The Beauty Bride, book one of my Jewels of Kinfairlie series of medieval Scottish romances, is a free read through the end of December. If you haven’t come to Ravensmuir yet, here’s a gret chance to do so!
More cherished than gold are the Jewels of Kinfairlie, and only the worthiest may fight for their love…The Laird of Kinfairlie has unmarried sisters, each a gem in her own right. And he has no choice but to see them all wed in haste.
Lady Madeline’s heart is not for sale…especially not to a notorious outlaw like Rhys FitzHenry. Yet Madeline’s hand has been sold, to none other than this battle-weary warrior with a price on his head. A more dutiful maiden might cede to the Laird’s command and meekly accept her fate, but Madeline has never been obedient. She decides to run away, though she never dreams that Rhys will pursue her.
She does not expect this taciturn man to woo her with fanciful stories, much less that each of his enthralling tales will reveal a scar upon his shielded soul. She never imagines that a man like Rhys could imperil her own heart while revealing so little of his own feelings. When Rhys’ past threatens his future, Madeline takes a leap of faith. She dares to believe him innocent—and risks her own life to pursue a passion more priceless than the rarest gem.
Claire Delacroix is always a winner for me with her tales of chivalry, passion and lush romance—I simply love her books. I found this one to be a great read, and recommend it highly to anyone liking a rousing, medieval-period romance. Five angels!
My Knights & Rogues Book Club launches today at Ream.
Each month, subscribers will have access to four stories (mostly full-length books) as we work through my various series. This tier is like a lending library or a streaming service – subscribers have access to the content for 30 days. It’s incredible I have enough completed books to fill an entire year but there you go. LOTS of books to read!
I’m looking forward to the community forum discussions on my books and will be popping in there each week. This is still evolving but maybe we’ll make a regular Q&A or a scheduled time for me to be there. One fun thing about Ream is that it supports features like reader polls, so we can figure out what’s most appealing to everyone. I’ll also be able to share additional resources for each series, like Pinterest links, blog posts about research, character lists or family trees, so that we can immerse ourselves in that world for the month or so.
Here’s the planned schedule of books for the first year:
November 2023 – The Bride Quest (The Princess, The Damsel, The Heiress and The Countess.)
December 2023 – The Bride Quest continued (The Beauty, The Temptress and Easter at Airdfinnan and Christmas at Tullymullagh).
January 2024 – The Rogues of Ravensmuir (The Rogue, The Scoundrel and The Warrior) and the beginning of The Jewels of Kinfairlie (The Beauty Bride).
February 2024 – More Jewels of Kinfairlie (The Rose Red Bride, The Snow White Bride and The Ballad of Rosamunde) and the beginning of The True Love Brides (The Renegade’s Heart).
March 2024 – More of The True Love Brides (The Highlander’s Curse, The Frost Maiden’s Kiss and The Warrior’s Prize) and the beginning of The Brides of Inverfyre (The Mercenary’s Bride).
April 2024 – More of The Brides of Inverfyre (The Runaway Bride and The Stolen Bride) plus Unicorn Bride and Pearl Beyond Price.
May 2024 – The Champions of St. Euphemia (The Crusader’s Bride, The Crusader’s Heart, The Crusader’s Kiss, and The Crusader’s Vow.)
June 2024 – The finale of The Champions of St. Euphemia (The Crusader’s Handfast) and Rogues & Angels (One Knight Enchanted, One Knight’s Return and One Knight’s Desire).
July 2024 – Blood Brothers (The Wolf & the Witch, The Hunter & the Heiress, The Dragon & the Damsel, and The Scot & the Sorceress).
August 2024 – the time travels (The Last Highlander, The Moonstone, Once Upon a Kiss and Love Potion #9).
September 2024 – The Brides of North Barrows (Something Wicked This Way Comes, A Duke by Any Other Name, A Baron for All Seasons and A Most Inconvenient Earl).
October 2024 – The Ladies’ Essential Guide to the Art of Seduction (The Christmas Conquest, The Masquerade of the Marchioness, The Widow’s Wager and The Hellion’s Heart).
It’s possible that there will be changes as we go – will there be a fourth Rogues & Angels book by June? – so be prepared for some tweaks. Either way, you’ll read a lot of medieval romance!
Links are live for the print editions of The Scot & the Sorceress! Murdoch and Nyssa’s story is available in both a trade paperback edition and a large print hardcover edition. Some links are still populating, but the most popular ones are live.
Remember that there will be collectors’ hard cover editions of all four Blood Brothers books, coming to Kickstarter in February 2024.
Yesterday, I told you a bit about my new Ream subscriptions. Today, I thought we’d talk a bit more about my Knights & Rogues Book Club, which will be launch at Ream beginning November 1.
Each month, subscribers will have access to four stories (mostly full-length books) as we work through my various series. This tier is like a lending library or a streaming service – subscribers have access to the content for 30 days. It’s incredible I have enough completed books to fill an entire year but there you go. LOTS of books to read!
I’m looking forward to the community forum discussions on my books and will be popping in there each week. This is still evolving but maybe we’ll make a regular Q&A or a scheduled time for me to be there. One fun thing about Ream is that it supports features like reader polls, so we can figure out what’s most appealing to everyone. I’ll also be able to share additional resources for each series, like Pinterest links, blog posts about research, character lists or family trees, so that we can immerse ourselves in that world for the month or so.
Here’s the planned schedule of books for the first year:
November 2023 – The Bride Quest (The Princess, The Damsel, The Heiress and The Countess.)
December 2023 – The Bride Quest continued (The Beauty, The Temptress and Easter at Airdfinnan and Christmas at Tullymullagh).
January 2024 – The Rogues of Ravensmuir (The Rogue, The Scoundrel and The Warrior) and the beginning of The Jewels of Kinfairlie (The Beauty Bride).
February 2024 – More Jewels of Kinfairlie (The Rose Red Bride, The Snow White Bride and The Ballad of Rosamunde) and the beginning of The True Love Brides (The Renegade’s Heart).
March 2024 – More of The True Love Brides (The Highlander’s Curse, The Frost Maiden’s Kiss and The Warrior’s Prize) and the beginning of The Brides of Inverfyre (The Mercenary’s Bride).
April 2024 – More of The Brides of Inverfyre (The Runaway Bride and The Stolen Bride) plus Unicorn Bride and Pearl Beyond Price.
May 2024 – The Champions of St. Euphemia (The Crusader’s Bride, The Crusader’s Heart, The Crusader’s Kiss, and The Crusader’s Vow.)
June 2024 – The finale of The Champions of St. Euphemia (The Crusader’s Handfast) and Rogues & Angels (One Knight Enchanted, One Knight’s Return and One Knight’s Desire).
July 2024 – Blood Brothers (The Wolf & the Witch, The Hunter & the Heiress, The Dragon & the Damsel, and The Scot & the Sorceress).
August 2024 – the time travels (The Last Highlander, The Moonstone, Once Upon a Kiss and Love Potion #9).
September 2024 – The Brides of North Barrows (Something Wicked This Way Comes, A Duke by Any Other Name, A Baron for All Seasons and A Most Inconvenient Earl).
October 2024 – The Ladies’ Essential Guide to the Art of Seduction (The Christmas Conquest, The Masquerade of the Marchioness, The Widow’s Wager and The Hellion’s Heart).
It’s possible that there will be changes as we go – will there be a fourth Rogues & Angels book by June? – so be prepared for some tweaks. Either way, you’ll read a lot of medieval romance!
Taking a character who has been a villain in one book, then making him the hero in his own book is a challenge I enjoy. It only makes sense to me that if love can conquer all, it can also reveal the hidden goodness in a character and redeem him. (I’ve never done this for a heroine, though. Hmm.) The thing is that these books, which are tough to write, invariably turn out to be among my favorites of my own books.
My first decision to do this was with Gawain, the wicked brother of Merlyn in The Rogue. Gawain was trouble but he also had a certain charm, along with his disregard for anyone other than himself. He was a clever character, raised to be the thief he was, and very good at his so-called profession. I thought of him as kind of a James Bond character, which prompted me to look deeper, since James Bond has a history that drives his choices.
I also thought Gawain was due for a surprise. He was accustomed to things going exactly the way he planned them. What would unexpected challenges do to this confident thief? What about being bested by someone else? Enter Evangeline, an unhappy heiress determined to change her future, and prepared to do whatever is necessary to make it so—including seducing a thief and stealing a prize from him. Repeatedly. Their book is The Scoundrel. I loved these two together and how Evangeline compelled Gawain to discover his lost honor. Here’s the moment that Gawain realizes what’s happened:
It was remarkable, for I could have spent a pleasant night betwixt the lady’s thighs, but had denied my own pleasure to protect her heart.
Chivalry, which I had long believed to be dead and gone from this world unlamented, had proven to be hidden in the most unlikely of places—it had been nestled in my very marrow, and had revealed itself at a most inconvenient time.
I saw now why I had always avoided noble deeds—I had slept alone, awakened alone, been relieved of my valuables, and all because of my own misguided urge to warn the lady away from me. Gallantry, in my opinion this morn, was of less merit than most men believed.
—from The Scoundrel
I redeemed a couple of heroes on my Cooke brand next, including the happy-go-lucky and indulged youngest son in the Coxwell family, in All or Nothing. Zach has the ability to make Jen laugh, something she’s forgotten in her battle with breast cancer. She’s learned her lesson about handsome guys with easy charm, though—and how quickly they jump ship when things get tough—so Zach digs in to prove her assumptions wrong. Along the way, he learns that there’s something (or someone) he cares about after all, though Jen isn’t easy to convince. I love their story, too. 🙂
My next “villain” to be redeemed was really an outsider. Lorenzo in the Dragonfire Novels has no interest in being a dragon shifter, so doesn’t want anything to do with his kind. He’s built a life as an illusionist and he doesn’t need the distraction of the Pyr war against the Slayers. Of course, no one can deny what or who they are, and Lorenzo is faced to accept his nature when he experiences his firestorm. He has even less desire for a destined mate than to be part of the Pyr team, but when Cassie is targeted and he’s outnumbered, Lorenzo changes his mind. Their story is Flashfire.
Back to my historicals, my next villain to reform his ways was Rafael in The Warrior’s Prize. In the previous book, The Frost Maiden’s Kiss, Rafael is Malcolm’s companion and fellow mercenary, a man concerned solely with his own advantage—until he sees Elizabeth, Malcolm’s sister, and loses his heart with one glimpse. She recognizes the kind of man he is, so Rafael has to change to win her hand (and convince Malcolm of his good intentions).
Rafael is prepared to win Elizabeth’s freedom from a Fae curse, regardless of the price to himself, and independent of whether Elizabeth accepts him afterward. That’s the stuff of a real hero.
The Crusader’s Heart
Wulfe in The Crusader’s Heart was the next hero to learn the power of love. Wulfe isn’t a villain, exactly, but he is very duty-oriented in The Crusader’s Bride and becomes impatient with Gaston for being sentimental. Wulfe’s world is very black-and-white, and he’s practical to a fault. Who better to complicate his perceptions than a widow who has disguised herself as a courtesan, a beauty in need of a warrior’s aid to escape captivity and return home? Even better, Christina is clever and she surprises Wulfe with her perceptiveness. Once these two agree to combine forces, they’re unstoppable.
I love that Wulfe abandons everything he knows to seek a future he can share with Christina, and that he’s the one to surprise her in the end.
It could be argued that three of the Blood Brothers are villains redeemed by love—a former mercenary, Maximilian is no angel when he comes to Kilderrick in The Wolf & the Witch. His half-brother and fellow mercenary, Rafael, is certainly not nobly inclined before he falls in love with Ceara in The Dragon & the Damsel. But I think the greatest villain in the series is Murdoch—until Nyssa sees his truth in The Scot & the Sorceress. Nyssa, a healer, realizes that Murdoch is driven by his grief, and that his sense of honor demands that he keep his word. She not only shows him another way to keep his pledge, but asks for his help with her own quest for vengeance—along the way, we see Murdoch’s protectiveness awakened. I really love this story of the healer and the warrior, since Nyssa and Murdoch heal each other in the end.
I have another villain coming due for his redemption in The Stolen Bride, publishing in December. (Writing these stories is a bit addictive, given how much I like the results!) Ramsay, the hero of this upcoming story, was the villain in The Runaway Bride, the previous book in the Brides of Inverfyre series. In that story, Evangeline, (named for her grandmother, the heroine of The Scoundrel, which brings us nicely full circle) is fascinated by the rebels in the forest who would challenge her father’s claim to Inverfyre. When Ramsay is imprisoned at Inverfyre, she boldly (and secretly) enters the dungeon to bargain with him. You can believe that he will never forget this regal beauty. The Stolen Bride begins when Evangeline leaves Inverfyre for her arranged marriage to a distant lord. Ramsay is disinclined to let her go. Evangeline has no interest in living in a forest hovel. I’m really looking forward to writing this battle of wills, and watching Ramsay change to win his deepest desire—the love of Evangeline.
There’s a little summary of my villains-turned-to-heroes, which also includes many of my favorites of my own books. Have you read them all? Do you like bad boy or troublemakers made heroes? What about villains redeemed by the power of love?