Her Runaway Lady, my playlist

I almost always have music playing when I’m writing or editing. I put together playlists for each book so I can get myself in the right mood. Here are all the songs I’ve been listening to while writing and editing Her Runaway Lady, a sapphic romance set in Paris in the 1880s. The setting is a Belle Epoque That Never Was but the music in this playlist, titled Sapphos, is all over the place.

It includes Fever Ray, k.d. lang, Billie Eilish, Unwoman, Sinead O’Connor, Morphine, Satie, songs from the Moulin Rouge soundtrack, Cat Stevens, Kate Bush, Baby Rose, Girlpool, Suzanne Vega, yeule, Saint Avangeline, Kiki Rockwell, Aimee Mann, Nouvelle Vague, Florence + the Machine, Christine and the Queens, Julien Baker, dodie, India, Tove Lo, Cecile Chaminade, Arlo Parks, Floor Cry, chloe moriondo, Debussy, Jill Tracy, Willow, and Sharon Van Etten.

These songs have ALL the feels of two young women falling in love but resisting that with everything they’ve got.

If you listen to it, leave a comment and let me know what your favorite track is.

Chat with the author: Melissa Addey

Melissa Addey writes historical fiction and has just released her first Regency romance, Lady for a Season, a delightful addition to the genre. 
I asked her about her book and writing in general. Here's what she has to say.

What were the differences between writing historical fiction and historical romance and why did you try that new genre?

I’d just finished a series set in Ancient Rome which follows the backstage team of the Colosseum as they stage the gladiatorial Games. Some of the material was quite dark and I wanted something lighter. I thought writing a Regency romance would be full of pretty clothes, elegant manners and falling in love – so I wrote Lady for a Season and it’s been all of those things but also came with darker elements. History isn’t all sunshine! It’s been interesting just how shocked romance readers have been about some of those darker elements compared to my usual historical fiction readers, I think less pleasant parts of the Regency era are sometimes skimmed over, but I wanted my world to be accurate. I think it’s a warm love story and definitely a romantic ending, but it starts a little bleakly. My books have always had a romantic streak but I knew with a proper romance I’d have to make sure romance was always front and centre, I learnt a lot by reading many other Regency romances and seeing what I liked about that genre. I found my ‘mentor’ in Mary Balogh, who I feel often brings in something unexpected from the era which makes the romance harder but adds a lot of authenticity. I hope I can do the same.

What inspired you to write this book?

I had this idea of a My Fair Lady makeover for a girl pretending to be a lady, but also what happens if you’re locked away as ‘mad’ (which covered rather a lot of conditions in those times, many of them not really serious mental health conditions at all) and then have to come out of that place and be launched into high society? I like that it isn’t just Maggie (a maid) who is out of place, it’s Edward too, because although he was born into the ton, he’s been locked away for a long time and he doubts himself. I wanted them to grow together. And I’ll admit I liked the My Fair Lady element of making over Maggie, I spent an entire morning of research just creating a moodboard of her entire wardrobe, choosing pretty bonnets and gowns! You can see a fair bit of it on the Pinterest page for the book. https://www.pinterest.co.uk/melissaaddey/lady-for-a-season/

Who is your favourite character and why?

Although I love Maggie and Edward as the main characters and really like that they have an equal journey to feel sure of themselves and know their own worth, I got a surprise while writing when Honora (Lady Fortescue) opened her mouth. I plot my books, but my notes just said I wanted her to be a friend to Maggie and not be intimidated by high society because she was so intimately part of it. I wrote her opening lines where she lists all the eligible bachelors of the season and comments on each of them and found myself thinking “Oh, you’re a lot of fun.” I liked that she knew what the rules were but also could see high society for what it really is and make fun of it. She’s very scathing of that hallowed institution, Almack’s! She will get a book of her own as part of the series one day, as will many other minor characters… try and spot them as you read! I also liked Old John, the head of the stables. He says something important to Edward which made me (and Edward) a little misty-eyed. Often, it’s minor characters who catch my attention because I’ve spent so much time thinking about the main characters that I know them intimately but the characters around them may surprise me once I start writing.

Where do you write your books?

I’m very lucky to have a little office in my house, one whole wall is books and papers (mostly research) and I face the window. I have plants along the windowsill, including a cactus which started out the size of my thumb and now has turned into a huge mad Dr-Seuss-like creature with octopi-like tentacles everywhere, I love it. I have a little space just by my computer screen currently full of pretty shells as a sort of visual mood board for the next book I’m writing, The Viscount’s Pearl, another Regency romance in a standalone series I have planned. The series is called the Regency Outsiders because the main characters are somewhat out of the norm but still need to play by the rules of the ton

What’s your go to beverage while writing?

In winter, Redbush Chai by Dragonfly Teas, it’s yummy. In summer, 1/3 beetroot juice topped up with ice and sparkling water, very refreshing though it does make it look like I’m downing pints of red wine!

If you’d like to explore Melissa’s writing, check out her website at www.MelissaAddey.com. If you’re a fan of historical fiction, you won’t be disappointed!

Book review: Courting the Sun

Courting the Sun, a novel of Versailles by Peggy Joque Williams is one of the better historical fiction novels I have read this year.

It’s a beautifully written, evocative story of a country girl swept into the court of the Sun King. I felt immersed in the world of 18th century Amiens and later Paris and Versailles, as seen through the eyes of an innocent (but thankfully not stupid) young girl, Sylvienne. She was excited to experience life beyond her small town but I loved that she didn’t make any truly reckless decisions despite being completely out of her element at the Sun King’s Court. She acted more like a girl of the time period not a modern teenager and I deeply appreciated that veracity to history. The other characters were all well crafted as well, from King Louis and his mistress Athenais to the people of Amiens and Sylvienne’s friends in Amiens.

The descriptions of the clothing worn at Court were swoon worthy and so vivid. As you may remember, I LOVE fancy dress and this book has ALL the clothes. Yum.

I also loved that difficult emotional situations were resolved realistically with respect to both the characters and the society of the time. No hand waving magic fixes for romance here.

The book really took me back in time which was so much fun.

Truly an enjoyable read!

I received an advance review copy for free.

It’s Release Day for The Cultist’s Wife!

This book o’ mine had a long, strange, and winding journey to publication but it’s HERE.

Long time readers of this blog first encountered it as a story about a little girl going to the Bahamas called Sand and Bones. Then I re-wrote it to be Clara’s story, and it became Escaping Andronicus. And then I let my Beta readers (thank you Dover and Thena!) at it (again) and it was finally titled The Cultist’s Wife.

Then it sat in my To Be Edited folder while I worked on The Vitruvian Mask because I had people asking me for a sequel to The Archimedean Heart and I am nothing if not responsive to my readers. <grin>

But finally, I returned to this book and polished it up to a shine. I had my developmental editor give it another pass. A sensitivity reader took a look at it from a Black Bahamian perspective. I hired a proofreader (thanks, Alison!) and got a great cover designer (Kelley York at Sleepy Fox Studios). I think it’s the story I wanted to tell now.

I have had some lovely people look at the ARCs and wanted to share snippets of their reviews:

The book took my breath away…

It had everything that I was looking for…

I was so enthralled in this story I couldn’t stop thinking about it when I couldn’t be reading it.

This was a quick read and it sucked me in right away!

Read this in 2 days. Very readable!

Blushing emoji

Awww, you folks are so sweet! <BLUSH> I was so pleased to read these reviews!

If you want your own copy, The Cultist’s Wife is on sale through the month of May.

It’s part of a promo package with a ton of other horror, mystery, and suspense books here or by itself here.

SNEAK PEAK: The Cultist’s Wife

Near Bath, England, 1908

Fragrant smoke swirled around Clara, its spicy, musky scent relaxing her. She breathed deeply, released from her corset’s constraints. She was free for at least an hour or two this morning before her obligations descended again. Clara’s heavy silk robe caressed her body and she shivered with pleasure. She settled more comfortably onto the large cushion on the floor of her darkened sitting room and focused on the single candle flame in front of her.

A childish voice shrieked outside her sitting room. Clara sighed and glanced at the door.

Can’t Nanny manage the children for an hour? I just need some time to myself.

The noise faded and her sitting room grew quiet. She took a long steadying breath, trying to regain her inner peace. Her reading into Esoterica and Spiritualism had hinted at possibilities of life beyond the constraints and expectations of society. Her marriage, her home, even having children had all been others’ choices. She needed guidance on how to become her own person, to find her own happiness. Her knees ached as she knelt on the cushion, and she shifted. Her feet were numb and tingling. She wiggled her toes and exhaled.

How do the gurus sit like this for hours?

Gathering her focus again, she determined to sit still until her spirit guide manifested and gave her the advice she sought. She had never actually seen her spirit guide or spoken to him, but her references assured her of his presence. She just needed to focus long enough. It had been so much easier to see the spirit world when she was a child. Clara leaned forward and sprinkled more incense on the brazier. A cloud billowed up and she watched as patterns formed in the musky, intoxicating smoke. Coughing a little, Clara squinted in the darkness.

Was that a face in the smoke? Could he be manifesting to her finally?

Clara struggled to sit still. Her body tensed with excitement and her breathing came fast and shallow. The image coalesced further, and the face began to look familiar. She squinted in the gloom.

That face…it’s so familiar. Who is it? Oh no…it can’t be…

Disappointment fell heavy upon her. The face in the smoke resembled her long-absent husband Theophilus. But why would her spirit guide look like him? Clara scowled at the likeness of her husband’s face. This apparition couldn’t be her spirit guide. She had somehow conjured up a vision of Theophilus. Her heart thumped hard. Why should he appear to her now when he had been in the Bahamas for five years? Was he dead and his ghost was haunting her? As if in answer to her questioning, the mouth opened in a silent scream and the eyes grew wide in terror. Clara gasped and cringed back from the brazier. Cold crept across her skin. She shivered and reached for her shawl, draping it around her shoulders without shifting her stare from the phantasm. It continued to scream without making a sound, its gaping mouth opening and closing. She pulled the shawl closer, her hands clenching the fabric.

The ghosts I saw as a child never looked like that. I don’t think he’s dead. Perhaps he’s in danger.

The smoke drifted higher, and the phantasm dissipated. Tears filled her eyes. Clara rose off her pillow, wincing at the tingling in her feet. Theophilus’s portrait above the mantel, illuminated by the single candle, glared down at her. Life with that cold, brutal man had been joyless. She glowered back at the image, wishing she had the courage to take the painting down.

I wanted insight into becoming happy. Does the road to my happiness lie with helping Theophilus?

She shook her head, remembering all the times when he had laughed at her spiritual explorations. He would find it ludicrous if she told him about having a vision of him being in trouble. But she had been seeking guidance from her spirit guide. Would she have to go to the Bahamas to help Theophilus? She paced across the little sitting room to the window and pulled back the heavy drapes. The misty green countryside stretched away into the distance.

I don’t want to leave England to be with Theophilus. He’ll take over my life like he did when he was here.

Tears welled up in her eyes and she gulped, trying to suppress them. They poured hot down her cheeks. Clara pressed her trembling hands against her face, but the tears kept coming. Her sobs shook her body and she moaned, trying to catch her breath.

Stop it, stop it. Control yourself, Clara.

She shoved a fist into her mouth to stifle the undignified sounds and sank to her knees, head resting on the windowsill. She fought the urge to shriek her fury.

I can’t go. I hate him. I hate him.

Clara sucked in a harsh breath, shuddering. The anger dissipated as quickly as it had overtaken her, leaving Clara weak and empty, her face wet. She pulled out a handkerchief and wiped her tears away. She’d need to repair her ravaged face before tea. She looked back at the brazier. The manifestation had been so vivid. Was it a true seeing or guilt over her hatred of her husband? She couldn’t give up her quest for happiness to go to Theophilus because of this vision. Could she?

On a remote island in the Bahamas, Clara is drawn into her husband’s cloistered cult. As her children explore, they reveal the cult’s corruption but no one will listen. Will Clara realize the danger they’re all in?

Get your copy online:
https://books2read.com/CultistsWife