Back to Top

Monthly Archives: February 2013

StrangerAtCastonbury2March 1 marks the release of my book A Stranger at Castonbury, the last book in the Castonbury Park series!!  (it’s up for pre-order at Amazon now…)  I will be giving away a copy to one commenter today…

When I was first asked to participate in a series described as “Downton Abbey in the Regency,” I jumped eagerly at the chance! Like so many other people, I am a Downton fanatic and have avidly followed the series from the beginning. (Mary and Matthew! Sybil and Branson! Bates and Anna! Thomas! The scandal! The clothes!). Mix it with another of my favorite things, the Regency period, and I was completely hooked. Also, I was very, very excited at the chance to work with so many authors whose books I love.

But then the reality set in. There were eight of us, and we had to work closely together to create a world as colorful and complex as that of Downton, with interlocking characters, upstairs/downstairs dynamics, scandal and passion. And I had to write the last story, tying it all together and making sure I stayed true to the world of Castonbury and other authors’ characters. Easy and simple, of course. Not!

Luckily one of the things I love best about Downton is how everyone’s lives interlock and entwine, and having the chance to create the same thing at Castonbury was great fun. (And luckily many of the other authors are much more organized than I am, and created spreadsheets and images that made the place come really alive for us all). Through the other stories, I could easily envision the house and the people in it, and by the time I finished writing Stranger at Castonbury, it felt like home.

For more info on the series, visit my website’s Castonbury Page!  Do you like continuity series?  What are some you have followed?  What did you like/not like about series like Downton??

How is everyone doing this week??  I am closing in on the February 15th deadline, slowly but (hopefully) surely, and looking at summer clothes on shopping websites as I fantasize about sundress and sandal weather coming back again.  (Surely it has to be somewhere in the not too distant future??).  I’ve also been following the fascinating news about the discovery and identification of Richard III’s skeleton under a Leicester carpark (that was once the Greyfriars church).  So amazing.

And I finally got some of the professional photos from my Dec. 15th wedding!

Wedding1MeWedding2MeWedding3MeWedding4Me

It made me wonder what sort of historical wedding portraits I could find.  I discovered things like Arthur Davis’s Mr and Mrs Atherton, ca. 1743 (it was originally thought to have been painted for their wedding a decade earlier, but was then given the later date):

Atherton

There was Gainsborough’s portrait of Mr. and Mrs. Andrews (and more importantly, their grand estate!):

AndrewsPainting

There was Reynolds’s depiction of the marriage of George III:

GeorgeIIIWedding

Queen Victoria’s wedding:

VictoriaWedding

Van Eyck’s Arnolfini Marriage:

Arnolfini

And the famous image of Anne of Cleves by Holbein that enticed Henry VIII into marrying her–until he met her in person, then he “liked her not!”  (I don’t know–I think she looks pretty enough):

AnneofCleves

And then there is this lady, Antoine Vestier’s Portrait of a Lady With a Book.  I imagine she is thinking about throwing that book at her husband if he says One More annoying thing…

LadyPortrait

What is your favorite wedding portrait????

Today is Mardi Gras!!!  Hurray!  (Mardi Gras has been a part of New Orleans life since the 1730s–amazing).  I am actually on deadline (due end of week–ugh), and it’s a cold, rainy, dreary day here so I don’t have much choice to stay in and write.  But in my dreams I will be…

Eating king cake…

KingCake

A recipe for king cake

Drinking hurricanes…

Hurricane

Cocktails recipes for Mardi Gras (I do love a good Sazerac!)

Wearing fab ballgowns…

BallCostumeVivienneWestwood

And dancing the night away…for tomorrow it’s Lent!

CostumeBall

A history of Mardi Gras…

Some detox smoothies for Wednesday…

What will you be doing this Mardi Gras???

I stumbled across a reasonably affordable copy of The Regency Companion and bought it. Maybe the library had two since the stamp says “Outdated or Redundant.”

Outdated? Photo by Yours Truly

Outdated? Photo by Yours Truly

Ah. Research. Very timely as I am about to embark on The Next Historical.

Still, I decided to have a little fun with this book, so I rearranged some of the sentences.

Mr. Coke was just as remarkable as his house. Though enthralled with the perfection of Leicestershire as England’s premiere hunting field, Nimrod was not immune to its problems. All knew that a man showed his mettle on the hunting field. Guns were fired off from both the park and the tower. The most dazzling private pack [ ] was the Duke of Rutland’s, [but] gloriously attired ladies, each sporting a plume, were the true spectacle. Torn between the desire to laugh at the sight or frown in irritation at the time and effort it took to achieve this ridiculous style, the Comtesse could decide only that it became her very well indeed. She was one of the beauties of her day and famed for her equestrian exploits. The Stud Book firmly put all breeding on record. How each hotblooded young buck and his older elegant counterpart made use of these opportunities was left up to his own skill and imagination. [H]er feelings were still loverlike and constant. Youthful infatuation died an ugly death.