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Archive for A Duke for All Seasons

Halloween Factoids You Never Knew

Friday, October 21st, 2011
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Or at least these are things I never knew. I was aware that Halloween has its origins in a Celtic holiday that honors the dead, but here are a few tidbits that are new to me:

- Jack-o-lanterns come from an Irish folk tale about Stingy Jack, who lit his way by putting a burning coal into a hollowed out turnip! Now 99% of the pumpkins grown domestically are used for jack-o-lanterns.

- One quarter of all candy is sold during Halloween time (September – November 10). Tootsie Rolls were the first wrapped penny candy in America, making them a natural for handing out as treats. (I used to love Tootsies. However, as the owner of two small dogs who doesn’t travel anywhere without little plastic bags, I’ll never look at Tootsie Rolls the same way again.)

- Halloween is the third biggest party day of the year behind New Year’s and Super Bowl Sunday, respectively. 86% of Americans decorate their homes at Halloween.  Approximately 82% of children and 67% of adults take part in Halloween festivities every year.

- Bobbing for apples may have originated from the Roman harvest festival honoring Pomona, the goddess of fruit trees.

- 48% of Americans believe in ghosts. 22% say they’ve seen or felt a ghost. Women are more likely to admit to it than are men. While we’re on the subject, I’ll admit that I saw somethingwhen I was a kid. It was an amorphous black blob that would appear in the corner of my bedroom at night and advance steadily toward me as I cowered on my lower bunk. If I closed my eyes, it retreated back to its corner to begin again. I didn’t tell anyone about it at the time, but when I was an adult, I shared the experience with my sister and her eyes grew wide. She’d been on the top bunk and had seen the same thing. Then our mother admitted that the previous owner of our house had hanged himself in our closet, but she didn’t want to tell us when we were little for fear of giving us bad dreams. Well, thanks, Mom!

A Duke for All Seasons

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How about you? Have you got a Halloween factoid to share? A personal ghost story? Let’s hear it.

I’ll give one random commenter a copy of my new e-novella A Duke for All Seasons. It’s the story of Sebastian Blake, Duke of Winterhaven, who never keeps a mistress longer than the turn of a season. Until he meets Arabella St. George, who won’t promise to even stay that long!

And as an added bonus, our winner will also receive the first chapter of Touch of a Thief, Book One in my Touch of Seduction series.

 

Salem in October

Monday, October 3rd, 2011
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Salem, Massachusetts is a lovely town. My local RWA chapter held our regional conference there last spring and will be back there again next April. (If you’re a writer, I encourage you to check out the 2012 Let your Imagination Take Flight Conference). But I’ve been warned against visiting Salem during October.  Wicked traffic near Halloween seems to be the witches’ revenge.

The Salem Witch Trials of 1692 hold a special fascination for me since one of my ancestors was among the accused. (See my post about Sarah Town Cloyce for more about her story.)  Of course, the likelihood that any of the 19 people who were hanged for witchcraft were actually familiars of the devil is exceedingly slim. Most of them were simply unlucky.

The first three to be accused were Tituba (a slave from Barbados), Sarah Good (a homeless beggar), and Sarah Osborn (a fussy old woman who hadn’t been to church in a year.) Since all of them were fairly powerless members of the society, it seems as if the accusers (a hysterical group of teenaged girls) were testing the waters to see how far they could take their claims.  Think of them as Puritan bullies.

One of the accused witches was Giles Corey, a tough-minded octagenarian. He didn’t meet his end on the hangman’s scaffold. Because he knew he’d be convicted if he went to trial and all his land would be forfeit, he refused to stand trial. In so doing, he assured that his land would go to his sons-in-law and their families. Punishment for his refusal to stand trial was “heavy persuasion.” Corey was stripped, a board placed on his chest and heavy stones piled on. Rather than plead for his life, or confess to witchcraft and save it, all he would say is, “More weight.”

Giles Corey is a hero to me. He refused to buckle to a proceeding he criticized as corrupt. He sacrificed himself for the sake of his family.

Of course, if I was writing the story, he’d have been willing to sacrifice himself but I’d have figured out a way for him to triumph and live instead. Unfortunately, history doesn’t guarantee a “happily ever after” like a romance novel does.

One of the main reasons I’m drawn to romance is the sense of balanced scales. I love the fact that no matter how bleak things look, somehow everything will turn out for the best–the wrongs will be righted, the good rewarded, the evil punished.

Unfortunately, life doesn’t have that sort of guarantee. But if you visit Salem in October, you’ll be convinced that in the long run, the witches triumphed.

Do you have a favorite historical person you think has what it takes to be named a hero?

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A Duke for All Seasons

Click to read an excerpt!

What would you do for the sake of a child?

My heroine in A Duke for All Seasons is faced with a terrible choice in order to protect hers. Arabella St. George is blackmailed into helping the French. When she gives the envelope intended for an assassin to the Duke of Winterhaven by mistake, she’ll do anything to retrieve it.

But the duke has plans of his own…

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