Romance Readers Want to Know Thursdays on the J,Q. Rose Blog |
Besides celebrating with the Irish, we are also throwing a party for Helena's new romance novella, just released last weekend--The Scottish Diamond, a romantic suspense novella.
Be sure to read on to discover how you can receive a free copy of the Palace of Deception, the romantic suspense novella which first introduces us to Lizzie and Leon.
Happy St. Patrick's Day! |
Romance Readers Want to Know by Helena Fairfax
Thanks so much for inviting me to take part in
this series, JQ. I’ve loved getting to know new authors through your posts -
and I love answering readers’ questions!
A question I’ve been asked a few times by readers
is “How do you write a whole book?”
I know exactly what they mean. Even though I’ve
written four full-length books now – and several short stories and novellas – I
still find it both exciting and daunting to be faced with that blank page and
the start of a new novel. It’s a very long way from having an idea for a story,
to actually putting that idea down on paper and creating a full-length novel
out of it.
The way I approach writing a new romance novel is
to have a clear idea of the romantic conflict between the hero and heroine
before I start. What is it that is keeping my characters apart? Why are their
goals in conflict? Why – if they are two attractive, single people – can’t they
get together on page one?
After that, I begin writing the novel, sometimes
with no clear idea of how I’m going to progress – how will I avoid that “saggy
middle”? What happens in chapter twelve? – but as long as I remain true to the
characters, and true to their conflict, I keep writing and keep dreaming up
situations that test this conflict to the max. I’m often hit with inspiration
on the way, which leads me to question two:
“Where do
you find your ideas?”
I love this question, and it’s a source of
endless fascination to me where writers (and all artists) get their creative
ideas from. I wish I had the answer! What I’ve found works well is having an
enquiring mind. I’m quite a curious person (my husband might say “nosy” :) )
and I often find myself wondering “What would happen if…”
I’ve had most of my ideas from asking myself
questions. I love antiques, and while watching a reality TV programme about
antique shops, I started asking myself, “What would it be like to own an
antique shop and be surrounded by these wonderful connections with other lives
in history?” My novel The Antique Love
grew directly out of this question. I dreamed up a heroine who is a romantic
dreamer and who is fascinated by old objects.
I ask myself these questions all the time. Have
you ever walked past a lighted window and cast a surreptitious look inside and
wondered, “Who lives there?” If you are as nosy as me, you could be a writer :)
“Did you
always want to be a writer?” I often get asked this question, too. The
answer is yes – but as a child I was more in love with the idea of being a
published author than actually sitting down to the painful process of writing! There
is a famous quote that goes “It’s a wonderful thing to be a writer. It’s a
terrible thing to write.” (I’m sorry, I can’t remember who said it.) I think
that sums it up. I do love being a writer – I love the days when my book is
released. It’s a very exciting feeling. But the reality of writing is a long,
hard slog to get your book to a publishable state, involving a lot of hard work
and persistence.
# # # #
Here is the blurb to my latest release, The Scottish Diamond:
The Scottish Diamond by Helena Fairfax |
What do
you do when nothing is what it seems…even the man you love?
"Fair is foul, and foul is fair..." When Lizzie Smith starts rehearsing Macbeth with her theatre group in Edinburgh, she's convinced the witches' spells are the cause of a run of terrible luck. Lizzie's bodyguard boyfriend, Léon, is mysteriously turned down for every job he applies for, until he's finally offered the job of guarding "The Scottish Diamond," a fabulous jewel from the country of Montverrier.
But the diamond's previous guard has disappeared in mysterious circumstances. The Scottish Diamond has a history of intrigue and bloody murder, and Lizzie is plagued by nightmares in which Macbeth's witches are warning her of danger.
Then Lizzie discovers she's being followed through the streets of Edinburgh, and it seems her worst fears are about to be realised...
Excerpt
I continued to frown up at him, troubled. He took
my face in his hands and kissed me.
‘I know what it is,’ he said, his eyes twinkling.
‘It’s all your talk of witches and ghosts. Your Scottish superstitions are
rubbing off on me and I’m seeing things in this gloomy weather that aren’t
there at all.’
He swung me into his arms and kissed me again.
After that, Léon dismissed his vigilance as
something brought on by the strangeness of his new city. And once he began his
new job at the Castle, he didn’t mention being followed again, and in fact, all
the tension he’d been showing disappeared, and he became almost his old self.
He left the house with a sense of purpose that had been lacking in his previous
aimless wanderings around Edinburgh. And the best thing was, he was beginning
to understand more and more of our Scottish brogue every day.
I later discovered it wasn’t just our Scottish
way of speaking he was mastering. A few days after he started work, I was in
the kitchen preparing our evening meal, when I heard the front door close and
Léon’s light tread in the hall. Usually he went straight upstairs to change,
but this evening he came directly to the kitchen and put his head round the
door. His eyes brimmed with amusement.
I stepped closer to give him a kiss, and he
pushed the door wide. My mouth fell open. He was dressed in a kilt. The green
tartan cloth was thrown over one broad shoulder in Highland fashion, and the
pleated skirt revealed an inch or two of tanned, muscular leg above a pair of
thick, cream-coloured socks.
‘Wow,’ I stuttered. ‘You look…’ I breathed out in
a long whistle. ‘You look amazing.’
He smiled broadly, showing his white, even teeth
in one of the first real smiles I’d seen him give since we left Europe.
‘This is my new uniform.’ He spread his arms a
little, glancing down at himself. ‘Not a bad effort for a half-Italian,
half-Montverrian. What do you think?’
‘Not bad at all.’ My face decided right then and
there to turn a decided pink, and to hide the fact that I couldn’t keep my eyes
off him, I threw my arms around his neck and planted a kiss below his ear.
His arms encircled me, and he murmured, ‘Ever
made love to a man in a kilt?’
And after that, everything between us was perfect
again. All my worries about Léon wanting to go home to Italy, and all his
former tension vanished, and we were just as we had been during those idyllic two
weeks we’d spent at his home on the Amalfi coast that summer.
But of course, perfect times can’t last forever.
Everything changed when I realised it wasn’t Léon who was being followed. It
was me.
Buy Links for The Scottish Diamond by Helena Fairfax
Amazon US
Amazon CA
About Helena:
Helena Fairfax writes engaging contemporary romances with sympathetic heroines and heroes she's secretly in love with. Her first novel, The Silk Romance, was a contender for the UK's Romantic Novelists' Association New Writers' Scheme Award and a runner-up in the Global Ebook Awards. Helena Fairfax was shortlisted for the Exeter Novel Prize in 2014.
Helena is a British author who was born in Uganda and came to England as a child. She's grown used to the cold now, and these days she lives in an old Victorian mill town in the north of England, right next door to the windswept Yorkshire moors. She walks this romantic landscape every day with her rescue dog, finding it the perfect place to dream up her heroes and her happy endings.
Social Media Links
If you’d like to get in touch, or find out more
about my books, writing, and photos of my settings or the Yorkshire moors where
I live, please follow my newsletter by subscribing here.
All new
subscribers to my newsletter will receive a FREE copy of Palace of Deception – a romantic suspense novella
On Helena's website you can see photos of Edinburgh, Scotland - the setting for The Scottish Romance here
Helena also talks about the superstition that surrounds Macbeth - the Scottish play - in this post.
* * *
Thank
you so much for having me today, JQ. It’s been a lot of fun taking part in this
series! I hope your readers enjoyed my post. If anyone has any more questions –
or any comments at all – I’d love to hear them!
16 comments:
Happy St. Patrick's Day!! I'll be wearing green once I've stopped visiting blogs and finally get out of my pyjamas :) Great interview! Congratulations to Helena. Wishing her success. Have a great day!!
Thank you Nicola. Glad you mentioned the green...I'll need to change when I go out today!
Hi Helena, Thanks so much for participating the Romance Readers Want to Know event this week.
Thanks very much for hosting me today, JQ. And thanks for dropping in, Nicola! I hadn't heard that you get pinched if you don't wear green. Lucky I put on a green shirt this morning!
Hey, JQ & Helena. Oh, yes, Helena, the pinching thing is rampant in elementary schools especially. Even if you're not Irish, you're expected to wear green. I do have mine on, even if it has a tad a aqua with it. :) Best to you with this second book in the series. Thanks for visiting with us yesterday on Sisters of Suspense.
JQ. How much longer does this series run? I would like to send you something if I can fit it in between all the downsizing activities. :) I've shared.
Wonderful excerpt! I can't wait to read more about Lizzie and Léon. And on the topic of "where do you find your ideas?" - I have to say that they find me :)
Hi Marsha,
That's funny about the pinching in schools. I can see why that hasn't caught on in the UK, as here nearly every school has its own uniform - even primary (elementary) schools. In the school I went to it was red blazer, black and red tie and black skirt or trousers. You would get sent home if you didn't wear it. We tried all sorts not to wear the tie :)
I hope JQ can fit you in on her series. I've much enjoyed it!
I love that your ideas find you, Heather - that just describes it exactly sometimes! It's when you're least thinking about it that it just happens. Thanks for dropping in on JQ's blog. I do hope you enjoy Leon and Lizzie's next adventures!
Happy St. Patrick's Day, J Q and Helena! I am wearing two shades of green today. I have a multi-colored sweater on. :)
Interesting questions and great answers. And a wonderful excerpt, Helena.
Best wishes!
Marsha, I could've guessed your Irish green would have an aqua shade! Series will be going through May for sure, but if enough authors want to jump in, I'll extend it to June. Thank you for your interest.
Heather, I guess ideas do find us, don't they? What a clever way to think about it. I'm enjoying reading Helena's Scottish Dream this week. What a wonderful storyteller, rich language, marvelous location. I'm learning a lot about Edinburgh and history. And of course loving the give and take of Lizzie and Leon's relationship.
Hi Susan, Sounds like you definitely had no pinching on St Patt's Day--2 shades of green! Hope you had a fun day. Thanks for including a visit with Helena and me in your day.
Thanks so much for dropping in, Susan. I have quite a few Irish cousins who live in Chicago (I believe there's a big Irish community there). I must ask them if they, too, wore green!
Thank you so much for hosting me on St Patrick's day, JQ. It made the day especially fun. And thanks so much for your kind words regarding the Scottish Diamond. I'm so thrilled you're enjoying it. (And relieved!)
Have a lovely weekend!
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