Lorraine Heath | Intrigued with Anglomania

I saw one political cartoon of the time that showed an old, crotchety looking fellow--obviously an aristocrat--kneeling before a young, haughty woman. The caption read, "American heiresses, what will you bid?" It was, of course, making sport of the American obsession with the nobility.
What will you bid? That phrasing stayed with me for a while and one day, I had a vision of a penniless aristocrat who didn't want to bother with courtship. Being pragmatic, he invited all the American fathers, who he was certain were tired of the Season, and told them that he'd marry the daughter of the man willing to pay the best settlement. The auction began, and he finds himself betrothed to the one daughter he'd hoped not to marry. Of course! Could it be any other way?

As a writer, I always feel like I should be in charge of the characters, but the truth is that they're usually the ones in charge--down to the minutest detail, including their names. I recently was struggling with writing a story, changed the hero's name, and the story flowed along swimmingly after that. Who would have thought something so simple could provide such a stumbling block?
Have you ever read a novel and thought--this character's name is wrong? Who was the character and what should his name have been?
My best,
Lorraine
Visit Lorraine's website
PS. I thoroughly enjoy writing my stories set in England, but as you may know my earlier stories were set in Texas--which I also thoroughly enjoyed writing. My mom was British, my dad a Texan, so I'm quite fond of both settings. But going back to my earlier writing roots (although before I wrote my first Texas-set book, I was writing medieval-set stories--did you know that?), I recently joined forces with a group of writers who write westerns and we just launched http://www.petticoatsandpistols.com. Its purpose is to provide a place where readers who love western romance can find information on the latest books and writers of romance can find sources. It's a lovely group of ladies, and I'm pleased to be included with them. I hope you'll drop by and visit. We have a very yummy cowboy puzzle that you can have fun with.
Labels: Historical, Lorraine Heath, Romance
1 Comments:
Good morning, Lorraine! I'm really looking forward to Just Wicked Enough. What a yummy cover! Medievals? Since when?
Tracy Garrett
TOUCH OF TEXAS, October, 2007
www.tracygarrett.com
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