Showing posts with label Secretary to the Socialite. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Secretary to the Socialite. Show all posts

Sunday, September 07, 2025

Weekend Links


 I just got a new box of books for my next Harlequin release, How to Court Your Wife!!!  It's the 3rd in the Matchmakers of Bath series, and I love it because the heroine, Sandrine, is a modiste.  You know how I love clothes!!!  Her business is booming--now she just has to deal with her much-too attractive estranged husband.  It's releasing on October 23, but I have a few copies to send out for review.  Let me know if you're interested!








In other book news, Secretary to the Socialite is gaining some lovely reviews!  As it's the "book of my heart," this is making me feel quite chuffed and smiley.  







And, as we hover on the brink of autumn (bring on Halloween and apple spice!) here are a few things to read:

Happy birthday, Elizabeth I!  (September 7, 1533)

And the death of her stepmother Queen Katherine Parr (September 5, 1548)

And this week the Duchess of Kent died, aged 92 (a true lady and talented musician, one of the last of the old-school royals, she led a fascinating and sad life)

The (almost) wildness of Elizabeth Bennet

A new "Age of Innocence" adaptation is on its way!  I love Edith Wharton, and it's been 30 years since the perfection of the Scorsese movie, but this description of being a "modern young version for a new generation" does not sound---reassuring....

The stately settings of "Downton Abbey"  (last movie is out next week, woo-hoo!)


Sunday, August 10, 2025

Weekend Links and a Discount Book Code




 Happy Sunday, everyone!  I can't believe how fast summer is slipping away.  Just one more week of Opera here in Santa Fe, plus school started Friday and Indian Market is next weekend.  Eeek!  But, as much as I love my summer dresses and cocktails on patios, not to mention the gorgeous flowers all around town, I'm looking forward to cooler evenings, Halloween, and getting some hygge coziness in the house.


In the meantime, if you'd like to dive into Millicent Rogers and her glam world, I have a discount link for a hard copy.  Perfect for end-of-summer reading!   You can find it here


And here's a few things to keep us distracted on this hot summer day!!


On August 9 in 1588, Elizabeth I gave her famous speech to the troops at Tillbury...

After decades in storage, an 18th century tapestry goes on view at Blenheim

More about the mysteries of the Voynich Manuscript

On August 9, 1902 was the coronation of Edward VII and Queen Alexandra

On August 4, 1557, Anne of Cleves (aka the luckiest of the the six wives) was buried at Westminster Abbey

Ryan Speedo Green in Santa Fe Opera's "Die Walkure" (I thought it was great!)

A "sorcesses' kit" found in the ashes of Pompeii

On August 3, 1553, Mary I made her triumphant entry into London as Queen, after defeating the forces of Jane Grey (this seems to be quite the Tudor month!)

Millicent Rogers' daughter-in-law's NYC apartment up for sale!

Love story of two Edwardian servants on display

Literary tourism

What are we all thinking about "The Gilded Age"???

Or the new Downton Abbey movie???

 


See you next week!

 









Sunday, July 27, 2025

Behind the Book Peeks


 I'm so excited that the "book of my heart" Secretary to the Socialite is finally out in the world!!!  Here's a little peek behind the story...

I’ve had so many questions from early readers about “who is real” in my story, so I thought I’d make a quick post (and use some of my notebooks full of research!). This was such a fun story for me to write, because Taos has been a special place in my own life. When I was very young, about 4, my parents decided to spend part of the summers in Taos, and so that was my vacation spot every year. One year, we visited a beautiful museum in an old house just outside of town, the Millicent Rogers Museum, and on the gift shop wall was a Vogue photo of a gorgeous blonde woman in a Charles James blouse and piles of turquoise and silver bracelets. I had to know more about her!

The Museum was started by one of Millicent’s three sons, Paul Peralta Ramos, in 1956 to showcase his mother’s collection of nearly 2000 pieces of local art—jewelry, pottery, weavings, carvings, and her own work as well, as she was a jewelry designer. It’s now grown to over 7000 pieces, and moved to its current location in 1968, where it’s continued to grow and expand.


Violet Redfield is fictional, but Millicent Rogers was very real! In her short life (1902-1953) she was a socialite and heiress (her grandfather was a co-founder of Standard Oil), fashion icon, art collector, and later an activist for Native American rights. She contracted rheumatic fever at age 10, which shortened her life and plagued her will illness, but she managed to marry three times, fall in love with men like Clark Gable, Roald Dahl, and Ian Fleming, and live in New York, Virginia, Jamaica, and Austria before making her final home in Taos in 1948. She was buried in her new hometown at the Sierra Vista cemetery on January 1, 1953.


Mabel Dodge Luhan (1879-1962) was, like Millicent, a socialite, daughter of a wealthy Buffalo, New York family, who married several times (four!) and was a patron of the arts. She lived in Florence, at a famous Medici villa, and ran a counterculture salon in New York before landing in Taos in 1917 to establish her own arts colony, attracting people such as DH Lawrence, Georgia O’Keefe, and Ansel Adams. She married Tony Luhan from the Taos Pueblo in 1923, and is buried in the Kit Carson Cemetery in Taos. Her house is now a National Historic Landmark and run as a conference center.


One of the great Taos characters is Dorothy Brett (The Hononorable! 1883-1977). Daughter of a viscount, she was raised amid Queen Victoria’s court, but became an artistic bohemian who attended the Slade School and became friends with the Bloomsbury Circle before befriending DH Lawrence and moving with him to Taos in 1924. She stayed there for the rest of her long life, creating her own unique art (some of which can now be seen in the Smithsonian, as well as the Millicent Rogers Museum and Harwood Museum).


Martha Reed (1922-2010) actually opened her famous shop in 1953, so I fudged it a bit for my story! Daughter of artist Doel Reed, she got her own Arts degree in 1944 and worked at the Philbrook Museum and Dallas Museum of Art before moving to Taos. She first worked at the Pink Horse Shop on the Plaza, where she became well-known for designing her “broomstick” skirts and blouses in calico and velvet, before opening her own shop. She was a very sociable person, famous for her “soirees with hooch” all over town. I am lucky enough to own a painting by her, as well as Martha of Taos original bought by my aunt in the 1960s!

Lorenzo is fictional, but his cousin Benito was real, a man who (like so many others) was tormented by what he had seen in World War II and was helped by Millicent. The Karavas brothers first bought La Fonda in the 1920s, and it came to be run by one of their sons, Saki, until his death in 1996. He was an art collector and (as his tombstone says) “a great Taos character.” Tom McCarthy is also real, and if you visit Taos you can stay at his family’s beautiful B&B, Casa Benavides! They have the best breakfasts, and he is full of stories of his long life in Taos.

These are just a few of the sources I used! I have to thank the Historic Santa Fe Archives for all their help, too.

The Mabel Dodge Luhan Papers Collection at the Beinecke Library of Yale (much of which is online)

Mabel Dodge Luhan, Winter in Taos (1935) and Edge of Taos Desert (1937)

Lois Palken Rudnick, Utopian Vistas: The Mabel Dodge Luhan House and the American Counterculture (1996)

Cherie Burns, Searching for Beauty: The Life of Millicent Rogers, the American Heiress Who Taught the World About Style (2011) and Diving for Starfish: The Jeweler, the Actress, the Heiress, and One of the World’s Most Alluring Pieces of Jewelry (2018)

Judith Nasse, A Life in Full (2022)

Annette Tapert and Dana Edkins, The Power of Style (1994)

Sam Hignett, Brett: From Bloomsbury to New Mexico (1985)

Lois P. Rudnick, ed. Mabel Dodge Luhan and Company: American Moderns and the West (2016)

Tuesday, May 27, 2025

(Post) Weekend Links and a Giveaway!

 Happy almost-June, everyone!  I hope you had a lovely Memorial Day weekend and are ready for the warmer weather.  We had a bit of surprise hail yesterday, but most of my veggie plants survived, and I've been buried in writing-land so there will be time for outdoor concerts and restaurant patios asap.


To start off the summer, I have a giveaway for newsletter subscribers!  A box of books and movies (Regency-themed).  If you're already subscribed, you're automatically entered!  If not, you can subscribe here...  (I'm very lazy, so the newsletter is very infrequent!  It's mostly book news and more giveaways)









I also have a July 22 release I am VERY excited about!  My first historical fiction, centered around a fascinating woman in mid-century history (Millicent Rogers) and my favorite place on earth, Taos, New Mexico, where she made her last home and where you can find her eponymous museum.  More about this book soon!!!  (You can pre-order here)

In the glittering world of mid-century America, Millicent Rogers is a woman ahead of her time—Standard Oil heiress, fashion icon, patron of the arts, wife, mother, lover to men like Ian Fleming and Clark Gable. Her beauty and intelligence captivate the world. But behind the scenes, she harbors secrets of ill health and loneliness that only one person knows—her secretary Violet Redfield. A quiet but artistic woman who left her Iowa farm family to pursue dreams of being a writer, Violet navigates a delicate balance between devotion to Millicent and her own dreams of independence.

As their lives become intertwined in a tangle of love, betrayal, and ambition, both women must confront the hidden costs of their powerful alliance. From lavish Hollywood parties to the mountains of bohemian Taos, 
Secretary to the Socialite explores this intricate bond between a woman of privilege and the one who keeps her world from falling apart.

In this captivating, immersive historical novel, two women from very different worlds find themselves at a crossroads where loyalty and personal desires collide, and where their choices could alter the course of their lives forever...

And a few things for your reading pleasure this week!

Marie Antoinette's pink diamond is up for auction

Jane Austen inspired decor

Audrey Hepburn's Givenchy gown to be sold at Sotheby's

The real Queen Charlotte

Young adults embrace Jane Austen "to escape modern dating"

"I cooked like Jane Austen..."

Friday, March 28, 2025

Springtime! Hey ding a ding time! And new releases

 I can't believe it's so long since I've visited here!  Winter has seemed long and dreary, full of deadlines and trying to get our new house into rights (my office is still basically a junk room, but it's getting there!)  I have lots of books news!



Flora Flowerdew and the Secret of the Sarcophagus
, Book 3 in my Victorian Mysteries series is out NOW!  It was quiet an adventure getting Flora and her posse corralled and sent off to the Nile to find out who did in Aunt Imogen's old lover, archaeologist Lord Crosbie.  I am a sucker for tales of desert adventure and ancient Egypt, to this was a fun tale to write.  I hope you enjoy their adventures as much as I have!  (and more info to come this week, I'm putting together a "history behind the scenes post)

1889. With the winter season, Flora's séance society is quiet and life looking dull. A late-night visit from the too-handsome Benedict, Duke of Everton, and his aunt Lady Imogen changes all that. Imogen's long-ago lover, the renowned archaeologist Lord Crosbie, is missing, and she fears the worst.

Flora agrees to accompany them to a mummy unwrapping at the British Museum to see if anyone knows about the disappearance. It's the shock of the town when Crosbie himself is found in the ancient sarcophagus—murdered! Adventure awaits when Flora, Benedict, Imogen, the faithful Pomeranian Chou-Chou, and Mary the Cockney maidservant, set off for Egypt—and find a large cast of suspects who all had good reason to send the archaeologist off to his own underworld...

Buy link 



The second book in my Regency "Matchmakers in Bath" series also came out this winter!  Their Convenient Christmas Betrothal  is a fun "will they or won't they?" make their pretend engagement real!  Mary and Charles get their HEA at last.  (and look for the third in the series How to Court Your Wife in October)

A festive romance to fool society… 

But are they fooling themselves too? 

Mary St. Aubin is a stellar matchmaker, but society has decided that, as a spinster, Mary can no longer be trusted with their matches! After watching her parents’ cold marriage, she refuses to wed for anything but love. 

 Then at a Christmas house party she encounters dangerously attractive Scottish laird Charles. He needs Mary’s help saving his ward from a reputation-ruining liaison with a rake. But when Charles’s own rakish past starts to get in the way, is there another match that must happen first…between Mary and Charles?

Buy Link

If you want to venture to the drama of Renaissance Florence, Betrayed by his Kiss is .99 right now.  If Elizabethan England is your things, Murder at the Princess's Palace is 2.99


And, last but not least, the book of my heart, Secretary to the Socialite, a historical novel about icon Millicent Rogers and bohemian mid-century Taos, will be on sale in August!!!  I am soooo excited for this one, it's been a long journey...

In the glittering world of mid-century America, Millicent Rogers is a woman ahead of her time—Standard Oil heiress, fashion icon, patron of the arts, wife, mother, lover to men like Ian Fleming and Clark Gable. Her beauty and intelligence captivate the world. But behind the scenes, she harbors secrets of ill health and loneliness that only one person knows—her secretary Violet Redfield. A quiet but artistic woman who left her Iowa farm family to pursue dreams of being a writer, Violet navigates a delicate balance between devotion to Millicent and her own dreams of independence.

As their lives become intertwined in a tangle of love, betrayal, and ambition, both women must confront the hidden costs of their powerful alliance. From lavish Hollywood parties to the mountains of bohemian Taos, Secretary to the Socialite explores this intricate bond between a woman of privilege and the one who keeps her world from falling apart.


In this captivating, immersive historical novel, two women from very different worlds find themselves at a crossroads where loyalty and personal desires collide, and where their choices could alter the course of their lives forever...

Look for info about my newsletter giveaway in a few days!  You can sign up for it here