Happy 2017! I had hoped to give you a date for the re-release of The Magnificent Marquess, but I am finishing up my revisions and still aiming for the end of this month or early February. I just can’t sit on my new cover any longer –take a look!! (click on images to see them bigger)
The hero in this book has lived in India for most of his life, and besides some loyal Indian servants who chose to come with him to London, he also has brought his pet cheetah, Ranee. She is the cause of some trouble right at the beginning of the story. And while you might not think the topic of cheetahs is very connected to the Regency, let me show you how it is!
When this story was first published by Signet back in 1998, some readers didn’t realize that in the early 19th century there were still (or ever had been) Asian cheetahs in India. They are gone from India (the cheetahs, not the readers) and are very nearly extinct now even in the Middle East, where they used to roam freely. I was very distressed recently to read that cheetahs of every kind are now considered endangered. But in 1816, that was not the case.
In India, cheetahs were often trained for hunting. They are, after all, the fastest animal on the planet. It almost seems like cheating!! Just because the British were in India where the climate was quite unlike that at home doesn’t mean they were about to give up their treasured leisure pursuits. But not all cheetahs were suited to it, and that is the case with Ranee, who is much happier as a pampered companion.
Of course, Ranee is fictional, and I went with my belief in “what could have been” when I wrote this story. Have you ever read or written something in a story that seems reasonable based on research, even though you couldn’t document that anyone ever did it? Isn’t it exciting when later you stumble across information that supports it? It’s so much easier to do research now!
The Internet was just blossoming back when I wrote the original version of this book. At that time I did not find any actual cases of cheetahs being brought to London. But do you know who had one? George III! And the artist George Stubbs took time off from painting horses long enough to paint a picture of it. Here it is:
It breaks my heart that the king’s cheetah eventually ended up in the zoo at the Tower of London, such a sad fate for a magnificent animal born to run. How long it survived there I have not been able to find out. Even though this happened some 60 years before my story takes place, pre-Regency, the king and many other people from that time were still alive during the Regency and might have remembered poor Sultan, or at least saw Stubbs’s painting exhibited at the Royal Academy.
I still haven’t been able to access much information about Sultan or even the later history of the Stubbs painting, and now I would love to know more. If you’ve ever run across this or know of an accessible source, please share!
In the meantime, please let me know in the comments what you think of my new cover? I always wished Signet had included Ranee in the original one. I hope by next month I’ll be letting you know the new version of the book, revised and expanded, is out and available!! Happy New Year, everyone! P.S. If you are interested in learning more about cheetahs, there’s a fascinating blog that follows the story of one rescued cheetah from cub-dom to adulthood (click on any of the cheetah pix on the site’s homepage, or go here for a single post: http://sirikoi.blogspot.com/2013/09/sheba.html or here for a nice narrative version of Sheba’s story: http://www.care2.com/causes/cheetah-raised-by-humans-who-loved-her-enough-to-set-her-free.html Also here’s a link to the recent information about how endangered these beautiful cats have become today (with some more lovely photos): http://www.care2.com/causes/worlds-fastest-land-animal-is-now-racing-extinction.html
Loved the book before and prefer that cover to the new one. I think most regency gentlemen who shave in the morning.
Very interesting about Cheetahs. I actually hadn’t quite registered that the animal was a cheetah– at least if asked I wouldn’t have been able to identify it as a cheetah.
Good story.
somehow a would turned into a who . Most regency gentlemen would shave —
Nancy, I quite agree with you on this –it is incredibly hard to find stock images of people who fit our characters and period!! This was the closest I was able to get. I tell myself he’s been at home by himself having a lazy day!! 😉
Thanks for sharing that bit of research, Gail, and I’m looking forward to this reissue. I think the new cover is striking and will work well in thumbnail for online catalogs.
Thanks Elena!! I hope I have improved the story, or at least the writing!! Yikes. I do love having the space to give a bit more detail than I could in the original, due to Signet’s length limits.
Love the cover. The eyes of both the cheetah and the hero are so striking and alike. Can’t wait to read this book.
Thank you, Joyce!! Soon! Very soon!!
How fun! Thank you for sharing those bits of research, Gail!!!
Thanks, Sandy! We Riskies do love the offbeat, don’t we? I’m looking forward to your next book!
I think you did a great job researching for this book. I definitely felt bad fir the animals that got sent to the Tower. Sadly I couldn’t get any info on what happens to them too when I was there. But just to point out, I thought this was going to go in the paranormal shifter realm because of the cover. LOL
LOL, ki pha!! I wondered if someone might think that, especially with the eyes so similar in color! There wasn’t room to put the heroine on the cover without really crowding it, so it also looks less “romance-y”. I hope people will see it says “Regency Romance”, and hope they may have read my other books so they know what I write!!
(I do like paranormal –to read and to watch on TV…. but haven’t written any.)
I, too, thought this was a Regency shifter romance based on the cover – oops! I just love stories with characters who have experiences to relate from outside of England.
I have a question – as a person who rarely sees her name or anything close to it in print, how do you pronounce the cheetah’s name? 🙂