Back to Top

Category: Giveaways

Posts in which we or our guests offer a giveaway.

CarolineDollWow, so very much baby news lately!!  Diane is a grandmother, and a little prince or princess is soon on its way in England.    I do not have any news of my own, (thankfully!), but I do like thinking about cute tiny clothes, precious weensy shoes, and best of all children’s books….  (I also took a shopping trip to the American Girl Place last week to buy a doll for my goddaughter–at 3 she is still a bit young for the AGs, but I had the best time wandering around looking at all the little outfits, reading the books, and planning for future presents for her.  Did you know they now have a War of 1812 American Girl doll named Caroline???  Complete with spencers and bonnets and a wee little Regency dining room set.  Plus a black cat named Inkpot.  Bliss)

 

DuchessPregnantIn honor of all this adorable new life, I’m having a little contest today!  Guess the gender and possible name of the upcoming Baby Cambridge, and whoever gets the closest (and first!) to being right will win an autographed copy of any of my books you like.  (My own guess is girl, but as for names I have no clue…)

If you need a little help, here are a few sites that help with the guesswork!

The Telegraph

Entertainment Wise (they say “Charlotte” is the front-runner…)

Huffington Post  (who says it will be “Philip”)

A Daily Mail article on how the new arrival will be titled (HRH Prince/Princess FirstName of Cambridge)

The excellent Baby Cambridge fundraiser

Just leave your best guess in the comments, and once the new HRH is here I will find out who was right and send you an autographed book!!!  Good luck and have fun….

ElizabethanBarbieIt’s contest time at my Amanda Carmack website!  Sign up for my newsletter list for the chance to win an advance copy of Murder at Hatfield House and an Elizabethan Barbie to help you read it!!  (My site is here, just click on the Contest Page)  I’ve gotten so many emails from people with their own favorite childhood doll stories, so I thought I would take a quick look at the history of dolls here….

 

 

 

 

 

Dolls have been around as long as human civilization.  Though no prehistorical dolls have been found (that I could discover in my research, anyway), but there is a fragment of an alabaster doll with movable arms from Babylonian times.  In ancient Egypt, there were dolls made of flat pieces of wood, with hair made of strings of beads.  There have also been pottery dolls found in graves from as far back as 2000 BC.

Doll (Greek, 500-400 BC) - Terracotta

The ancient Greek and Roman graves of children have also yielded dolls, very lifelike ones of of wood, ivory, or wax, with movable limbs and sometimes little clothes of their own.  I read a legend that sometimes when girls grew up and were considered too “old” for dolls, they donated them to the altars of domestic goddesses…

 

 

 

 

Renaissance and later in Europe saw a boom in the demand for dolls.  Mothers of all social classes made rag dolls for their daughters, but the wealthier classes wanted fine dolls of wax or porcelain.  There were “fashion dolls” for grown women to look at gowns, and girls played with very similar styles.  In the early 1800s, composition (a mix of pulped wood or paper pressed into a mold, made a more affordable and durable alternative).  In the Victorian age, every little girl wanted a French “bebe” (much like every girl wants an American Girl now!).  They were among the first to depict a younger child rather than a grown lady, and her clothes were always very fashionable and elaborate.  Bisque dolls made in Germany were similar, but cheaper.

Doll18thCentury DollBebe

The availability of plastics in the 1940s, and the development of vinyl dolls in the ’50s and ’60s revolutionized dolls, like my mom’s Chatty Cathy and Barbie (both of which were passed down to me!  I played with Barbie, but CC sort of scared me, so she stayed in the closet)

DollBarbie

My husband’s niece was given an American Girl Kit doll for her birthday, and at a family weekend a few weeks ago she carried the doll with her everywhere!!  Her brothers were NOT allowed to touch the doll….

DollKit

What was your favorite childhood doll story??  If you could have any doll now, what would it be?  (and be sure and enter my drawing for your very own Elizabethan Barbie!)

I hope everyone had a great holiday weekend!!  I confess–I ate too much junk food, and laid around reading too much when I have a lot of work to do.  Oops.  But this is a new week, and the WIP is moving forward!  In the meantime, I forgot last week was release week for my new book, The Runaway Countess (Book One of The Bancrofts of Barton Park!).  I am sooooo excited to talk about it here today, and also to give away a signed copy to one commenter….

runaway0813Wed to Wickedness….

In Society’s eyes, Hayden Fitzwalter, Earl of Ramsey, and Jane Bancroft have the perfect marriage.  But what can’t be seen are the secrets hidden behind closed doors.  Believing Hayden will never renounce his dissolute ways, Jane flees to her family’s dilapidated estate in the country.

Years later, Hayden longs to win back the only woman who has ever touched his heart.  But first he has to convince her that this rogue is ready to be tamed….

Bancrofts of Barton Park

Two Sisters, Two Scandals, Two Sizzling Love Affairs….

“I really loved this story, the gentle pace of the story along with a couple making it a go at it to heal their broken hearts proving that Happy Ever After does take work but it well worth it when she share it with the ones you love.
I’m looking to reading about Jane’s sister and the trouble no doubt she’ll get into!”–Goodreads review

We love to talk here about “risky” books (both reading and writing!), and this book felt very risky to me when I was in the middle of it.  It was really the first time I tried an Austen-esque setting.  Not an Austen-esque style, because that would be way too scary, but a setting much like Emma or Sense and Sensibility, a small country village and a few estates, with neighbors and families who knew each other well.  Jane and her sister Emma have taken refuge at her father’s old estate, Barton Park, and it’s like many people going home as grown-ups–comforting and awkward at the same time!  It was a challenge to get to know all these people and the dynamics of their lives together.

It was also the first time I have ever tried a “marriage in trouble” story.  The hero and heroine are married for the whole story, but are sadly estranged.  They married too young, too quickly, with no realistic idea of how a marriage partnership between them could work.  They needed time and patience to realize what went wrong–and how to win each other’s hearts all over again.  I admit I really ached for Hayden and Jane!  I wanted so much for those two crazy kids to make things work, and once or twice I was sure they never could….

I loved spending time in this Regency world, getting to know these characters!  I hope readers enjoy it too.

I’ll be giving away a signed copy to a commenter on this post today.  Do you like marriage in trouble stories?  Austen-esque stories of country settings and families?  Speaking of families–what are you plans for the fall and all the holidays coming up???

Runaway Countess at Amazon

At eHarlequin

Info at my own website (covers, excerpts, etc)

runaway0813I’ve been so busy the last few weeks (trying to get ahead on the WIP, packing my 50 boxes of books for a move, taking care of a sick cat who has suddenly become very, very picky about his food….) that the beginning of September completely passed me by!  And with the beginning of September I had a new book release.  So I am talking about it today!  Better late than never, right???

 

Wed to wickedness 

In Society’s eyes, Hayden Fitzwalter, Earl of Ramsay and Jane Bancroft have the perfect marriage. But what can’t be seen are the secrets hidden behind closed doors. Believing Hayden will never renounce his dissolute ways, Jane flees to her family’s dilapidated estate in the country. 

Years later, Hayden now longs to win back the only woman who has ever touched his heart. But first he has to convince her that this rogue is ready to be tamed…. 

BANCROFTS OF BARTON PARK …Two sisters, two scandals, two sizzling love affairs

This story felt very risky to me when I was writing it.  I had never tried a “marriage in trouble” story before.  My stories have always followed the general romance outline–meeting (or re-meeting), liking or hating, getting to know each other, falling in love, marrying.  Maybe a villain or evil plot or two along the way!  This time there was no meeting/falling (though I show glimpses in flashbacks, another risky thing for me, but I really wanted to show how happy they were at first, and what went wrong).  This was a couple married in a time when marriage was nearly impossible to get out of, but who couldn’t bear to be together any longer.  They felt broken.  It almost broke MY heart, because I always want the best for my characters!!!  It’s hard for me to be mean to them, even when it’s for their own good….

Unlike many historical romances, the bulk of the book is not centered on the couple winning each other into matrimony but on the healing of a struggling marriage, the revelation of their pasts (particularly Hayden’s) and how difficult it is to change even when that change is fervently desired. Add the mystery and danger of a hidden treasure and a truly distasteful man and McCabe has created an enjoyable romance with a different focus than most…I am eagerly awaiting book two. –Fresh Fiction

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERABut honestly, Jane and Hayden needed to learn their lessons.  It’s a story that’s common even now–they married young, in the first flush of new passion, naive and impulsive.  Jane didn’t know how to be a countess; she had grown up in a ramshackle country house with an unconventional, scholarly family, taking care of her little sister Emma.  Hayden saw no need to give up his wild life just because he had a wife.  A few miscarriages drove them even further apart, until they had to separate.  But a few years later, they’ve both grown up a lot, and can see the enormity of what they’ve lost.

I admit it–I cried a bit when they started to get back together.  They were meant to be together, darn it!!  They just needed to figure that out…

Hayden and Jane were truly a couple who belonged together. They simply did not know how to handle a marriage. Jane tried to explain what she needed, but Hayden had only his parent’s example and could not understand. As a result, thw two must face the question is love enough? Find out in The Runaway Countess by Amanda McCabe. A little maturity and a lot of love can make a difference. Amanda McCabe has penned an amazing historical romance with just the right touch of suspense, some surprise revelations and a highly romantic ending. –Cataromance

It was also a risky story for me in that I wanted to try an Austen-esque setting.  Not in the style of Austen; I would never, ever be brave enough for that!!  But a small village, where everyone knows each other and small-seeming concerns become large, where family relationships are important, and the house is a character in itself.  (I wanted to go live at Barton Park, spend my days puttering in the garden and sewing by the fire…)  I ended up having lots of fun with it, though I missed my Gothic storms and poison plots.

RunningFromScandalCoverThe life of Barton Park continues in December, with Emma’s story, Running From Scandal.  She has to learn to grow up a bit, too–and might end up with a man she would never have dreamed of ever thinking about before, LOL.

The book is available on Amazon

And at eHarlequin

And my own website has excerpts and more info…

 

 

 

I apologize in advance, you are going to be hearing a lot from me in the next few months!  I have releases every month until the end of the year.  October brings the debut of my Elizabethan mystery series, written as Amanda Carmack, Murder at Hatfield House!  I am sooooo excited about these books.  November will bring a Christmas novella, A Very Tudor Christmas.  And December Emma’s book.  Whew!

In the meantime–do you like “marriage in trouble” stories?? What kind of dream house would you want, if you could choose any? (I am torn between a beach bungalow and an English country house.  Or a Paris apartment with a view of the Eiffel Tower…)  Comment for a chance to win a signed copy of  Countess!!!

 

OK, so it’s not really early (not according to Target, which was setting out their Christmas displays next to the Halloween stuff!  Really, people….one holiday at a time, please), but I do have a new Christmas-theme novella out this month!  A Very Tudor Christmas is now available….

 

TudorChristmas A Very Tudor Christmas was such a fun story to write.  It takes place against the backdrop of a real historical event, the enormous dynastic marriage of Anne Cecil, the teenaged daughter of William Cecil, Lord Burghley (Elizabeth I’s chief advisor) to the Earl of Oxford, one of the most eligible young courtiers.  The wedding (which took place at Westminster Abbey, with the queen herself in attendance, followed by a lavish banquet at Cecil House in Covent Garden) was on December 19, 1571 and was the event of the holiday season.  Alas for poor Anne, she died young in 1588, after a very unhappy marriage, but her wedding seemed like the perfect backdrop for a winter romance for my own characters, Rob and Meg, who were parted when they were young and had to learn to find their way back to each other.

England, 1571

A brief but passionate flirtation with the dashing Sir Robert Erroll had Margaret Clifford dreaming they would be wed—until Robert left for the continent without a word, breaking her heart.

Robert never forgot Meg, or gave up hope that she would wait for him to make his fortune. But after three years abroad, he has returned to court to discover a cold, distant woman in place of the innocent maiden he left behind.

Yet Robert can sense the desire that still burns within her. And when a snowstorm forces them to take refuge for the night, he is determined, come Christmas morn, to have melted the ice that has built up around Meg’s heart….

(Another inspiration for this story was Much Ado About Nothing!  Meg and Rob’s younger cousins have to help the stubborn lovers along a bit…)

Are you feeling in the Christmas spirit yet???  Hopefully a holiday story can help!  I will give away a copy to one commenter on todays post.  Meanwhile, you can see more about it here at Amazon or at eHarlequin, or at my website