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Author Archives: Amanda McCabe/Laurel McKee

About Amanda McCabe/Laurel McKee

Writer (as Amanda McCabe, Laurel McKee, Amanda Carmack), history geek, yoga enthusiast, pet owner!

My horoscope this week says I’ve “gotten a little addicted to habits that are rooted in fear and worry.” It also gives me some interesting suggestions as to how to break out of this cycle. “1) On an empty milk carton, paste a collage of cut-out images and phrases that symbolize your anxieties. Then put it on the floor and stomp it to death as you growl. 2) Slap your own hand briskly 10 times as you bark ‘Stop being such a wuss!’. 3) Everywhere you go, visualize yourself accompanied by 3 great warriors who’re dedicated to your well-being.”

These are very good, especially #3. Where can I find 3 great warriors?? And I decided to add to this list (and celebrate sending the new book off and away!) by going to Barnes and Noble and buying some summer reading! Also to buy a large iced tea to celebrate National Iced Tea Month (see Bizarre Food Holidays–I’m very glad to find that my iced tea addiction is being recognized on such a level). My criteria for Summer Reading is easy–it has to be fun. Not research. Even though, in my mind, research book does=fun.

I came up with Michael Gruber’s Book of Air and Shadows. It appears to be a “literary thriller” (according to the jacket), involving a lost Shakespeare manuscript, secret codes, car chases, Russian gangsters, etc. What else does a story need?? Salon.com also says it boasts “nimble, witty prose,” which sounds like Summer Reading to me. I’m going to give it a try this weekend, as I sip Nationally Recognized Iced Tea and sit by the pool (okay, sit by my dogs’ little plastic wading pool from Petsmart).

I also bought some romances–Desperate Duchesses, Lord Sin, and The Spy Wore Silk, as well as Lindsay Pollock’s The Girl With the Gallery (biographies do qualify as SR, right? Right). So, let Summer begin!

What are you reading this summer? (Besides books by the Riskies, of course! Don’t forget Janet and I both have books out in August…). And how do you get rid of “fear and worry”??

Be sure and sign up for the all-new Riskies newsletter at riskies@yahoo.com, with “newsletter” in the subject line. If you do, I won’t put your picture on a milk carton and stomp on it…

The WIP is finished! No more Henry VIII story forever! (Okay, that’s not entirely true. The rough draft is done, I’m still polishing and tweaking. But the hardest part is over!). I saw two movies over the Memorial Day weekend (this is unusual, even though I love movies, because the huge multiplex that always has Exclusive Engagements on the interesting films is in the middle of the mall and is a pain to get to. I usually wait for the DVD). I saw Waitress, a wonderful little gem I highly recommend, just be sure you have somewhere to go for pie afterward. And I saw Pirates 3. I was disappointed. Very, very disappointed. Very, very, very–you get the picture. And I found this great website that sells beautiful handmade pendants. I’m going to order the Jane Austen and Marie Antoinette models ASAP, and don’t be surprised if you see the Muses necklaces as giveaways here someday when my Muse books come out.

And now the point of this post (yes, I do sometimes have one). I don’t know a lot about Australian history. What little I do know comes from books like Blue Latitudes and The Fatal Shore, and movies like Strictly Ballroom (though I don’t imagine SB is really represantative of the lives of most–or any–Australians!). A couple weeks ago I saw an episode of the PBS series Secrets of the Dead called The Voyage of the Courtesans (to be more accurate, they really should have called it “The Voyage of the Streetwalkers and Pickpockets,” but whatever). It was very fascinating!

Three modern Australian women wanted to trace the lives of their convict ancestors from the late 18th century. The research starts in London, where they go to the British Library to track down old court records. An historian took one of the women to what’s left of Newgate (I didn’t realize there were still cells left, underground beneath a block of posh flats–very creepy), and told her what life was like for the women before they were transported. Then they follow the 10-month voyage, their arrival in Australia, and what happened to them there.

It was also quite inspiring. One of the women (an 18 year old prostitute at the beginning) ends up running a chain of pubs and owning two houses. One runs a ferry service with several employees. One marries a rich shipowner and becomes a famous hostess, invited to balls at the governor’s house. And one (11 years old when she was caught thieving and sentenced to death. The sentence was commuted to transportation for life in an amnesty following George III’s “recovery from madness”)–she ends up dying at nearly 90, surrounded by children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and great-great grandchildren. Respectable and loved. They all did far better for themselves there than they ever could have in London.

Any of these women would make terrific heroines in novels! They came from the most adverse conditions imaginable, and built terrific lives for themselves. Amazing.

A few links:

Voyage of the Courtesans

Australian Explorer

More Australia stuff

Roger Ebert’s Review of Strictly Ballroom

Have any of you ever tried to trace your ancestors? What did you find? And have you seen any good movies so far this summer???

Andrea Pickens started writing books at the age of 5 (or so her mother tells her!), with a Western tome lavishly illustrated with crayon drawings of horses. Since then she has moved from the Wild West to Regency England, with numerous titles for Signet, Pocket, and now Grand Central Publishing (nee Warner). She graduated from Yale University, and now lives and works in New York City as Creative Director of a magazine.

Commenters to the interview will be entered to win a copy of The Spy Wore Silk! Be sure and check out the Official Rules of Entry here. Winner announced on Tuesday!

Welcome to the Riskies, Andrea!

Q: First things first! Tell us about your new release…
A: The Spy Wore Silk is my first book with Grand Central Publishing! It’s the start of a Regency-set trilogy featuring a secret school for female spies. The students at Mrs. Merlin’s School for Select Young Ladies are streetwise orphans, who are trained in the arts of seduction and swordplay. They’re England’s ultimate secret weapon, dispatched to handle only the most dangerous assignments. It’s due out June 1, and I’m very excited about it! So far the feedback has been positive–it was a June Top Pick at Romantic Times, and received a nice review at Publishers Weekly, so I hope the readers enjoy it.

Q: What gave you the idea for the Merlins? What are the next stories for us to look forward to?
A: I love the swashbuckling fun of Pirates of the Caribbean, but found myself wishing Keira Knightley would do more arse-kicking of her own! So I started thinking–and decided it would be fun to make the heroine the secret agent, capable of beating powerful men at their own game. I also liked the challenge of having my heroes come to grips with women whose physical skills and intellect are as finely honed as their own.

The series features 3 roommates–Siena, Shannon, and Sofia. Each is assigned her own perilous mission, starting with Siena in The Spy Wore Silk. She must unmask a clever traitor lurking among an exclusive club of Society rare book collectors. Seduced by a Spy, due out in Spring ’08, follows Shannon to Ireland and the Scottish Highlands as she seeks to parry the attack of a French assassin. And Sofia’s story, as yet unnamed, follows her through the ballrooms and back alleys of London as she untangles a web of deceit.

These women are as close as sisters, but they each have very different personalities, with their own strengths and weaknesses!

Q: You had some great (and very unusual!) Regencies from Signet before you broke into the single title market. Which was your favorite of these books, and how do you think they differ from your new titles?
A: I think I’ve always been intrigued by trying to find a little twist to convention! One of my favorite Signet Regencies to write was A Diamond in the Rough, a golf story, where I had the hero forced to learn the game in order to win back the ancestral estate his father gambled away. The heroine is the best golfer at St. Andrews, but of course she has to play disguised as a boy. A friend asks her to teach the hero the game, so, acting as his caddie, she takes on the assignment. At first, it may seem sport and Regency romance don’t seem an ideal match. Which is probably what made me think “Oh, this could be fun!”

As to how the Signet stories differ from the new books, I would have to say they both explore ideas about unconventional heroines in unusual situations. The historical format allows a longer word count, so the stories can be a little more complex.

Q: Were there any challenges in researching the Merlins books? Any new or interesting historical facts you discovered?
A: I love research, so I’m always reading obscure books and poking around in used bookstores and antique shops for inspiration!

For The Spy Wore Silk, I found a wonderful resource by attending a lecture on using technology to teach Medieval history. There’s a section of the British Library’s website called “Turning the Pages.” It lets you actually thumb through rare medieval manuscripts and books and zoom in on details, so it was perfect for researching the illuminated psalters that play a part in the story.

In researching Shannon’s book, I found a great resource on gunpowder! So I fear the reader is going to be bombarded with a lot of little facts I found.

Q: What is it about the Regency period that makes you want to write about it?
A: I love how the era is so richly romantic. It was a world aswirl with silks, seduction, and the intrigue of the Napoleonic Wars. A time when old ideas were constantly clashing with radical new ones. What better place for an unconventional heroine?

Q: Who are some of your favorite authors/influences?
A: Well, I’ll start with you, Amanda! I love your books, and am really looking forward to your first Harlequin Historical! And of course I’m a big fan of Diane Gaston, Mary Jo Putney, Loretta Chase, Barbara Metzger, and Lynn Kerstan.

Q: The title of our blog says it all! We’re proud of our “Risky” Regencies. Tell us what’s “risky” about your stories?
I find the parallels between the Regency and today so intriguing, in that both societies confront elemental challenges to traditional ways of thinking. The upheavals in science, literature, music, technology, and social structure are so similar, and thus individuals–especially women–ask the same sort of questions about their basic sense of self. I try to play with modern sensibilities within Regency conventions, hoping the blend will strike a chord with today’s readers and still be historically authentic. I love historical romance to be alive and relevant, not some stuffy story we can’t relate to!

Q: Can we look for you at any appearances or booksignings soon?
A: I’ll be at RWA in Dallas, doing the Literacy signing, so please stop by and say hello!

Anna Campbell over at Romance Bandits tagged me for the 8 meme (list 8 random facts about yourself). I was VERY glad she did, since I had no idea what to blog about this week! (It was a hectic week, my Pug got an ear infection, I didn’t finish the WIP like I wanted, and Dancing With the Stars had its finale…)

So, here ’tis! Way more than you ever wanted to know about me, Amanda.

1) This is no surprise to anyone here at RR, though it might surprise people at the day job, who think I’m a serious, fairly normal, grown-up person. In reality, I am a crazed fan-girl. I have Steady Boyfriend Orlando (Pirates of the Caribbean opens today!!), New-ish Boyfriend Matthew Macfadyen, and Totally New Boyfriend Apolo Anton Ohno. If only I could put up their pics in my cubicle…

2) Another factoid not unknown to the Riskies (and related to #1)–I do love cheesy things (as well as actual cheese, come to think of it. Especially Gouda). I love Hello Kitty, garden gnomes, travel souvenirs like teapots shaped like the Tower of London, DWTS, and Disney movies. Also 1930s musicals with huge production numbers, where Fred and Ginger (in dresses made of feathers!) dance in a fake Venice or rain-swept gazebo.

3) I love music like Turandot, Mozart, Ravel, and Miles Davis. But I also like Abba. Especially Dancing Queen. And that Waterloo song.

4) I’ve worked in bookstores and libraries, in the office of a company that sets up estate sales, a classical music radio station, the marketing office of the symphony, and now back to a library. Where will I end up next??

5) In grad school, I specialized in Elizabethan poetry, just to be sure I’m totally unfit for any “real world” job. Therefore, I’m hopeless at sales calls and Excel spreadsheets, but if you ever need the symbolism analyzed in Sidney’s Astrophil and Stella, I’m your girl.

6) I’m the oldest child in my family, I have one brother who is several years younger. He’s a snowboarder and mountain biker, and doesn’t much like to read. Sometimes I wonder how we ended up in the same family, but I love him dearly.

7) I love raspberries and chocolate, cherry gelato (also saying the word “gelato”), samosas, and pad thai with shrimp. I hate brussels sprouts, lima beans, liver, and bananas (okay, I don’t ‘hate’ bananas, but I don’t much like them).

8) If I could live anywhere in the world, it would be Maui. Or the English countryside. I can’t quite decide. A bungalow near the beach or a cozy Tudor cottage?

I’m supposed to now tag 8 people, but instead I’m going to tag all of you! List your 8 in our comments–let us get to know you. Enjoy the holiday weekend, and be sure and sign up for our Riskies newsletter at riskies@yahoo.com. Please don’t make us list 8 reasons why you should…