Grace's Mosaic Moments


Thursday, October 19, 2023

The Indomitable Miss Lacey - a Traditional Regency

 * REGENCY REVIVAL *

My last blog post, "What is a Traditional Regency?" did not come out of the blue. After a number of years of writing Regency Gothics, Regency Historicals, the uncategorizable—is there such a word?—Matthew Wolfe series, and a spin-off of my SciFi Fantasy series, Blue Moon Rising, I went back to my long-ago Regency roots with Signet and wrote a genuine Traditional Regency . . . well, almost. Inserting Peru into a Trad Regency may be a bit of a stretch! 

So, sorry, Gothic fans. No dark & gloomy settings, no dead bodies, no ghosts, no paranormal, no threatened heroine—just London during the Season, though the hero and heroine—a world-traveling spinster and an impoverished earl—also stretch the Trad Regency concept a bit. 

The Indomitable Miss Lacey is available on Amazon and Smashwords (with a 15% free read), and should soon be available on most ebook vendor sites.

Grace note:  I did some in-depth research on Vauxhall for this one and have probably included more than anyone wants to know about the famous pleasure gardens. But after reading about the Dark Walk in so many novels, it was truly satisfying to find out where it was actually located. 

So here is my first Trad Regency in umpteen years:

 


 
Miss Madeline Lacey—world traveler and spinster—is a far cry from the other young ladies making their debut in London society. But instead of wilting into an aging wallflower, she surprises everyone by attracting the attention of a wealthy country gentleman and a newly made rough-about-the-edges earl. Except . . . one lacks the spirit of adventure and the other is allegedly betrothed to the daughter of a marquess. And then there is the problem of what to do with the many artifacts Miss Lacey's father accumulated during eighteen years of exploration, as well as the deep, dark secret that Miss Lacey is not as penniless as society assumes. Disaster looms as sheer stubbornness on the part of both hero and heroine threatens the possibility of Happily Ever After.

~ * ~

For a link to Blair's website, click here. 
 

Thanks for stopping by,

Grace (Blair Bancroft)

Saturday, October 7, 2023

What is a "Traditional Regency"?

As mentioned last week, my daughter and her husband are in Singapore this week, where Mike is in charge of tech for a large convention. On the way, they made a 3-hour stop in Japan, and Susie posted this photo of a toilet at the airport - which, to me, looks more like the cockpit of Cassidy's Cessna. No wonder they had to post a hint for foreign visitors. But, frankly, I'm really intrigued by what all those buttons are meant to do. 



The Conference hotel, Singapore 2023

 Grace note:  nothing like getting paid to stay in a 5-star hotel!


Susie at the Singapore branch of the company
she works for at the Altamonte Mall

 

Singapore skyline, very likely from roof of
hotel in Pic 2 above

(Regular readers will recall that Mike & Susie have been doing alternating conferences in Singapore and London for some years now, including taking the whole family to Singapore in 2019.)

~ * ~

 

What is a "Traditional Regency"? 

Grace Note 1: the comments in the following article do not include the requirements for Harlequin Regency novels, which are a whole 'nother kettle of fish.)

Grace Note 2: I have so many scribbled notes, I scarcely know where to begin, but as someone who's written ten Traditional Regencies, plus six more serious Regency Historicals, eleven Regency Gothics, and seven Regency novellas that range from comedy to scandalous, I'm going to give it a try.

 

A so-called Traditional Regency Romance is based on the early 19th century novels of Jane Austen. A style that was revived and augmented in the 1950s and 60s by the extensive works of Georgette Heyer, who is credited with bringing the genre back into vogue.  

What does "Regency" mean? 

"Regency" literally refers to the period between 1811 and 1820 when the Prince of Wales was named Regent in place of his father, King George III, who had gone mad. In Regency fiction, however, the "allowable" years are 1795-1820. To many, this will make more sense if it's noted this is the time period when Napoleon Bonaparte set out to conquer every country in sight, only meeting his final defeat in 1815 at the Battle of Waterloo. (Although most Trad Regencies are set in a London society seemingly oblivious to the war, I've always preferred to include, wherever possible, the war and its affects on my characters.)

Background on New York publishers and the Regency novel

For many years after the success of Georgette Heyer's novels, Traditional Regency Romances were published by Signet and Kensington. Then somewhere around 2008, SEX - the more graphic the better - swept the publishing world, and those of us writing pristine comedies of manners with nothing more than a kiss here and there were out, the lines shut down, all Trad Regency authors out of a job. Sigh. So what to do?

Most of us ended up in the burgeoning e-book market. Fortunately, our publishers were good about returning the titles to our earlier books, so most of us began by learning how to format our backlist for Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Smashwords, etc.

Below, a list of what I believe makes a Traditional Regency Romance:                 

1.  Overall "feel."  A Trad Regency is basically light-hearted, even though the plots sometimes get a bit out of hand.

2.  Point of View.  Trad Regencies frequently feature multiple Points of View. Not just the Hero and Heroine, but stray glimpses into other characters from relatives to the butler or even a street urchin. 

3.  Writing Style. Trad Regencies often feature long, involved sentences, with lots of commas, semi-colons, and colons. 

4. Vocabulary.   Trad Regencies have their own special vocabulary, based on the well-educated vocabularies of the protagonists in Austen and Heyer. The vocabulary also includes "cant" phrases of the period, most culled from Real Life in London by Pierce Egan (1821) and Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue, by Francis Grose (1811). Any Trad Regency not using some of these phrases is not considered authentic by aficionados of the genre, although I have to admit if we used as many as Ms Heyer does, 21st c. readers would likely wrinkle their noses in disgust (or confusion).

5.  Characters.  The main characters must be from England's Upper Class, preferably titled. Yes, the sons or daughters of second sons of second sons may sometimes sneak in there, as does an occasional daughter of a wealthy "cit" (i.e., merchant class). But for the most part Trad Regencies stick to the upper echelons of society. 

And just as important, characterizations must be diverse and well-delineated:  the interesting, charming, challenging, infuriating, kindly, bombastic, classic busybody, etc. Heroines and secondary females range from shy, wilting, wouldn't-say-boo-to-a-goose to strong-willed, courageous, and willing to fight against male dominance. The heroes and secondary heroes range from titled rakes who vow they will never to marry to responsible gentlemen not averse to finding a wife and an occasional shy young man who thinks love unlikely to come his way.

 6.  Setting.  The setting of a Trad Regency is most frequently London during the spring Season. This can be extended to other "socially acceptable" sites, such as Brighton, Bath, and/or an English country house and nearby village. There may be short scenes elsewhere, but the activities of the London ton (society) is a prime ingredient.

The London sites most frequently used: Mayfair, Bond Street, Hyde Park, Almack's, Tattersall's, Gentleman Jackson's, Manton's; and just out of town, Richmond Park. If you don't know what these places are, you should not attempt to write a Trad Regency.

7.  Descriptions.  Good descriptions of people and places are necessary, most particularly the details of gowns and hats, but not forgetting a nod to the austere garb for men dictated by Beau Brummel, in striking contrast to the elaborate male costumes of the 18th c. (I tend to short clothing description in favor of character delineation, but to each his own.)

8.  Plot.  You will note that Plot is last on the list. Plots in Trad Regencies tend to be thin, little more than a idea that allows the author to display the full panorama of British Upper Class society enjoying life on inherited money (never having worked a day in their lives). Yes, there is always a Romance, but on occasion it can be extremely sketchy. One Georgette Heyer comes to mind - definitely not one of my favorites - where the hero spends the entire book trying to rescue a foolish runaway female, while his supposed love interest languishes away, wondering where he is.

Summary.  It could be said that a Traditional Regency Romance is everything that a Regency Gothic is not. No ghosts, no dead bodies, no paranormal, no dire threats or life-threatening moments. While Trads, even those with strong heroines, tend to be frothy, with numerous touches of comedy. Depictions of life at the very top of England's nobility. Of life in those few short years that saw a sharp change from the lavishness and licentiousness of the 18th century to a more refined, more polite, more conservatively-dressed society. An almost perfect moment before it all disintegrated under the austere disapproval of young Queen Victoria, who was so horrified by the society espoused by her uncle, George IV, that she tore down his palace in London and would have done the same for his summer home in Brighton if it hadn't been rescued by being purchased by the city. To this day, the Pavilion in Brighton is one of the "must sees" for tourists from all over the world. 

Experts on the Regency period - which the Brits call "Late Georgian" - will undoubtedly note all the points I forgot. But this article was written for those who haven't the slightest idea what a Trad Regency is, and I hope it helped.

Additional Notes:

Regency Historical Romances are longer, more serious, more adventurous, and feature more action. But like all romances, no matter how much the Hero and Heroine have suffered, a Happily Ever After is required.

Regency Gothics, as previously stated, feature a lone heroine against the world - tales often embellished by ghosts, the paranormal, deadly threats, scary situations, a continuing sense of gloom and doom. But with the inevitable HEA ending.

Naughty Regencies.  Yes, there are Regency novels that are far from squeaky clean. I ventured into that realm with my Aphrodite Academy series, though those four books are mild compared to some. These novels are at the opposite end of the spectrum from Traditional Regencies. They do, however, depict an aspect of the Regency that existed, though not as blatantly as in the 18th century. Again, HEA required.

Hopefully, if you've managed to plow through the above, you have a better idea of what you'll be getting if you choose a Traditional Regency Romance.

~ * ~

 My featured book this week is my first sale of a Trad Regency to the New York print market. I still remember the moment when I answered "the call" in my kitchen in Venice, Florida. After two lengthy Regency Historicals that had gone to the e-market, I disciplined myself to stick to the expected Trad Regency format and, lo and behold, the Regency editor at Signet (Penguin Putnam) was on the line telling me they wanted The Courtesan's Letters. Wow!  Appallingly, however, the title would later be changed to The Indifferent Earl (which he most certainly was not) as the Marketing Department didn't think "courtesan" would play well in the hinterlands. Sigh. When, many years later, I got my rights back, the book went on Amazon and Smashwords under its original title.  


 
Miss Abigail Todd, the very proper headmistress of an academy for young ladies in Boston, arrives in England to settle her grandmother’s estate, only to discover that her ancestor was la grande Clarisse, the most notorious courtesan of her day. And, to her even greater horror, she herself is the perfect image of her grandmother. Clarisse has left a series of letters detailing commissions Abby must carry out in order to obtain her inheritance (an amount far greater than anticipated). In order to do this, she must accept the assistance of Jared, Earl of Langley, grandson of the man who was Clarisse’s devoted lover for forty years. Has Clarisse created these letters because of love, nostalgia, mischief, vengeance . . . or is she perhaps more interested in matchmaking? The most likely answer: all of the above.

Author’s Note:
The Courtesan’s Letters is suitable reading for Ages 14 & up. Under the Signet title of “The Indifferent Earl,” it was nominated for a RITA award by the Romance Writers of America and was awarded “Regency Romance of the Year” by Romantic Times magazine.
       

Saturday, September 30, 2023

Gallery & Cover Reveal

 Long-time readers of Grace's Mosaic Moments know that even back in the days when most of my blogs were devoted to Writing and Editing tips, I always sneaked in family photos, mostly of the grandgirls. And these days are no different, except the girls are all grown up and doing remarkable things—Hailey majoring in Engineering with the nearby Space Center in mind, Riley a freshman at Stetson, and Cassidy considering a career in the Air Force or as a commercial pilot. As her first step on this long road, below a pic of the license that recently arrived in the mail.


A nostalgic moment as the girls jump the dunes in Dubai, when they accompanied their parents on a business trip to Singapore in 2019.

 

A few weeks ago, Hurricane Idalia tracked north just off the Florida Gulf Coast, churning the seabed along the way, resulting in Susie's best one-dive haul ever:


I believe she said that's a mammoth tooth on the right.

After this triumphant dive, Susie changed her Facebook photo to:


For Gramma Grace's addition to the family achievements, see Cover Reveal at the end of this blog.

A Special note for my surprisingly many readers in Singapore: Susie and her husband Mike will be in Singapore late next week, where he directs the technical support for a convention that meets there every other year. So if you see a curly-haired reddish blonde, old enough to be the mother of the two on the left . . . (Cassidy was in Flight School when this was taken at Susie's birthday party.)

Riley, Hailey, Susie, June 2023

 

 And now, a Gallery of treasures, filched from Facebook:


 


Highway Interchange in China

Yosemite - photo by Leanna Dilbeck

Grand Canyon

Taken 9/11/23 by Margaret Riegert West

Arizona Sunset by Delle Jacobs

 ~ * ~

Delle is also an outstanding Cover Artist. The latest example of the umpteen gorgeous covers she has created for my books since 2011:

 

The London adventures of Miss Madeline Lacey should be available - hopefully - sometime around mid-October.

~ * ~
 
For a link to Blair's website, click here. 
 

Thanks for stopping by,

Grace (Blair Bancroft)


Saturday, September 16, 2023

My Personal View of 9/11

Next Blog - September 30, 2023 

 

Blog draft written on Monday, September 11, 2023

 

Photo from Facebook

 

 MY PERSONAL VIEW OF 9/11

My view of 9/11 is more personal than many, and on this day, the twenty-second anniversary of 9/11/2001, I feel compelled to spell it all out. No, thank God, I was not in New York City but in Venice, Florida, that day. I lost no personal friends and, to the best of my knowledge, have met only one person who was in the towers that day. Nonetheless . . .

My tale begins about two years earlier (best guess, some time in 1999). I lived on a quiet street in South Venice, an unpretentious neighborhood separated from truly delightful downtown Venice by a small airport and the Intracoastal Waterway. As I drove home several times over the course of a few months, I saw a truly unusual sight. South Venice was full of Florida "good ol' boys," retirees from the Mid-west (Venice is a straight run down I-75), and a few stray New Englanders like my parents and myself. Which is a not-too-subtle way of saying, both Venice and South Venice were pretty much lily white. And yet, as I drove home, I saw a strongly Arabic man walking purposefully down my street, heading toward the airport (or possibly the library). He was always highly focused, striding along, looking neither left nor right. And giving off what I have to call non-American vibes. But, hey, this was the U S of A, home to millions of immigrants. Then again, he stood out like a sore thumb in South Venice. In addition, no one walked in South Venice. Bicycles, motorcycles, trucks, cars - yes. Walking? You've got to be kidding!

Fast forward to September 11, 2001. I was at home when the phone rang and my daughter in Orlando called to say, "Turn on your TV!" and abruptly hung up. Like so many, I watched with horror the "accident" at the World Trade Center. I needed to go the library, however, so off I went, where, naturally, I kept an eye on the TV coverage of the disaster - and was standing there, staring at the ceiling-mounted screen, when the second plane hit, and we all realized this was not an accident but an attack. 

No need to rehash the next few days as we all sat, transfixed to our screens, watching the horror unfold. (The hair on my arms is rising while I'm typing this sentence.) The shock of the Pentagon being hit. The heroic passengers who downed their plane rather than let it hit the Capitol building. The horror of the rising body count that would keep on increasing as the First Responders succumbed to illnesses born of their heroism that day.

But back in Venice . . .

On Day 2, the FBI swarmed into Venice, confiscated every computer in the Venice Library (yes, the library where I watched a plane hit the second tower), and shut down a flight school at Venice Airport (a scant mile from my house). And the story came tumbling out:  Mohammed Atta, the head of the airplane hijackers, had coordinated his attackers from the computers in Venice Library. He had lived for months in South Venice - until he was ousted from the home where he was staying for disrespecting the wife of the house. And where did Mohammed Atta learn to fly? At that modest-sized flight school at the Venice Airport. A business that promptly closed, never to open again. Not surprisingly, I compared his photo to the man I had seen a couple of years earlier marching down my street. If he wasn't Mohammad Atta, he was his twin. Interestingly, years later when I took Sarasota County's 8-week Sheriff's Class, one of our speakers mentioned he had been one of the local investigators on the county's ties to 9/11, and when I told him my story, I thought he was going to swallow his tongue. He gulped, hemmed & hawed, and finally came up with something totally inane. Which left no doubt in my mind that the Powers That Be knew that the months just before 9/11 were not Atta's first visit to South Venice, but I suspect since our area already had so much egg on its face, this had been deliberately kept a deep, dark secret. 

Addendum:

Several days after the disaster, I learned that a relative by marriage ( no spring chicken) had been in New York's lower east side that morning, and when all transportation shut down, he had to walk, through the smoke and pandemonium, the long, long distance back to his apartment on the upper west side. Not that he was complaining - he was infinitely grateful that he had made it home alive.

About a year or so later, the speaker at Sarasota's Ivy League Club was a former stockbroker who had walked down from the 82nd story - I believe it was in the second tower. He moved to Florida to get away from it all, but admitted he had been unable to settle back into work. At that time he was simply telling his story to anyone who would listen and hoping he would eventually get his life back to normal. Multiply his story by thousands of others, let alone the trauma of the First Responders, and you begin to understand that the horrendous personal tragedy of 9/11 extended far beyond the loss of the thousands killed that day. And continues to extend not only to those who lived through it, but to their children, and grandchildren.

~ * ~

IN MEMORIAM

To all who died due to the attacks on the World Trade Center, 

the Pentagon, and United Flight 93;

to the Firemen and Policemen who gave their all, 

and to the many who have suffered physical and mental trauma ever since.

Requiescat in Pace

~ * ~

Featured this week, the most "downbeat" of all my books, even though it was written for a Christmas anthology.

 


Marriage, yes. Love, no. Lady Christine Ashworth's glorious Season in London comes to an abrupt close with the death of her father. Her home now belongs to someone else; her fiancé is conspicuous by his absence; and her younger sister is as miserable in their new home as she is. What can she do but accept an offer from the despised heir, even if Christine now considers all men anathema, particularly the perfect stranger who has taken her father's place?

Author's Note: This novella was first published in a Christmas anthology as The Last Surprise, but I always felt it needed more scope. Therefore, ten thousand-plus words have been added. A Lady Learns to Love is a poignant tale of those faced with tragedy, amplified by unforeseen circumstances, who still manage to survive, aided by the spirit of Christmas.

~ * ~
 
For a link to Blair's website, click here. 
 

Thanks for stopping by,

Grace (Blair Bancroft)

                                  

Saturday, September 9, 2023

Reading Note, Recipe & Gallery

 

Some of the drinks served at The Capital Room Bar
 

Though I don't see my favorite - Conservative Lady - blue with a butterfly perched on top.


Busy night at The Capital Room Bar, Sanford, FL

Update on Grace's Recent Reading:

Last week's hurricane (Idalia), though it spared my part of Florida, seemed to usher in a really bad week—perhaps it was the increased humidity adding new aches and pains on top of my eyes plunging into a periodic cycle of going wonky on me. In any event, I turned to the comfort of old favorites on my Kindle, and the need for a Special Note cropped up. 

One of my all-time favorite series of any genre is Lindsay Buroker's SciFi Fantasy, "The Emperor's Edge." Not only is it highly imaginative, full of action, with remarkable characters, but it goes through something like ten books before the hero (anti-hero) even kisses the heroine! But my Special Note is this:  if you are thinking of reading, or re-reading, this series, you will enjoy it more if you read Book 1 of the "Encrypted" series first. Because Book 1 introduces the seventeen-year-old version of the Emperor's assassin, Sicarius, the anti-hero of all eleven volumes of "The Emperor's Edge" series, as well as two VIP characters who reappear in the last volume of the series." 

Warning:  to the best of my recollection, we never get a peek inside Sicarius's head. He is always seen through other people's eyes. (I have always wondered if, when Ms Buroker created him, she intended to use him in his own series, or if she simply found the character she created for Encrypted too intriguing to let him go. ( I. e., a decade or so later, who and what has he become?)


A LOST RECIPE

 As I have mentioned, I am a recipe freak. I could recall making a tasty chicken recipe which included thin lemon slices, but it became lost among my mountains of recipe magazines and not re-discovered until I culled the piles, determinedly packing most of them off to Goodwill (but only after photocopying my favorite recipes, of course). But when I took a second look at the re-discovered recipe, I found a number of oddities, which I am going to list before typing up the original. Here's a look at the photo in One-Pan Recipes (Allrecipies.com)

Keep in mind, however, that the sauce in this recipe is so tasty that it is well worth a bit of hassle to try to figure out what the recipe's author really meant.

 


 Problems:

1.  Photo shows broccoli, but there's no broccoli in the recipe.

2. Recipe calls for 3 chicken breasts, but every package of 3 I saw in the store weighed considerably more than the specified "about 1 lb." I bought a package of two.

3.  Recipe states:  chicken breasts cut into half-inch cutlets, which implies cutting the chicken before cooking, except the photo implies the chicken is not cut until after cooking. (Both times I've made it, I cut the chicken up ahead of time. Will experiment with cooking breasts whole next time.)

3. Recipe states to keep chicken warm in oven while making sauce. It seems to me the chicken could also be put in microwave and gently reheated before pouring the sauce over. (I experimented with keeping chicken warm on Power Level 1; that also worked.)

Warning:  Like so many truly delicious recipes, Chicken Piccata has quite a few steps. Here's a list of what can be done ahead of time.

1.  Slice chicken (if you plan to cut strips before cooking).
2.  Prepare a plastic baggie with flour, salt & pepper. (This is the way my mother taught me to coat chicken, more than half a century ago - except we had to use a brown paper bag.)
3.  Mince garlic.
4.  Slice half a lemon into thin slices. 
5.  Squeeze enough lemons to make 3 tablespoons juice. (Two lemons should be enough for both slices & juice, as long as they're not mere dry excuses for lemons.) 
6.  Mince parsley.
 
Here is the recipe, as printed in One Dish in November 2021: 
 

LEMON CHICKEN PICCATA

3 boneless, skinless chicken breasts (about 1 lb.), cut horizontally into ½" cutlets
¼ teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon black pepper
½ cup flour
2 tablespoons vegetable oil, or as needed*
1 clove garlic, minced
1 cup low-sodium chicken broth
½ lemon, thinly sliced
3 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
2 tablespoons capers, rinsed & drained
3 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons minced Italian parsley
 
1.  Preheat oven to 200°F. Put a serving platter in oven to warm.
2.  Season chicken with salt & pepper, then dredge in flour. Shake off excess. Heat oil in large skillet; pan-fry each breast until golden brown on both sides, about 3 minutes per side. Transfer chicken to platter in oven. Drain oil from skillet, leaving a thin coating.
3.  Add garlic to skillet & cook, stirring, until fragrant, about 20 seconds. Pour in broth. Scrape up any brown bits from the bottom of the skillet. Stir in lemon slices and bring to boil. Cook, stirring occasionally, until sauce reduces to about 2/3 cup, 3-5 minutes.
4.  Add lemon juice and capers; simmer until sauce is further reduced and slightly thickened, about 5 minutes. Drop butter into sauce; stir in. Add parsley; stir in. Remove sauce from heat.
5.  Arrange chicken on serving plate(s); top with sauce.

*I experimented with Pam, which is not a good substitute in this recipe; had to add olive oil before adding garlic. Therefore, use vegetable oil or olive oil; no spray-on.

Repeat:  This is a great sauce, well worth the effort and the confusion about what the instructions mean. I'm guessing the original intent was to cut the chicken into cutlets only after cooking. Enjoy!

~ * ~

This week's featured book:

The background on this one is highly authentic. I ran a costume shop in one of the Gulf Coast's most delightful towns for several years (making c. 85% of the costumes myself).

 

   

Costume designers are not detectives. But when a customer ends up dead in Gwyn Halliday's best Santa suit and a senior friend is threatened, what's a girl to do? And besides, a bit of investigation might promote a better acquaintance with the hunky new police chief, not to mention reestablish an old acquaintance with a friend suffering from PTSD, who now needs her as much as she needs him.

Author's Note:
Golden Beach is an actual Florida Gulf Coast town, whose residents would prefer to keep its real name secret. Only a few of my Golden Beach books have cross-over characters, but all share the same idyllic setting. (Or at least it was before I made bad things happen there.)
~ * ~
 
For a link to Blair's website, click here. 
 

Thanks for stopping by,

Grace (Blair Bancroft)