One Knight Enchanted and KU

One Knight Enchanted, #1 of the Rogues & Angels series of medieval romances by Claire DelacroixOne Knight Enchanted, which is book #1 of the Rogues & Angels series of medieval romances, will be finishing its run in Kindle Unlimited on April 15. After that, it will be available at all portals.

If you are a KU subscriber, don’t miss your chance to read this book free!

Cursed to take the form of the wolf by day, Rolfe de Viandin is skeptical that love can save him. All he wants is to return home from crusade by the Yule and even the pleasures of a magical palace cannot console him…until a beautiful and bold maiden arrives at his gates, seeking sanctuary, and Rolfe’s hope is restored.

Hunted in the forest, Annelise de Sayerne has to surrender her desire to wed for love, as the price of entering the only refuge is marriage to its enigmatic lord. She fears he must be a monster, but once she experiences his kindness, Annelise resolves to find love with her new husband—if she can just claim his heart.

Even as Rolfe is beguiled by his bride and Annelise unravels his secrets, a spurned suitor pursues Annelise, determined to claim her legacy at any price. If Rolfe’s curse is not broken, how can he defend his beloved wife from the villain? Will their future be lost before it is truly won—or will Rolfe be convinced of the power of love in time?

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Me and KU

One Knight Enchanted, #1 of the Rogues & Angels series of medieval romances by Claire DelacroixAs you might recall, I decided to enroll a lot of my books in Kindle Unlimited last August as an experiment. It’s gone reasonably well, but the time has come for this experiment to end. One of the things that feeds success in KU is the regular addition of new content into the program. I’m not publishing a new title every month, which is what seems to work best, and my new titles are being released in wide distribution when they are published instead of into KU. Given this, it turns out the program isn’t an ideal fit for me. I’m glad I tried it and I hope I found some new readers, but it’s time to go back to wide distribution. (Do I hear a cheer from the Nook readers? I think I do! LOL!)

The Beauty Bride, #1 of the Jewels of Kinfairlie series of medieval Scottish romances by Claire DelacroixKU requires a 90 day enrollment period, so it will take a few months for everything to come out of the program and be made available again elsewhere. I’ll update the interiors and upload the books again at each portal. It’ll be under the same ISBN, so if you bought any book before, you’ll be able to download the updated version free. I’ll post when each series is updated at the other portals and the links are here on the site. Here’s a rough schedule, although in each series I have one book that will be early or late.

One Knight Enchanted – goes wide in April

The Jewels of Kinfairlie – goes wide in early May

The True Love Brides – goes wide in late May

The Crusader's Bride, #1 of the Champions of St. Euphemia series of medieval romances by Claire DelacroixThe Champions of St. Euphemia – goes wide in late May
(The Crusader’s Bride is already out of KU and will go wide this week.)

The Rogues of Ravensmuir – goes wide in June

The Bride Quest II – goes wide in late June

The Bride Quest I – goes wide in July

Swag for Readers

I realized that this site didn’t have a swag page, so I’ve added one. It’s under About Claire.

The Crusader's Bride, #1 of the Champions of St. Euphemia series of medieval romances by Claire DelacroixI send out bookmarks, postcards and bookplates free to readers who request them. If there’s anything you’d like, just comment on the Swag for Readers page.

I need to have more covers done in each series before I do bookmarks or postcards for The Brides of Inverfyre, Rogues & Angels and The Brides of North Barrows. I’ll let you know when that happens. 🙂

The Mercenary’s Bride in Print

The Mercenary's Bride, #1 of the Brides of Inverfyre series of medieval Scottish romancesI’ve just created mini-book print versions of The Mercenary’s Bride. I call these “mini-books” because they’re 4.25″ by 7″, almost the same size as mass market paperbacks, but are still print-on-demand.

This makes them an excellent size to give away or donate. I’ve sent 100 copies of this print book to Lori Foster’s Reader-Author Get-Together to go into the goody bags. They won’t be signed—because I’m not an attending author—but I hope the readers in attendance will enjoy the story. RAGT has over 500 attendees so not everyone will get a book, but people will probably swap them around, based on their reading preferences.

If you order a signed print copy of The Mercenary’s Bride from my online store, you get the digital edition for free. After you buy the print copy, you’ll get an email from BookFunnel about the delivery of your ebook. They’ll make sure you get the ePUB or the MOBI on your device of choice. Here’s the buy link for my online store.

An Unexpected Adventure

The Runaway Bride, book #2 of the Brides of Inverfyre series of medieval Scottish romances by Claire DelacroixOver the past few days, I’ve embarked on an unexpected adventure. I’ve been working on a series bible (or world guide) for Ravensmuir, Kinfairlie and Inverfyre. The plan was to compile what I’ve said about these places and characters before writing Ross’s book (The Runaway Bride) to make sure I don’t forget any important details. There are a LOT of details and it’s a much bigger exercise than anticipated. (I should have expected that, given how many books are set in that world, but there you go.)

The thing is that as I’ve been compiling details, I’ve found little gaps in the overall narrative. For example, in The Rogue, Ravensmuir is empty except for Ada and Arnulf when Ysabella arrives with Mavella, Tynan and Fitz. (Well, Merlyn is hiding there, but there are no more servants.) By the end of the book, Ada leaves, Berthe has arrived and Berthe’s parents come to be Merlyn’s seneschal and housekeeper. There’s no mention of men-at-arms or mercenaries hired to defend the keep, much less a captain of the guard. There needs to be one, and Berthe needs an HEA. In The Warrior, the Hawk has a company of loyal warriors and friends who follow him and aid in his quest. Where did he find them? I’m going to guess that he found some of them at Ravensmuir, in service to his uncle.

The Rogue, #1 of the Rogues of Ravensmuir series of medieval Scottish romances by Claire DelacroixSimilarly, by the end of The Rogue, Mavella has married her true love Alasdair, who is Kinfairlie’s miller. Alasdair has adopted his cousin’s fifth son to give that boy a legacy and to give himself an heir. On the downloadable family tree, Mavella and Alasdair are listed as having five unnamed children, the oldest of which is a girl. I left off the cousin’s son, since he isn’t their child. The next time we hear of Kinfairlie’s miller is in The Snow White Bride, when the current miller’s son, Mathew, is encouraged by Alexander to court shy Ceara. Who is that miller? I think he must be Alasdair’s youngest son, which means I need to figure out what happened to the other ones, as well as name some peeps.

The Rose Red Bride, #2 of the Jewels of Kinfairlie series of medieval Scottish romances by Claire DelacroixIn The Rose Red Bride, Alexander tells his sisters the story of the maiden who disappeared through the portal to the realm of the Fae, the one whose Fae suitor left behind a red rose made of ice as her bride price. This maiden was the beautiful daughter of the castellan who managed Kinfairlie keep after it was rebuilt by Merlyn and Ysabella but before Roland and Catherine took command of it. Anthony, the castellan at the beginning of The Beauty Bride is an older gentleman. Could this have been his daughter? What was her story? Where did she go and why? I always intended to write this story, but it’s been pushed aside for a while.

There’s also the story of Roland and Catherine. While we learn in The Beauty Bride that they drowned in 1420 in a shipwreck, they were still married for 25 years and had 8 children. I’m thinking they had a good marriage—plus they inspired a desire to marry for love in their daughters. Theirs must have been a love match. When and where did they meet? We know that Roland and the Hawk of Inverfyre were milk-brothers—when and where did that happen? Merlyn and Ysabella must have journeyed to Sicily, where Gawain and Eglantine were living after the siege of Inverfyre and where the Hawk was born. They must have gone during Ysabella’s second pregnancy or shortly thereafter, which makes sense given that Merlyn continued his trade in textiles from the east. I want to write Catherine and Roland’s story, too.

I haven’t even looked at the True Love Brides series, yet.

I’ve started Berthe’s story. My thinking is that these will be novellas or short stories, but we’ll see how it goes. I don’t tend to write short and I know you all prefer longer stories anyway. I’m going to call this collection Kinfairlie Tales. You’ll find a page for it under the Ravensmuir tab, after the Brides of Inverfyre.

And here’s my question for you today: would you be interested in the world guide for Ravensmuir, Kinfairlie and Inverfyre? I’ll be compiling it for my own reference, but could publish it as well. What do you think?