and Brandon were two of my favorite characters, and I still remember that book with much love and affection. My chapter will hopefully be putting something together in our next newsletter.
I admit I’ve never read any of her books, but I know what a pioneer she was. I first saw mention of her passing in a Publisher’s Weekly email — certainly the industry recognizes her influence!
Nice column, Diane. And have a great time at conference!
Cara
Isn’t it sad?
I can remember just how lost I would get in her books; I’d want to do nothing but read.
Mallory, you probably know what I mean when I say that reading Woodiwiss was liberating at a time when we were just learning how to be truly liberated women.
I had no idea Woodiwiss was so young. We lost her too soon!
I’m glad you like my website, Mallory!!
Diane, I know exactly what you mean by liberating.
I can surely relate to getting lost in her books for hours! 🙂
I do recall not long ago Daphne du Maurier who written the story Rebecca passed away. As to be expected of that age. But sad too none the less. And quite a fascinating woman. :-)Loved her stories.
DaphneduMaurier
Yep, that’s a great new site you have there!!! 🙂
I only have and read one, and that would be A Rose in Winter. . . and just simply loved it. But actually, I wasn’t even aware she was still writing; I was under an impression she had stopped some time ago, not really sure where I got that. But anyway, still, really sorry to hear about it — I may only have read one, but I know plenty of people since I started looking for romance related internet stuff, they have always mentioned her.
Lois