As April is Royal Wedding month, and everyone who loves royal romances and big white weddings (i.e. our blog readers) has their focus on England, we're bringing you a selection of the finest England has to offer this month. I'll admit I was surprised to find just how many hot Englishmen are out there. If you believe they're mostly weak chinned and pale, then this lot will prove you wrong ...
First up is a man I've met in person, and I can attest to the fact that he's not just lovely in looks .... Daniel Craig.
If you like your heroes even darker and more dangerous than 007, then how about Stephen Moyer of True Blood fame?
The English do dark and brooding very well ... take your pick of Ben Barnes or Rufus Sewell ...
Or if you prefer softer and more gentlemanly, then how about Mr Darcy?
No English Hottie poll would be complete with these gorgeous blue eyes ...
Or these gorgeous green ones ...
And finally, a choice of two young adrenalin-junkies: Jensen Button and Lewis Hamilton.
My apologies if you were hoping to see Robbie Williams or David Beckham in here, but I had to be a little selective or this post would just keep on going ...
Who do you think should be Man of the Month? You know what to do ... the poll is in the right sidebar.
Monday, April 4, 2011
Friday, April 1, 2011
April Word Count Challenge

Are you looking for a bit of extra motivation to finish your current WIP? The April Word Count challenge is all about giving your writing an extra boost but in a way that doesn't end with you sitting in a corner and eating your hair.
This isn’t a NaNoWriMo so you can factor in time to sleep and do the dishes. Your goal can be as big or as small as you want but don’t forget to take school holidays or a certain royal wedding into account! As tempting as it may be to set yourself a high word count you want to feel good about yourself and your writing at the end of the month, so don't make it the writing equivalent of Mount Everest unless you already have your hiking boots on.
Here are the Minxes goals:
Do you have a word count goal for April? Want to join us? Just leave a comment with your goal word count, grab yourself a blog badge and a word meter (you can get one here) and start bragging about your productivity!
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Author Spotlight - Margaret James
In the Minxy spotlight today is historical author Margaret James, who is chatting to us today about her latest release, The Silver Locket, and its sequel, The Golden Chain, which releases in May.
I was teaching creative writing for the London School of Journalism, writing regular columns and doing author profiles for Writing Magazine, working as an editorial consultant for a script doctoring service (www.storytracks.net), and somehow finding the time to finish a novel called The Penny Bangle for UK hardback publisher Robert Hale, which became my thirteenth published title.
The Silver Locket and its sequel The Golden Chain started life a long time ago on a family holiday in Dorset, which is where Thomas Hardy set many of his novels. We were driving past a beautiful honey-coloured mansion which was obviously empty and needed sympathetic restoration, and I wondered who had lived there a hundred years ago. Rose Courtenay, who became the heroine of The Silver Locket, walked into my head and said – I did! So write about me!
I once wrote a paranormal novel called Elegy for a Queen which was ahead of its time genre-wise and got some lovely rave rejections from mainstream publishers before it was finally published by Solidus, a small imprint in the UK. Paranormal is hugely popular nowadays, so I hope to have written and had published another paranormal romance, as well as another historical romance.
Oh, that’s easy – it’s One Day by David Nicholls, a romantic novel about two people who meet on their last day at university and agree to see each other on the same day every year until – well, I won’t give the story away! The hero and heroine of this novel, Dexter and Emma, became so real for me that as I read their story I could see them, I could hear them, and if they’d walked into the room where I was sitting reading I wouldn’t have been at all surprised.
When I was a teenager I was profoundly moved by Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird, and I thought how wonderful it must be to take your reader to a completely different world. I wanted to see if I could do it, too.
6. Do you find writing love scenes giggle-worthy or cringe-worthy – or neither?
I’m very happy to write love scenes, as long as I can do this in a way I feel is appropriate. I don’t like writing in graphic detail about sexual acts, but neither do I think it is fair to slam the bedroom door in my reader’s face. I always try to engage my reader’s emotional sympathy for my characters, rather than turn my reader on. I try not to make my love scenes read like lists of who did what – who undid whose buttons, who stroked whose hair back from whose forehead, and so on! I don’t like reading love scenes which sound more like instruction manuals for Martians, so I do my best not to write them.
When my first baby was born and my husband couldn’t stop smiling and hugging me, because he was so proud of me and delighted with the baby!
What a long, hard struggle it was going to be to get published! Or maybe not – perhaps, if I’d known, I’d have given up and become a librarian instead. Maybe it’s best not to know about all the hard work that lies ahead after you’ve signed your first contract.
Choose your rut carefully, because you’ll be in it for a long time. My first novel was a historical romance, so I obviously chose the perfect rut for me.
My novel The Silver Locket is a historical romance set during the First World War. My heroine Rose Courtenay is the spoiled, bored only child of wealthy parents, and Rose is expected to marry well. This means marrying the man her parents have chosen, but Rose falls in love with Alex Denham, the local bad boy, who is also a married man. When war breaks out, Rose goes to London to become a nurse, and later she is sent to France, where she meets Alex again and they begin an affair which has huge repercussions – enough for two more novels, in fact.
The sequel to The Silver Locket is The Golden Chain, which is published in May. I’m also working on several other projects, including a romantic comedy set in the present day, and a paranormal romance set in the 1950s. I’ve done a little ghost writing, which was great fun, and I’d like to do more. So I’d love to hear from someone who has a great story to tell and would like me to help them tell it.
You can find out morfe about Margaret and her books at her blog and her website.
Her books are available at:
The Silver Locket: Amazon and Amazon UK
The Golden Chain: Amazon UK
* * *
1. Where were you in your writing career 5 years ago?
I was teaching creative writing for the London School of Journalism, writing regular columns and doing author profiles for Writing Magazine, working as an editorial consultant for a script doctoring service (www.storytracks.net), and somehow finding the time to finish a novel called The Penny Bangle for UK hardback publisher Robert Hale, which became my thirteenth published title.
2. Where did you get the idea from for this particular book?
The Silver Locket and its sequel The Golden Chain started life a long time ago on a family holiday in Dorset, which is where Thomas Hardy set many of his novels. We were driving past a beautiful honey-coloured mansion which was obviously empty and needed sympathetic restoration, and I wondered who had lived there a hundred years ago. Rose Courtenay, who became the heroine of The Silver Locket, walked into my head and said – I did! So write about me!
3. Where do you hope to be in 5 years time?
I once wrote a paranormal novel called Elegy for a Queen which was ahead of its time genre-wise and got some lovely rave rejections from mainstream publishers before it was finally published by Solidus, a small imprint in the UK. Paranormal is hugely popular nowadays, so I hope to have written and had published another paranormal romance, as well as another historical romance.
4. Which was the last book you read that you wish you'd written?
Oh, that’s easy – it’s One Day by David Nicholls, a romantic novel about two people who meet on their last day at university and agree to see each other on the same day every year until – well, I won’t give the story away! The hero and heroine of this novel, Dexter and Emma, became so real for me that as I read their story I could see them, I could hear them, and if they’d walked into the room where I was sitting reading I wouldn’t have been at all surprised.
5. Was there any particular author or book that made you want to be a writer?
When I was a teenager I was profoundly moved by Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird, and I thought how wonderful it must be to take your reader to a completely different world. I wanted to see if I could do it, too.
6. Do you find writing love scenes giggle-worthy or cringe-worthy – or neither?
I’m very happy to write love scenes, as long as I can do this in a way I feel is appropriate. I don’t like writing in graphic detail about sexual acts, but neither do I think it is fair to slam the bedroom door in my reader’s face. I always try to engage my reader’s emotional sympathy for my characters, rather than turn my reader on. I try not to make my love scenes read like lists of who did what – who undid whose buttons, who stroked whose hair back from whose forehead, and so on! I don’t like reading love scenes which sound more like instruction manuals for Martians, so I do my best not to write them.
7. What's the most romantic moment of your life so far?
When my first baby was born and my husband couldn’t stop smiling and hugging me, because he was so proud of me and delighted with the baby!
8. What do you wish you'd known about being an author before you were pubbed?
What a long, hard struggle it was going to be to get published! Or maybe not – perhaps, if I’d known, I’d have given up and become a librarian instead. Maybe it’s best not to know about all the hard work that lies ahead after you’ve signed your first contract.
9. What's the best writing advice you've ever been given?
Choose your rut carefully, because you’ll be in it for a long time. My first novel was a historical romance, so I obviously chose the perfect rut for me.
10. Tell us about your latest release.
My novel The Silver Locket is a historical romance set during the First World War. My heroine Rose Courtenay is the spoiled, bored only child of wealthy parents, and Rose is expected to marry well. This means marrying the man her parents have chosen, but Rose falls in love with Alex Denham, the local bad boy, who is also a married man. When war breaks out, Rose goes to London to become a nurse, and later she is sent to France, where she meets Alex again and they begin an affair which has huge repercussions – enough for two more novels, in fact.
11. What’s next for you?
The sequel to The Silver Locket is The Golden Chain, which is published in May. I’m also working on several other projects, including a romantic comedy set in the present day, and a paranormal romance set in the 1950s. I’ve done a little ghost writing, which was great fun, and I’d like to do more. So I’d love to hear from someone who has a great story to tell and would like me to help them tell it.
You can find out morfe about Margaret and her books at her blog and her website.
Her books are available at:
The Silver Locket: Amazon and Amazon UK
The Golden Chain: Amazon UK
Monday, March 28, 2011
Fantastic, Fantastic, Fantastic
Look who won our Hot Scotsman Poll - and look how pretty....
Anyone who knows me will understand how delighted I am with this outcome. And the win has inspired me to relive my night with John Barrowman (unfortunately, there were about 2,000 other people also there, but we'll gloss over that).
My party sat happily in our third row seats and could almost have reached out to touch him. A lovely friend had suggested that we might be close enough to smell him - alas, not quite. But we were close enough to see that he looked as though he would smell nice.
He sang his little heart out. And his energetic dancing resulted in a pair of split trousers that revealed a pert behind, clad in only the softest, whitest cotton. Even though I'm not entirely sure it wasn't deliberate, the audience screamed in delight at the sight of his - very clean - underpants.
Audience participation seemed the order of the day. A woman sitting behind us shouted that she loved JB - then lamented that it was a wasted dream. Another woman, sitting next to me, danced in her seat all night and stopped only to shout her opinion that JB should take his torn trousers off.
The show was being filmed for a DVD. I immediately decided to panic in case I was in the finished product. I don't look good in videos - as opposed to in my own head where I look like Cindy Crawford.
Having now watched said DVD, I can confirm that the only part of me visible is my arm. And my arm could be the identical twin of Cindy Crawford's arm.
My party sat happily in our third row seats and could almost have reached out to touch him. A lovely friend had suggested that we might be close enough to smell him - alas, not quite. But we were close enough to see that he looked as though he would smell nice.
He sang his little heart out. And his energetic dancing resulted in a pair of split trousers that revealed a pert behind, clad in only the softest, whitest cotton. Even though I'm not entirely sure it wasn't deliberate, the audience screamed in delight at the sight of his - very clean - underpants.
Audience participation seemed the order of the day. A woman sitting behind us shouted that she loved JB - then lamented that it was a wasted dream. Another woman, sitting next to me, danced in her seat all night and stopped only to shout her opinion that JB should take his torn trousers off.
The show was being filmed for a DVD. I immediately decided to panic in case I was in the finished product. I don't look good in videos - as opposed to in my own head where I look like Cindy Crawford.
Having now watched said DVD, I can confirm that the only part of me visible is my arm. And my arm could be the identical twin of Cindy Crawford's arm.
Labels:
John Barrowman,
Man of the Month poll
Friday, March 25, 2011
Anything Goes Friday
Are you unpublished? You could win £1,000 or a runner-up prize of £100 by entering a synopsis and the first chapter of your novel in the 2012 Harry Bowling Prize for New Writing Contest. The judges are looking for urban settings, great characters, romance and drama. The deadline for entries is 30th September 2011. For more information, rules, entry forms and comments from past winners visit http://www.harrybowlingprize.co.uk/.***
A year of mentorship with bestselling Australian romance author Valerie Parv is up for grabs again. Just send an 800 word synopsis and the first 12,500 words of your category or single title manuscript by 8th April 2011 to be in the running. For more information click here.
***
Have you heard of Operation: Auction? In just days it will be launched on eBay to help raise money for one of the romance community’s own. There’s some fantastic items up on the block including editorial critiques, author critiques, the opportunity to have a character named after you in an author’s next book, meet and greets with editors, gift baskets, book trailer designs, advertising, autographed books, complete book series and gift certificates.
There’s something for everyone and it’s for a great cause! The auction will start March 27 and close April 1. You can book mark the auction site here.
Donations are also welcome and can be made via PayPal on the Operation: Auction website.
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