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Author Archives: diane

About diane

Diane Gaston is the RITA award-winning author of Historical Romance for Harlequin Historical and Mills and Boon, with books that feature the darker side of the Regency. Formerly a mental health social worker, she is happiest now when deep in the psyches of soldiers, rakes and women who don’t always act like ladies.

hh_CALENDAR_2013_smallThe Harlequin Historical Holiday Giveaway is coming soon. This will be our third giveaway and again the grand prize will be a Kindle Fire HD (or equivalent tablet depending on your location). Starting November 27, play every day for more chances to win. Each participating author will have an activity planned on their website for their special day. At the end of the month on December 23, one grand prize winner of the Kindle Fire will be randomly selected from all the days’ entrants. The more days you visit, the better your chances! Happy Holidays and we look forward to seeing you.

Check my website or Amanda’s on the 27th for the Advent Calendar and the rules for entry. My prize day will be December 17, but I’ll give you all the details on the 27th.

Here are the participating authors and their dates:
Cheryl St. John – November 27
Elizabeth Rolls – November 28
Michelle Willingham – November 29
Annie Burrows – December 2
Ann Lethbridge – December 3
Marguerite Kaye – December 4
Barbara Monajem – December 5
Amanda McCabe – December 6
Louise Allen – December 9
Blythe Gifford – December 10
Kate Bridges – December 11
Michelle Styles – December 12
Georgie Lee – December 13
Jeannie Lin – December 16
Diane Gaston – December 17
Terri Brisbin – December 18
Julia Justiss – December 19
Lynna Banning – December 20
Grand Prize Drawing – December 23

Be ready to enter and celebrate the holidays with us.

Battle_of_Krasnoi_1812On November 15 to 18, 1812, Napoleon, in retreat, gathered his remaining ragged forces in Russia and faced the Russians in a series of skirmishes that are collectively known as the Battle of Krasnoi. Because Napoleon was able to preserve these forces in retreat, he had the nucleus of an army to build upon and to carry him through the rest of the war. Marshal Ney‘s resistance to the fierce Russian attack earned him the name “Bravest of the Brave.” The fact that the Russian general, Kutusov, did not totally destroy the French army by continuing to pursue and engage them enraged Tsar Alexander I.

Battle of Krasnoi resulted in French losses numbering as many as 13,000 killed and wounded and up to 26,000 taken prisoner. These numbers paled in comparison to the nearly half a million French soldiers killed or captured in the whole Russian campaign.

Half a million.

Military experts credit Napoleon’s Russian campaign as one of the most lethal in history and as a turning point in the Napoleonic war. After this decimation of the French army, Austria and Prussia broke their alliance with France and joined the UK and its allies, leading to the defeat of Napoleon and his exile to Elba.

Almost 130 years later, in 1941, Hitler also invaded Russia in a campaign that resulted in even more horrific losses and failed as well. The Russians lost 27 million soldiers and civilians; the Germans lost over 3 million soldiers.

So…now that I’ve cheered you up with stories of devastation, how is your Monday going for you?

Regency lady at worktableI am in that unique space of having finished the last book in my contract and I have to think of a new story.

Unlike some of my friends (Amanda???) I don’t have an endless fund of story ideas.

So I want to know where I can get some?
My story ideas often come from the previous story, but eventually I run out of characters to write about. That’s the situation I’m in now.

Sometimes my stories come from a little glimmer of an idea, usually based on something historical, like the aftermath of Badajoz (my three soldiers series). Or the laws of the Regency, like in Scandalizing the Ton, where I wanted to explore the inheritance laws of widows, pregnant widows.

I’ve also used various popular Romance themes, like Marriage of Convenience (too many of my books to list!), or in my next release, A Marriage of Notoriety, a Beauty and the Beast theme.

So, is there a story out there you are pining to have someone write? Do you have favorite Romance themes? I’d love to know!!

Posted in Writing | 11 Replies

Carolyn’s blog about Amazon’s Matchbook program led me to poke around at Amazon and to ultimately look at my Amazon Book Wish List. On Amazon you can make as many wish lists as you like, an easy way to record a “gift registry” for yourself or family members. I use the wish list function to keep track of books that interested me, but that I was not certain I wanted to buy immediately. Or, more accurately, books I was afraid I’d forget.

Here are a few of them.

Phillips_The_profligate_SonMy newest addition to the list was recommended to me by Kristine Hughes (The Writer’s Guide to Everyday Life in Regency and Victorian England from 1811 – 1901 and Number One London blog)–The Profligate Son: Or, A True Story of Family Conflict, Fashionable Vice, and Financial Ruin in Regency Britain. by Nicola Phillips.
Booklist says:

“The dangers of a profligate son is a persistent theme in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century British literature, and it was also a very real fear among the upper echelon of British families…an absorbing case study…Phillips eloquently fills out the bare bones of the known facts of the story.”

How can any of us resist that story?

Next on my wish list are two books with the same title but different authors–Wellington: The Iron Duke, first by Phillip J. Haythornwaite; second by Richard Holmes. I’m hoping to go on Kristine and Vicky Hinshaw’s Wellington tour next year and it has been years since I read a Wellington biography.

51lu0ROOBzLThere are several books on my list that I own in hardback or paperback, but that I’d love to have on my Kindle for convenience. I can’t quite justify spending the money to buy books I already own, but I’m hoping someone in the family will see them and buy them for me as a gift. One of my favorites is Redcoat: The British Soldier in the Age of Horse and Musket, again by Richard Holmes. This book gives so much information about the British army in the Napoleonic War, it is a treasure. Other books I already own are: Wellington’s Rifles by Mark Urban, What Jane Austen Ate and Charles Dickens Knew: From Fox Hunting to Whist-the Facts of Daily Life in Nineteenth-Cen​tury England by Daniel Pool, Every Man Will Do His Duty: An Anthology of Firsthand Accounts from the Age of Nelson 1793-1815 by John B. Hattendorf and Dean King.

9781857024692_p0_v1_s260x420Two more books on the list: The Black Count: Glory, Revolution, Betrayal, and the Real Count of Monte Cristo by Tom Reiss. This book won the Pulitzer Prize for Biography and sounds fascinating. As does A Scandalous Life: The Biography of Jane Digby by Mary S. Lovell. In 1828 Jane Digby left her aristocratic husband and young son for an Austrian diplomat. A sensational divorce resulted and Digby left England for the continent, marrying two more times, but leaving those husbands and more children, as well, until she ultimately found happiness marrying a sheik twenty years younger than she. If her story were fiction, it would be too far-fetched.

Do you own any of these books? Are they on your wish list? What books are on your wish list?

I think some of the most beautiful portraits of our period and a bit earlier are found in miniatures. One of the best miniaturists was Richard Cosway.

510px-Cosway,_Self-portraitCosway (1742-1821) was the son of a schoolmaster. At age 12, he went to London to study painting, winning prizes from the Society of Artists in 1754 and 1760. By the age of 20 he was in demand. In 1785 he was appointed Painter to the Prince of Wales and painted the Prince’s first wife Maria Fitzherbert.

In 1781, Cosway married Maria Hatfield, 20 years younger than he. Maria was a multitalented artist, composer, and educator, who had brief romance and life-long friendship with Thomas Jefferson. Cosway supported his wife’s artistic pursuits, but theirs was not a happy marriage.

Miniatures were keepsakes that could easily be kept in a pocket or reticule, much like we keep treasured photos in a wallet. This Cosway miniature of a lady shows how some were set.

Richard_Cosway_-_A_Lady_-_WGA05444
Here are some other examples:

Wellington
Arthur_Wellesley1808,_by_Richard_Cosway

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

George IV
432px-GeorgeIV1792

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And this beautiful one of Mrs. Floyd
535px-Mrs._Floyd_by_Richard_Cosway,_RA

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I’ve always wanted to own a Regency or Georgian era miniature. Do you own one? Do you have a favorite?

Posted in History, Regency | 8 Replies