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Showing posts with label courtney milan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label courtney milan. Show all posts

10 September 2013

Review: The Heiress Effect by Courtney Milan

Author: Courtney Milan
Publication Date: July 15, 2013
Publisher: Courtney Milan
Genre: Adult Historical Romance
Find It: GoodreadsAmazonB&NBook Depository
Source: Publisher via NetGalley

Miss Jane Fairfield can’t do anything right. When she’s in company, she always says the wrong thing—and rather too much of it. No matter how costly they are, her gowns fall on the unfortunate side of fashion. Even her immense dowry can’t save her from being an object of derision.

And that’s precisely what she wants. She’ll do anything, even risk humiliation, if it means she can stay unmarried and keep her sister safe.

Mr. Oliver Marshall has to do everything right. He’s the bastard son of a duke, raised in humble circumstances—and he intends to give voice and power to the common people. If he makes one false step, he’ll never get the chance to accomplish anything. He doesn’t need to come to the rescue of the wrong woman. He certainly doesn’t need to fall in love with her. But there’s something about the lovely, courageous Jane that he can’t resist…even though it could mean the ruin of them both.

Courtney Milan is an auto-buy author for me. Her historical romance novels never fail to draw me into her world and into the lives of her characters. Her characters are never conventional or cliched. They feel like real people with quirks and flaws. I always have a really emotional response to her stories and each one leaves me wanting more.

The Heiress Effect is book 2 in the Brothers Sinister series. It focuses on Oliver Marshall, the son of Serena and Hugo from the The Governess Affair, a wonderful short prequel story to the series. You don't need to read The Governess Affair  to understand the series but it's fantastic and I highly recommend it. Having been born a "bastard," Oliver is very aware of society's rules and works hard to maintain his reputation in order to be taken seriously and to make a different in Parliament.

Jane Fairfield is anything but proper. She's loud and says things that a proper young lady should never say. She is an heiress so society must tolerate her but they all ridicule her behind her back. And this is fine with Jane who wishes to remain unmarried in order to stay with her under age sister and protect her from a pious, overbearing uncle.

This is a romance that doesn't start as a romance. Oliver finds Jane ridiculous and totally improper and Jane still holds a grudge against Oliver for a wrong committed years ago and for which he has since made up for. However, their dislike soon becomes friendship when they realize that each is not what they first appear to be. I really liked watching Oliver and Jane get to know each other. From barbs and insults to frank conversations and inside jokes, their relationship slowly evolves and I loved watching them slowly fall for each other.

I'll admit that I was not a huge fan of Jane's at first. She seemed a little bit frivolous and selfish. She soon started to grow on me though and I found her to be kind, an extremely protective older sister, smart and fearless. While some of it is an act, Jane will never be what society considers a proper lady. I admire her for being herself even when it means ridicule.  

Oliver is a great hero. He is honorable and intelligent though he has flaws. He struggles with who he and I think has always felt a little out of place in society. This is why Oliver and Jane make such a great pair though. Neither of them fits the box that society wants to put them in and they make a great team.

There is also a great cast of supporting characters. Robert and Minnie from The Duchess War make an appearance as does Sebastian, another Sinister Brother. I loved seeing Oliver's parents, Selena and Hugo again, older and still in love. Jane's sister Emily has a really sweet storyline a well and I enjoyed her parts in the book. Jane's uncle is the "villain" in the novel though he is not all bad. Like all of Milan's character, he is a complex character that is only too human.

The Heiress Effect is another wonderful novel by Courtney Milan. Full of great dialogue and nuanced characters, her books are a must for any romance reader. I can't wait for the next book in this series!


*I received this book free of charge from the publisher in exchange for an honest review. This, in no way, affected my opinion or review of this book.





Visit the author online at www.courtneymilan.com and follow her on Twitter @courtneymilan

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30 May 2012

Author Interview with Courtney Milan

Today I am very excited to have author Courtney Milan on the blog for an interview. I was introduced to Courtney's historical romances earlier this year and quickly devoured everything she's written. A seriously talented writer, Courtney's books are full of drama, passion and humor. We are so happy that Courtney agreed to be interviewed. We hope you enjoy it as much as we do. 


Hi, Courtney and welcome to Nite Lite! I read on your website that you stopped writing for awhile but started again by entering some online writing contests contests. Can you tell us a little bit about that? What motivated you to enter and start writing again? Did you find it difficult to get back into the groove of things?

By "a while" you mean... oh, let's see. Thirteen years or so? I wanted to write books in high school and for the first year of college. I wasn't very good at it, and more importantly, I took myself way too seriously. I stopped taking myself seriously, changed my major, stopped messing around, got an advanced degree in theoretical chemistry and then went to law school.

I started writing again because I was procrastinating doing other things I needed to do. And because I was procrastinating, I didn't find it difficult at all. :)

But I should specify that I never stopped writing: I kept writing during all those years, just not novels. For instance, I wrote letters--there are a handful of people who I had lengthy conversations with over the course of many years. I had a blog (not my current one) for years, too. Much of what I think of as my author voice was developed over those years.

You write historical fiction. Have you always been a history buff? Do you do a lot of research when writing your books?

You know I never even took a history class in college. (I got away with that because of AP credit.) What I know about history I learned in law school and then read about. Honestly, I'm just 100% dork. I like learning new things.

You write some pretty good smexy love scenes. :) Do you find them easy or difficult to write?

It depends on the scene! There are some scenes that are so easy, I write them at the very beginning. There are some that are really hard. There are some I have to write four times before I get it right.




Your first series, The Turners, is about three brothers with...unique names. Did the names come first and then the idea of the series or the other way around?

The idea for the Turners started off like this: I wanted to name a character Smite. The rest of the series came about because I was trying to figure out how to motivate that.

I think my favorite Turner brother has to be Ash (though I have a soft spot for all of them). Do you have a favorite Turner?

There are things I like about all of them. There are things about all of them that would drive me up the wall. Although I think if I knew them in real life, I would most likely end up friends with Smite. Ash is too sure of himself, and Mark is too sweet.

Ooh now let's talk about your new series, The Brothers Sinister! I love that it sounds so mysterious and dangerous and I really can't wait to read it. I just read The Governess Affair, which was fantastic. What can we expect from the rest of the series?

So, the Brothers Sinister! Indeed. It *does* sound mysterious and dangerous! But it's really about a set of guys who are related to each other and who all happen to be left-handed (that's where the sinister part comes in).

The Brothers Sinister series takes place about 20 years after the era in which you normally set your books. Can you tell us why you decided to change the time period?

There are some political, scientific, and social elements that have to be in place for the series to work. Some of those things are spoilers so I can't mention them here, but I can say that the plot of Oliver's book, THE HEIRESS EFFECT, is tangentially related to the Reform Act of 1867; and Sebastian Malheur, the hero of THE COUNTESS CONSPIRACY, is a famous scientist whose work connects with that of Charles Darwin. There isn't a more scandalous scientist than Darwin in all of the nineteenth century, and Sebastian's contribution to Darwin's body of work is even more scandalous.

I haven't mentioned any of the things that connect to the women, because those are all spoilers.

The series deals with scandalous men and ruined women.The idea of a ruined woman is a common theme in your books. In Unclaimed you have a courtesan as a main character and in Unraveled, an arrangement is made which would make the woman "ruined" afterwards in the eyes of society. Yet in your stories these are all very strong, independent women who are able to (with the help of the men sometimes) turn their situations around and are considered respectable. What about the subject and idea of a "ruined" character appeals to you? 

You say that as if ruination and strength were opposites. But I actually think they're closely tied together. Before you're ruined, you have too much to lose to take risks. And that tells you why I tend to write heroines who are ruined: I like writing women who have to take risks, and who have a good reason not to buy into society's rules.


I should add that with the exception of Serena in THE GOVERNESS AFFAIR, the heroines of the Brothers Sinister series are not ruined in the conventional way, and alas, I cannot say any more than that. In fact, two of them are virgins! And the other is a widow! This is unusual for me--I've written more non-virgin heroines than virgins, and while I've written a character who pretended to be a widow, I've never actually written a widow.

What are you currently working on/what's next for you?

The next two things that I think will be out are:

First, a short story in THREE WEDDINGS AND A MURDER, called "The Lady Always Wins"--it's not connected to anything. And second, a novella that I haven't titled which may or may not end up being connected to a very minor character in THE DUCHESS WAR, but I don't know yet.

I say this because I'm not sure which will be out first: that story, or THE DUCHESS WAR. I'm not trying to be cagey; just annoyed and frustrated that some things don't write themselves.

But I'm going to be working on the Brothers Sinister for some time now.

After that, (but by this point, we're well into 2013) there's going to be a stand-alone novel set in 1836 through 1837 (and yes, that time period is exact!) about a girl who is trying to pull off an extremely dangerous heist, and I'm not going to say what that is because it's a spoiler (am I saying that a lot? I'm saying that a lot), and a guy who was once the assistant to the Greek ambassador (before he was sacked), who discovers what she's up to and decides to stop her.

I'm not sure what's going to come after that. I have a bunch of ideas, but they're still in the percolating phase.

I am also working on a few side projects. One of them is an urban fantasy with vampires set in an emergency room. Then there's a 1910 historical romance that is closer to erotic than not. There's a YA in which talking rabbits turn terrorist.

I need more time in the day.

What's the strangest food you've ever eaten?

I've eaten kangaroo. I've had carbonated grapes. I once had a corn soup made with liquid nitrogen. (In fact, I've eaten quite a few things made with liquid nitrogen, now that I think about it.) But the strangest thing I've ever eaten has to be Graham Elliot's foiellipop, described here:http://foododdity.com/pop-rocks-dusted-foie-gras-lollipops/

Historical, paranormal or contemporary romance?

Yes, please, to all of the above.

Do you think you'd survive a zombie apocalypse?

Highly unlikely. I can't use knives, bombs, guns, or grenades. And I run very slowly. But on the plus side, if I did somehow manage to survive, I could make myself very useful, since I (a) garden and (b) have enough backpacking experience to cook under weird conditions and (c) have spent lots and lots of time reading about Victorian farming techniques.

If you could go back in time (without messing with the space time continuum) and tell your younger self one thing, what would it be?

Buy stock in Google. ;)

Cake or pie and what kind?

I love desserts but most end up far too sweet and rich for my tastes. I will still eat them, but I hate myself when I do. So I've been working on a recipe for a light, airy carrot cake--the usual suspects you get from the bakery are dense, sweet, and rich.

I'm still playing with the proportions of carrot to flour and the right proportion of spices, but the current incarnation looks like this:

Author's warning: making this requires you to have a stupid amount of crap that no reasonable person should keep around the house.

CAKE:

3/4 c canola oil
Enough carrots to make about 3/4 cup when grated with a microplaner.
1/2 cup whole wheat pastry flour
5 large eggs, separated,
1/4 c sugar
Nuts of some kind (walnuts or pecans work well)--appx one small handful's worth.
Spices to taste: cinnamon, allspice, cloves, ginger

Microplane carrots until you have 3/4 of a cup. Yes, you need to microplane it and not just use a grater--the regular grater is too coarse and it'll ruin the texture. Put microplaned carrot into dehydrator on low heat for appx. 2 hours. You want to dry it out, but not completely--it should be very mildly damp.

Chop nuts very finely, until there is no piece larger than a grain of wheat. Mix dehydrated carrot (now about 1/2 cup worth) with flour; add in nuts and mix well. Add spices to the mix. (My recipe notes say: "tiny pinch of cloves, a few gratings of nutmeg, bit of allspice, don't be shy with the cinnamon," for whatever that's worth.)

Juice the other half of the carrot. Beat yolks with sugar until mixture is pale and no longer grainy. Add oil and 1 1/2 tablespoons of the carrot juice; beat until combined.

Mix yolk mixture into flour mixture.

Now grab your egg whites. Throw in a little bit of salt. (a pinch, or 1/4th of a teaspoon, or, five or six good turns of the salt grinder). (If you want to ruin a good thing, you can add another 1/4 cup of sugar here, but that's overkill).

Fold egg whites into the rest of the stuff.

Put in oiled pan--an 8x8 square pan is about the right size. If you want, drop a piece of parchment paper on the bottom and it'll come out pretty clean. Whack it against the counter to evenly distribute the batter. Bake at 350 until it's done, which I'm guessing is about 40-50 minutes, but don't quote me on that, and don't blame me if it burns.

TOPPING

Note that this is NOT frosting. Frosting is evil. I hate frosting. This is best topped with a quenelle of creme fraiche ice cream:

1 cup creme fraiche.
1 cup buttermilk
1/3 cup sugar
little bit of yuzu juice (but okay, you can use lemon or lime juice)

Mix together. Run through an ice cream maker.

Serve right away because (a) it's awesome warm and (b) it will fall a little after a few hours.

I think next time I make this I'm going to add a pinch of ancho chile powder to the spice mix, because hey, carrot cake deserves a kick.

Last book read?

Insurgent by Veronica Roth.

Favorite guilty pleasure movie?

Oh, this is an embarrassing question. I wish I could explain, but I have real cognitive difficulty recognizing people in movies, and that makes it hard to understand the story since I can't figure out which characters are which. Long story short, I don't enjoy watching movies all that much. It's too much work for me to keep track of what's going on and who is who. I can never relax.

And finally, are you touring anytime soon? (cause we like to stalk our favorite authors and our readers do, too)

Not really--but I will be in Southern California this July, at the RWA National conference, where I'll have books on sale.

Thanks so much for hanging out today, Courtney! I really look forward to reading the rest of the Sinister Brothers series later this summer!

Thanks so much for having me--and seriously, thanks for the great questions!

We want to thank Courtney for the awesome interview. If you haven't read one of her books, what are you waiting for? I highly recommend all of them. Really, all of them are fantastic and are constant re-reads.

You can find Courtney online at the following places:
Author Website
Goodreads
Twitter




02 May 2012

The Governess Affair - Review & Giveaway


Publication date: 21 April 2012
Length: 110 pages

Category: Adult Historial Romance
Keywords: Historical, romance, ruined woman
Format: eBook
Source: Purchase


From Goodreads:

She will not give up…

Three months ago, governess Serena Barton was let go from her position. Unable to find new work, she’s demanding compensation from the man who got her sacked: a petty, selfish, swinish duke. But it’s not the duke she fears. It’s his merciless man of business—the man known as the Wolf of Clermont. The formidable former pugilist has a black reputation for handling all the duke’s dirty business, and when the duke turns her case over to him, she doesn’t stand a chance. But she can’t stop trying—not with her entire future at stake.

He cannot give in…

Hugo Marshall is a man of ruthless ambition—a characteristic that has served him well, elevating the coal miner’s son to the right hand man of a duke. When his employer orders him to get rid of the pestering governess by fair means or foul, it’s just another day at the office. Unfortunately, fair means don’t work on Serena, and as he comes to know her, he discovers that he can’t bear to use foul ones. But everything he has worked for depends upon seeing her gone. He’ll have to choose between the life that he needs, and the woman he is coming to love.

Thuy's Review:

Oh, Courtney Milan. I really hope you never stop writing because I pretty much love everything you put out. Milan’s recently released The Governess Affair is a short novella that kicks off the start of a new series coming out this summer. While short in length, The Governess Affair manages to have the emotional depth and punch of a full length novel.

The story starts off by introducing us to Serena Barton, said governess of the title, who comes to town demanding recompense from the Duke of Clermont for as yet unknown damages. The Duke, a selfish and cowardly man, instructs his right hand man Hugo Marshall to get rid of her. Nicknamed the Wolf of Clermont, Hugo is a brilliant and ruthless man who always gets what he wants. What he doesn’t bargain for is being attracted to the stubborn governess. The Duke’s questionable and less than honorable actions make his job even harder as his admiration for Serena grows.

As usual, I fell in love with the characters that Milan created. Hugo, despite his ruthless reputation, has more honor than he realizes. I loved the small, kind things he did for Serena like bringing her tea in the rain. And Serena, finding herself in an extremely difficult position, doesn’t give up or run away. Instead, she is determined and fearless in her quest to secure her future. The pair have fantastic chemistry and I had fun watching them trade playful barbs while fighting their growing attraction to each other. There’s one major love scene in the book that is sensual and sweet and will have you looking at hairpins in a totally new way. I also really enjoyed the clever notes that Serena and Hugo traded throughout the book.

Milan isn’t one for easy answers or happy endings not earned and there is always a bittersweet quality to her stories. But it just makes it better when the characters do finally find their way because it truly feels like they belong together. Milan injected just enough angst into Serena and Hugo’s story to have me worried for a bit. But happily, it doesn’t last too long and the ending left me sighing and happy. While some novellas often feel incomplete, the pacing and development in The Governess Affair are anything but. While I do wish it was longer (just to have more of Hugo and Serena) it is a satisfying and complete story on its own. The last part of the book sets up background for the rest of the Sinister Brothers series and only made me want to know more.

Another great read by Courtney Milan, one that you will not want to miss. I can’t wait for summer to come and the next book in the series, The Duchess War, to come out. The novella is currently only $0.99 in ebook format so you really have nothing to lose. Go ahead, get it, and thank me later. :)



Hi, everyone! We hope you are as excited about The Governess Affair and Courtney's new series as we are. And just because we love you, we are doing a quick giveaway. 2 lucky winners will win an ebook of The Governess Affair. This giveaway is international. As long as you have an email address that can accept ebooks, you're good. This giveaway ends at the end of the day on SUNDAY so hurry and enter! Thanks!

a Rafflecopter giveaway



Visit the author online at www.courtneymilan.com and follow her on Twitter @courtneymilan