Scandals by Emily Greenwood

Scandal. Fans of Regency-era stories often find that word featured somewhere in the books they love. Anna Black, the heroine of my new release, THE BEAUTIFUL ONE, is pulled into a scandal when a book of nude drawings of her (made without her knowledge) begins making the rounds of society—and threatening to ruin her life.

Romantic stories of scandal can be delicious when everything works out, but of course, in reality scandalous behavior could have heavy costs –especially for women. Consider Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire. 

Born Georgiana Spencer in 1757 (into the same Spencer family in which Diana, Princess of Wales, was later born), she had looks, charm, and wit enough to make her a dazzling prize, and at seventeen, she was married to the much-older Duke of Devonshire. Though the Duke didn’t love her and was already involved with a long-term mistress, he nonetheless required an heir. Years passed, though, without Georgiana being able to conceive. 

A lively woman who received little attention from her reserved and unloving husband, Georgiana threw herself into social events and was known for her exquisite and dramatic taste in fashion. A passionate supporter of the Whig party, she was said to have traded kisses for votes during one election, scandalizing many. She held lavish parties and spent money like water, and she was deeply addicted to gambling, losing astonishing sums.

Finally, when she was nearing thirty, she gave birth to her first child, a girl, and subsequently to two more children with the duke, including a son and heir. But by this time she’d met the love of her life, a Whig politician named Charles Grey. When Georgiana discovered she was pregnant with Grey’s child, her husband told her that if she didn’t give up the baby, she would never see her other three children again. (This despite the fact that Georgiana had welcomed the duke’s own illegitimate daughter into their household.)

Horribly torn by the impossible choice forced on her by the husband she didn’t love, she went abroad to deliver her baby, named Eliza, then gave the girl to Grey’s parents to raise. She was never allowed to acknowledge being Eliza’s mother. 

After a two-year absence, Georgiana was allowed to return to England and her three children, and she did eventually resume her place in society. But one can only imagine how she must have felt, married to the man who’d forced her to abandon her child.

About The Beautiful One 

 

 

 

A PICTURE SAYS A THOUSAND WORDS…

The ton is buzzing about The Beautiful One, a striking figure in a scandalous book of nude sketches. Only two men know the true identity of The Beautiful One, and they are scouring the countryside, determined to find her.

BUT NOT THE MOST IMPORTANT ONES

The unlikely center of the scandal, Anna Black is forced to flee home as disaster looms. Her tomboy’s heart and impertinent tongue serve her well when she meets the most brooding viscount ever to darken a drawing room. Will Halifax, Viscount Grandville, has his reasons for pushing people away, and when his tempestuous teenaged ward arrives on his doorstep, he presses Anna to take on her care. As Anna begins to melt the Viscount’s frozen heart, she knows the more she loves, the more she has to lose. For although Will cares nothing for what makes Society titter, he has yet to see The Beautiful One.

Excerpt from THE BEAUTIFUL ONE

Rounding the edge of the wood at the back of Stillwell, he was startled to see his ward standing about. She was looking up at a tree in which, from the movement of its leaves and branches, some large creature seemed to be thrashing. A crow?

As he drew nearer to the oblivious Lizzie, he was almost certain he heard a woman’s voice coming from among the leaves. Lizzie stepped closer to the tree and lifted her hands upward, and he saw that on a thick branch perhaps six feet off the ground were perched two feet in past-their-prime dark ankle boots, and above them he was treated to a view of trim calves he could not regret. The surrounding leaves and branches mostly obscured the rest of his recently hired governess. In the instant before Lizzie became aware of Will, he saw that she held in her cupped hands a fluffy white ball.

Lizzie turned and saw him, her mouth forming into an “O” as a voice called from above, “Lizzie? I’m ready for the owlet.”

“Er,” said Lizzie, looking at him. In the clear afternoon light he noticed that her eyes were a different color blue than Ginger’s had been. But the shape was Ginger’s, as were the eyebrows. Not her fault, but he couldn’t go the route of compassion. It would only muddy what had to be. He looked past her and lifted a hand to rub his eyes.

“Miss Black,” he said, knowing he could not avoid asking, “what on earth are you doing?”

There was a pause as she absorbed his arrival and a shifting of the feet on the branch near his forehead as they drew together, perhaps in an attempt at modesty.

“Ah, my lord,” she said from above him. “Good afternoon. Lizzie and I are engaged in returning a fallen owlet to its nest. It was her idea. She is very caring toward animals.”

He could feel Lizzie’s big blue eyes on him though his own were still covered by his hand. He had no doubt as to whose idea it had been to climb the tree. He hadn’t truly expected Anna Black to be a typical sort of governess, had he?

“Come down at once.”

“If you will wait just a moment, my lord,” she said breezily, “I shall be down directly. Lizzie, the owlet.”

Lizzie cleared her throat. “Here.”

He tapped her on the shoulder before she could lift her arms farther. “Give me that creature, please.”

She looked uncertain, but she clearly didn’t want to displease him, and she handed over the motionless owl. He took it carefully from her and did not return her tentative smile. He could feel her eagerness for him to acknowledge her, but he let it flow past him.

The leaves and branches above them shook as Anna Black crouched down and extended her hand for the animal. Her bonnet, the same horrible blue one, had fallen on its strings around her neck again, and her hair, apparently loosened by her climb, curled crazily about her face as if she were some unkempt urchin, accentuating her pert nose and reminding him of her jack-in-the-box appearance from the coach.

Her pink lips pressed outward at the sight of him; doubtless she was annoyed by his arrival, but her expression didn’t draw an answering wave of annoyance from him. Instead, her lips were making him wonder, unaccountably, what it might feel like to be kissed all over by pink butterflies.

“The owlet, please,” she fairly ordered him.

“Don’t be ridiculous. Get down this instant before you fall. I will return the owlet.”

“I am already positioned to do so. If you will just give it to me, I can put it back and then receive your displeasure properly on the ground.”

He grunted. Why did he keep finding himself in out-of-his-control conversations with this maddening woman?

In his palm the owlet’s heart beat with a rapid, stressed flutter. He reached up his hand, and she gently took the animal and disappeared into the foliage.

From above came a few rustling noises, then the angry screech of what had to be an adult owl and a yelp. Fearing Miss Black would fall, he stepped forward to catch her, but at that same moment she jumped neatly down, so that she landed right in front of him.

He grabbed her arms, a reflex to steady her. She didn’t need his help, but their eyes locked, and for a moment he read vulnerability there before it was replaced with the hard glint of independence. She smelled like sunshine and crushed leaves, and he felt the slim softness of her arms and his body’s yearning to hug her close.

She stepped away from him. It had all happened in the space of a few moments.

But as he watched her brush some leaves from her skirts with her head down, that vulnerability he’d glimpsed tugged at him. Who was this woman? Where had she come from? She was clearly educated and intelligent, and though she was too forthright and she dressed terribly, she was not rough, merely unusual.

That life-on-the-edge-of-propriety quality he’d observed in her the night before had suggested that she’d known some hardship, or that she had some burden she might trade for money. And yet today, in the company of his ward, she looked at ease, even if her eyes seemed to be hiding something.

About Emily Greenwood

Emily Greenwood worked for a number of years as a writer, crafting newsletters and fundraising brochures, but she far prefers writing playful love stories set in Regency England, and she thinks romance novels are the chocolate of literature. A Golden Heart finalist, she lives in Maryland with her husband and two daughters.

Connect with Emily Greenwood via: Website | Twitter | Facebook | Goodreads

Isabel Cooper Shares Which Character She Relates to the Most

Standard writer’s answer applies, of course: I see bits of myself in every character I write. (Except for the nasty ones, in which I see bits of various people I hated in middle school, of course.) 

That said, if I’m picking a single character, I’d go with Reggie from Highland Dragon’s Lady. For one thing, the MacAlasdairs themselves are, while a lot of fun to write, a little hard to completely identify with: they’re not human, and they are old. That’s one of their attractions—I’ve always really liked the slightly-antiquated-fish-out-of-societal-water thing you get with elves or vampires or Thor—but I can’t see myself as Stephen, Colin, or Judith. I’m not that cool.

I’m also not a secret agent. Sadly.

And Mina is a lot more devoted to her job than I’ll ever be, and had to overcome a lot more than I suspect I ever will. My folks aren’t rich the way Reggie’s are, but the child of comfort, grown up to enjoy adventure and excitement a lot more than rules? Yeah, that sounds a lot like me. I’m fond of comfort, but also enjoy following impulses; you could probably describe elements of my lifestyle as “bohemian,” if you were the sort to do that; I’ve been on the end of malicious rumors a time or two, though thank God not any time recently; and despite having only lately learned to drive, I do enjoy that. 

Also, I live in the city most of the time, but occasionally go out into the country to see my folks, which is where another similarity comes up—one that applies to Mina, too. Both she and Reggie have living parents with whom they have close, functional relationships, regardless of their occasional differences. I don’t read minds (which is good, since I have to commute), I’m not romantically entangled with weird dragon guys, and my life is generally considerably less dramatic than either Reggie’s or Mina’s—but I like to think that my folks would be as supportive as theirs end up being, at least. 

(Fortunately, they already are much less Victorian.)

Looking back, although this wasn’t conscious when I was writing, all three of my heroines represent a situation I’ve been in. Mina is trying to get your life where you want it to go—hi, early twenties. Reggie is coming back to a place and a set of people who knew you as you used to be, and maybe as you’re trying to forget being—pretty much any reunion I could name. And Judith is realizing that your world is changing, and you have to start changing with it—welcome to your thirties, huh? 

About Night of the Highland Dragon

“They say,” said the girl, “that people disappear up there. And I heard that the lady doesna’ ever grow any older.”
“The lady?” William asked.
“Lady MacAlasdair. She lives in the castle, and she’s been there years, but she stays young and beautiful forever.”

In the Scottish Highlands, legend is as powerful as the sword—and nowhere is that more true than in the remote village of Loch Aranoch. Its mysterious ruler, Judith MacAlasdair, is fiercely protective of her land—and her secrets. If anyone were to find out what she really was, she and her entire clan would be hunted down as monsters.

William Arundell is on the trail of a killer. Special agent for an arcane branch of the English government, his latest assignment has led him to a remote Highland castle and the undeniably magnetic lady who rules there. Yet as lies begin to unravel and a dark threat gathers, William finds himself drawn deeper and deeper into the mystery of the Highlands…and the woman he can neither trust nor deny.

He prays she isn’t the murderer; he never dreamed she was a dragon.

During the day, Isabel Cooper maintains her guise as a mild-mannered project manager in legal publishing. In her spare time, she enjoys video games, ballroom dancing, various geeky hobbies, and figuring out what wine goes best with leftover egg rolls. Cooper lives with two thriving houseplants in Boston, Massachusetts. 

Writing Ex-Military Men by Victoria Vane

For those who might not be familiar with my books, I have always enjoyed putting a different spin on familiar tropes as well as combining character archetypes. Although Hot Cowboy Nights has a definite Western flavor, two of the heroes in my series, Dirk Knowlton (ROUGH RIDER) and Reid Everett (SHARP SHOOTIN’ COWBOY), are also former Marines. While they share a number of things in common, they are very different personalities. Dirk is very much the wounded warrior. In ROUGH RIDER, Dirk spends much of the book trying to figure out what he really wants from life. When we first meet him he is fighting fiercely to hang onto his family ranch as he feels it’s all he has left.

ROUGH RIDER Excerpt

Dirk stared at her in incomprehension, his mind still reeling at her appearance. He still couldn’t believe she’d walked into his life after all this time. He didn’t understand her motivation either, but did he really care? He’d done his best to warn her, to chase her off even. He hadn’t exaggerated. He was a fucking wreck, one that no sane woman would take on. But here she was, sane or not, and he wanted her with a desire that penetrated his marrow. The same need shone in her eyes, the kind of deep physical, gut-wrenching need that he shared, and the only kind he could fulfill.

He mumbled a stream of curses before hoisting himself to his feet. “Last chance, Janice. I can only fuck things up and make you miserable. It’s all I’ve ever been good at.”

Nevertheless, he offered his hand.

Her brown eyes met his unwavering. “I’m a big girl, Dirk. I think I can take it.”

The softness in those eyes betrayed her tough words. That same softness and vulnerability cried out to him. After six years in the Marines, there was nothing soft left in him. He wanted to bury himself in it…in her. 

SHARP SHOOTER Excerpt

Dear Haley,

This is my first real letter to you. I may not get another chance for a while. Hell, I may not get another chance period. Truth be told, I don’t even know if I’ll send it. Although I prefer to live by the adage that if you can’t say something positive, it’s best to say nothing, there aren’t a whole lot of rainbows in the middle of a shit storm. And that’s what we’re up against. The grunts we came to replace greeted us with a nod and the thousand-mile stare. No words were exchanged. None were needed. We all know what we’re facing.

Every morning begins a new game of Russian Roulette as we sidestep IEDs, dodge RPGs, rockets, mortars, and sniper fire, taking every minute as it comes, knowing nothing over here can ever be taken for granted. My first thought every morning is only to make it through the coming day, and my last, at night, is a prayer of gratitude that I’m still alive.

At the end of each day, I can only marvel at the beauty of sunsets that are some of the most spectacular I have ever seen. Watching them is an evening ritual.

Reid paused to read the message, realizing it was far too raw and real. Did she ever think about him? He didn’t know. Did she care? He didn’t know that either. Maybe he never would.

With a shake of his head, he deleted the text of the email, attached a photo of a breathtaking desert sunset, and hit “send.”

About Sharp Shooter

 

 

 

TAKE YOUR BEST SHOT, COWBOY…

Weary warrior… After eight years as a Marine sniper, war-scarred Reid Everett is back in his native Wyoming. He knows and loves this rugged land, so working for wildlife services to reduce the booming wolf population suits him to a T.

Caring crusader… Wildlife biologist Haley Cooper is desperate to make a difference. Leaving the world of academia behind, she accepts a position as a wolf advocate to protect the animals she loves.

Raw attraction… Their jobs set them on a collision course, but chemistry sparks like wildfire between Reid and Haley. They’ll have to brave some rough territory if they hope to reconcile their polarizing views with a passion that won’t be denied.

About Victoria Vane

Victoria Vane is a multiple award-winning romance novelist and history junkie whose collective works of fiction range from wildly comedic romps to emotionally compelling erotic romance. Victoria also writes historical fiction as Emery Lee and is the founder of Goodreads Romantic Historical Fiction Lovers and the Romantic Historical Lovers book review blog.

Connect with Victoria Vane: Website | Facebook | @AuthorVictoriaV | Pinterest | Goodreads

Q&A with Cym Lowell

For those who are not familiar, your current book Jaspar's War has been well received. Can give us some insight into the book? 

Jaspar’s War examines the process by which a rich socialite becomes a warrior to rescue her children, told from her own point of view as she is connected with a warrior seeking to become a human being. Their mission occurs throughout Tuscany and ends in the Monte Carlo Grand Prix.

On the humanitarian front, I've been very inspired by your generosity. What led you to devote your proceeds towards our servicemen and women?
 
When I returned from Vietnam in 1966, I had health and the G.I. Bill to pursue an education to better myself. So many of my compatriots did not. I dedicate the proceeds (100%) in a quest to help those who return today as best I can. It is a tribute to those of my own generation who never had a chance. So far we have provided equipment for about half of the 200 heroes on the waiting list when we began.
 
I also volunteer at a rescue mission for the homeless. There are so many Vietnam and other war veterans. It is my joy to try to help others avoid such a fate.

For those who are not familiar with Operation Next Chapter, can you tell us about it and what services it provides?
 
It is an initiative we formed to raise money to purchase voice-activated computers for our heroes who cannot use their hands, as well as service dogs for those who need canine guidance or alert.

You have a new novel we have to look forward to, Harvest of Gold, tell us about it.
 
Molly is a school teacher in rural Texas, who has always been anxious about her never explained heritage. As she learns that her mother was rescued from Auschwitz as a child and deposited in the same locale, a war breaks out as a mammoth Swiss bank (the world’s largest) seeks to kill her and any children to eliminate any claim to the so-called Jewish Gold that is its own financial base. The bank is aided by the U.S. President and his government. She is taken prisoner with her only son, who does not know that he has fathered a child in his sweetheart. Can she survive to claim her heritage. The story ends in a shoot-out on the steps of the U.S. Supreme Court.

From your experiences with soldiers, what challenges have you found? What do you feel has been their biggest need?
 
Acceptance and respect for their sacrifice. In my generation, we were spit on and pilloried as “baby killers.” Fortunately, our heroes are hailed for their service. They still have huge needs that government can fully provide.

You are involved in a new initiative, Patriot Paws? Can you tell us more about it and how we can get involved?
 
Yes. Patriot Paws provides service dogs for our heroes in need, at a cost of about $ 27,000 each. Through our Operation: Next Chapter, we reached out to form a bridge and cooperation as we did with Soldiers’ Angels for the voice-activated computer program.

Are you currently working on anything that we can look out for?

For sure! Presently, we are seeking a literary agent and commercial publisher to expand the funds available for our Operation: Next Chapter, as the service dogs are vastly more expensive than the computers. I learned in the Navy long ago to approach dreams one step-at-a-time, which is what we are doing in our quest to honor our heroes. I look forward to my own tears as heroes are united with their new soulmates – service dogs!

For Cym and all the veterans past, present and future, thank you for your dedication and commitment to your respective military services!

Cym Lowell was born in Montana to academics and spent his youth traveling the world. To put it politely, he was an undistinguished student, rewarded with assignment to the U.S. Navy at 18. After two years in Vietnam, college and law school were a challenge. Being a veteran in the political turbulence of the late 1960s and early 1970s taught humility. Raising three children in the Midwest and Texas brought love and responsibility. An international tax practice in the financial crises of the past 40 years provided insight into motivations of actors on the global stage. Friends, clients, adversaries, and colleagues, like victory and defeat, added color and context. The result is a writer with a treasure trove of experience to frame compelling characters enmeshed in heart-thumping challenges.

You can reach Cym via his Website | Facebook | Goodreads | Twitter @cymlowell

Q&A with Janice Maynard

Tell us a bit more about the country of Alma and the Montoro family featured in MINDING HER BOSS’S BUSINESS.

In the first book, MINDING THE BOSS’S BUSINESS, my hero and heroine travel from Alma to Miami on a very important mission. Things in Alma have changed for the better, and the country wants its royal family to return. Alex Ramon, Deputy Prime Minister of Commerce, is charged with convincing the Miami Montoros that they have an obligation to their people. Alex’s colleague, Maria Ferro, is an expert in government relations and public affairs. She answers to Alex in this situation. Her main focus is to do damage control, because one of the presumed heirs to the throne has a serious bad boy image. When Maria cozies up to the prince, Alex realizes that his feelings for Maria are more pleasure than business.

Is it possible to mix business with pleasure?

As an author, I have to say yes. I love my job, so even when I go to a conference (such as the one coming up in NYC this July), much of what I do for business is a pleasure. Of course, if we’re speaking romantically, I think it can probably become very messy when co-workers get involved. And in that vein, I hope you’ll enjoy watching Alex and Maria discover just how complicated mixing business with pleasure can be!

You’ve said you knew you loved writing by the time you were 8 years old. Tell us about the moment you realized writing was something you wanted to do.

My husband went to grad school in Atlanta. I was fresh out of college, with no experience, so I wasn’t able to get a teaching job right away. For almost a year, I worked as a secretary in the math department at Emory University. And yes… that is as boring as it sounds.  There was a silver lining, though…when the students went home on breaks, the offices were dead. I ended up filling a few days here and there by writing the early chapters of my very first book. That experience fueled my desire to become a “real” writer, even though it would be many years later before that dream came true.

It took multiple rejections and years of trying before you sold your first novel and eventually became a USA Today bestselling author. What is your advice for writers struggling to catch their big breaks?

I wish I had the magic formula for success. I could have saved myself a lot of time! The truth is, I feel like I stumbled in the dark much of the way. But if I had to nail down a few essentials, the foremost one would be Write a lot of books. The first manuscript I ever sold was my third. The editor who bought that story eventually went back and bought books one and two. So if you have work stacking up on your hard drive, it can be a very good thing.

Secondly, Go to conferences. Meet people. I can’t stress this enough. So much of what I learned early on, came from workshops, friendships, and introductions at seminars and the like. It doesn’t have to be the national RWA event to start with. Lots of regional conferences are fabulous and far less expensive.

Third, Always be pleasant and professional. The publishing world is relatively small. Talk travels. If an editor gets a submission from an author who has a reputation as a diva, it might be easier to send a rejection letter than to buy the work in question.

Number four is easy but exceptionally hard: Never give up.

What do you have planned for your future books or projects?

I often say, “beware of what you wish for”… My publishing schedule at the moment is a wonderfully exciting burden.  I have four books remaining in my current Harlequin contract, even after my next four releases (5/15, 8/15, 11/15, and 2/16). That means I get to work again and again with my spectacular editor, Stacy Boyd. She knows I think the world of her, so this doesn’t count as brown-nosing.

I’m also very excited about a trilogy I recently sold to Kensington Publishing. These books are contemporary, Scottish-set romances where three thirty-something women travel to Scotland in search of kilted, larger-than-life heroes of their own. Lots of humor and sexy Scottish adventures headed your way in March, May, and November 2016.

About Janice Maynard

JANICE MAYNARD knew she loved books and writing by the time she was eight years old. But it took multiple rejections and many years of trying before she sold her first three novels in 1996 and 1997. After teaching kindergarten and second grade for sixteen years, Janice turned to writing full-time in the fall of 2002. Since then she has written and sold over twenty-five books and novellas. Her publishers include Kensington, Penguin/NAL, Berkley, and Harlequin. Janice lives in east Tennessee with her husband, Charles. They love hiking, traveling, and spending time with their daughters, Caroline and Anna, sons-in-law, Jamie and Chris, three granddaughters, Anastasia, Ainsley, and Allie, and the newest addition to the family, Levi.

Is It Really Hard To Write Historicals by Alison McMahan

Here's something I hear all the time: "I could never write historical. Too much work! All that research. How do you do it?"

And my answer always is: "Contemporary. I could never write it. Too much work! You have to make everything up. For historical, I need to know something, I look it up."

There's truth to both statements, of course. Both genres have to make stuff up. Both genres have to do research. But I do think writing about a period where you can look everything up can be a lot easier.

For example, describing a character's clothing. Luckily for me, when I was writing The Saffron Crocus, my historical mystery-romance set in 1643 Venice, there was art.

Although much of the art was religious or allegorical, most of the painters used live models, so I could look at faces and bodies and get a visual start on a character. And I could use the clothing in portraits to dress my characters.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claudio_Monteverdi#/media/File:Bernardo_Strozzi_-_Claudio_Monteverdi_(c.1630).jpg

For example, Bernardo Strozzi's portrait of Monteverdi was painted in 1640, just three years before the events of The Saffron Crocus take place. I spent quite a lot of time staring into those slightly mismatched eyes while I listened to recordings of his music and came up with ways to incorporate him as a character into the story.

http://www.wikiart.org/en/bernardo-strozzi/lute-player-1635

I modeled the character of Domenico on Strozzi's Lute Player. Not just the face and the clothes, but also the general character, a boy who has just turned into a man and is something of a dandy. It's hard to look at this painting and take the young man's ability to play the lute seriously. So in the story Domenico is wealthy and has good taste but he plays the lute like a hobbyist. Not like someone who devotes their life to music, as some of the other characters do.

In those two instances the paintings gave me a character whole, but often I had to cobble together information from various sources, including more than one painting, in order to put together a character. For the figure of Margherita, I looked at many paintings of St. Cecilia, including one by Bernardo Strozzi:

http://c300221.r21.cf1.rackcdn.com/bernardo-strozzi-1581-1644-saint-cecilia-1349404334_b.jpg

For Margherita, I was also inspired by his portrait of Judith with the head of Holofernes:

https://judith2you.files.wordpress.com/2013/04/judith-bernardo-strozzi.jpg

In both images I was struck by the women's expressions. St. Cecilia is transported by some heavenly inspiration, as Margherita could be when she was singing. Judith confronts the viewer directly, even though her servant isn't too sure about this. I felt that summed up Margherita's abilities to survive and flourish no matter what life threw at her.

I named a supporting character Cecilia, after my recently-deceased mother-in-law and because the 17th century in Venice worshipped that saint. But for her appearance I used another portrait of Strozzi's, a sweet old woman with a stare that dares you to confront the truth about yourself:

http://www.wikigallery.org/wiki/painting_234976/Bernardo-Strozzi/Head-of-an-Old-Woman

5.jpg

After using so many of Bernardo Strozzi's paintings as sources of information and inspiration, I felt I had to put him in the book too. He is an "off-screen" character in the book, in that the main characters hide out in his studio while he is away, but we never meet him directly.

Who was Bernardo Strozzi? He lived from 1581 to 1644, so the year my story takes place was the last year of his life. By then he was one of the most influential painters of the 17th century, especially in Genoa and Venice.

He became a Capuchin monk but took a leave of absence (over two decades long!) to care for his mother and sister. After his sister married and his mother died the order insisted he return, but Strozzi left Genoa and went to Venice instead, where he had a large workshop.

About Alison McMahan

Alison McMahan chased footage for her documentaries through jungles in Honduras and Cambodia, favelas in Brazil and racetracks in the U.S. She brings the same sense of adventure to her award-winning books of historical mystery and romantic adventure for teens and adults. Her latest publication is The Saffron Crocus, a historical mystery for young. Murder, Mystery & Music in 17th Century Venice.

She loves hearing from readers!

You can connect with Alison via: Saffron Crocus | AlisonMcMahanAuthor.com | AlisonMcMahan.com | Facebook | Twitter 

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About The Saffron Crocus

Murder, Mystery & Music in 17th Century Venice.

Venice, 1643. Isabella, fifteen, longs to sing in Monteverdi’s Choir, but only boys (and castrati) can do that. Her singing teacher, Margherita, introduces her to a new wonder: opera! Then Isabella finds Margherita murdered. Now people keep trying to kill Margherita’s handsome rogue of a son, Rafaele.

Was Margherita killed so someone could steal her saffron business? Or was it a disgruntled lover, as Margherita—unbeknownst to Isabella—was one of Venice’s wealthiest courtesans?

Or will Isabella and Rafaele find the answer deep in Margherita’s past, buried in the Jewish Ghetto?

Isabella has to solve the mystery of the Saffron Crocus before Rafaele hangs for a murder he didn’t commit, though she fears the truth will drive her and the man she loves irrevocably apart.