An Interview with EMERY LEE

With THE HIGHEST STAKES e-book going on sale from now until January 8th, I thought I would reprise last spring’s television interview with WHAS in Louisville, KY.

THE HIGHEST STAKES e-book is on sale in all formats for $1.99 until January 8th. http://www.amazon.com/Highest-Stakes-country-fortune-ebook/dp/B003CTEFIY/ref=tmm_kin_title_0?ie=UTF8&m=AG56TWVU5XWC2

Posted in AUTHOR BLOG, AUTHOR EMERY LEE, BOOK PROMOTION, THE HIGHEST STAKES | 1 Comment

Guest blogging today at Romance University

Good morning, RU! Today, I’d like to welcome fellow Sourcebooks author Emery Lee to the classroom. I first met Emery, not through our mutual publisher, but through her fabulous Goodreads forum. Emery is here to talk about the many ways in which authors can connect with readers. Emery, the class is yours!

You are brimming with hope, joy and anticipation. Your beautiful shiny new novel, the work of your blood (if you count paper cuts), sweat, and tears is about to launch  – into the vast sea of a gazillion other beautiful shiny new novels – many by authors far better known, with many more books under their belts.

The image is both daunting and dismaying. With thousands of authors and tens of thousands of books being released each year, the good news is that the popularity of romantic fiction continues to grow. An estimated 74.8 million people read at least one romance novel per year according to a 2008 RWA Reader Survey. Furthermore, projected romance sales are estimated to exceed $1.3 billion this year. But with over 8,000 traditionally published romance titles released last year, in addition to the recent glut of self-pubbed books, how can we “newbies” avoid drowning in this tsunami?

LINK TO POST: http://romanceuniversity.org/2011/12/12/creative-ways-to-find-your-readership-by-emery-lee/

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AUTHOR INTERVIEW AT READING ROMANCES

Interview with Emery Lee

Emery Lee is a lifelong equestrienne and history buff  who loves nothing more than a romantic story That also provides  food for the intellect. Her debut novel THE HIGHEST STAKES is an epic tale of star-cross lovers set in the high stakes world of 18th century horse racing. In FORTUNE’S SON, Emery spins a web of drama, passion, and deceit deep in the world of high stakes gaming. She currently resides in NE Georgia with her husband of twenty-eight years, two sons, a little dog with a big attitude, and her two horses. She is represented by Nicole Resciniti of The Seymour Agency and is a member of the Historical Novel Society, Romance Writers of America, Georgia Romance Writers, and is the group moderator for Goodreads Romantic Historical Fiction Lovers.

Hi Emery, thanks for being here at Reading Romances! As this is a blog focused on romance books, I have to ask you: who are your romance “goddesses”?

I don’t read much romance outside the domain of historicals but within that subgenre I woudl have to list several: Georgette Heyer (Ms. Heyer is the prima goddess!) Lisa Kleypas, Pamela Clare, Laura Kinsale, Loretta Chase, Janna Bourne, Judith  James , Elizabeth Hoyt just to name a few off the top of my head. What a list! I’m sure I’ve overlooked many but tried to think of my DIK list in naming them.  Oh, two new favorites are Grace Burrowes and Lucinda Brant for her Georgian era RH novels.

Do you have a top 5 for your favorite heroes?

Or the first 5 you can think of I forgot to mantion Diana Gabladon as one of my “goddesses”. Her character Jamie Frazer is a fantabulous hero although I don’t care much for his soul mate Claire (Most times I want to shake her until her teeth rattle!  Next is Loretta Chase’ hero Sebastian from Lord of Scoundrels and Lord Damerel from Georgette Heyers’ Venetia. I also LOVED  Iain MacKinnon from Palmela Clare’s SURRENDER and most of all Philip Drake from FORTUNE’S SON. I know it’s a shameless plug to mention my own character but if I wasn’t in love with him, I never would have given him his own book after THE HIGHEST STAKES!

LINK TO FULL INTERVIEW: http://readingromances.wordpress.com/2011/12/10/interview-with-emery-lee/

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An Interview with a Reformed Rogue

Today at FRESH FICTION a chat with Philip Drake of FORTUNE’S SON

"Lee brings the atmosphere of the Georgian era to life with lush descriptions that beg the reader to see, hear, feel and touch it all....with a lively cast of characters and surprising twists and turns that are reminiscent of Fielding’s Tom Jones or Defoe’s Moll Flanders."-RT BOOK REVIEWS

Philip Drake has the look of a man acutely aware of his surroundings. He emanates a sort of restless energy, not of the nervous variety, but of a man accustomed to taking charge of those around him. He regards me first assessingly, and then flashes a raffish smile that makes my pulse speed up, but then Philip, even at his worst, has always had that effect on me.

“So, Miss Lee,” he says, “To what do I owe the honor of this interview?”

“It seems there are many misperceptions about you, my lord-”

“Philip, please.” He meets me with his intense, dark gaze and then smiles warmly. “I am, after all, indebted to you for my very existence.”

“Thank you.” I return the smile and try to suppress my rising color. “I had hoped we could chat briefly.”

He nods, relaxes in his chair, and crosses a booted ankle over his knee.

“Philip, when readers were first introduced to you in THE HIGHEST STAKES as a brother-in-arms and boon companion to Robert Devington, many were shocked and dare I say even repulsed, by your selfish opportunism.”

“Ouch.”Philip winces and then laughs a brief, harsh sound. “I confess I had imagined we might ease into this but you don’t parry words, do you?”

I prompt him with silence.

He sighs. “Everyone has moments in their past that they would change if they could, don’t they? While I won’t make excuses, please know that I’ve had to live with the consequences of my past and it has not been pretty. In those years of which you speak, I was deeply dissatisfied and brimming with resentment of what it could have and should have been, and perpetually sought to dull my disillusionment with easy women and hard drinking. My behavior was irresponsible at the best of times and reprehensible at the worst. I was bitter, as if I’d been dealt an unfair hand or played against cogged dice. I sought to meet the world in the same manner it met me. I was wrong.”

“Dare I ask you to share some of that bitter experience with us? The broken heart, mayhap?”

Philip glances at the ceiling and shifts in his chair. “Got any brandy?” he asks with a chuckle. “I don’t generally bare my soul without it.”

“Please,” I cajole. “You know this is a great opportunity to clear up many misperceptions about you.”

He answers, as if to put me off. “It’s a very long story, that of Sukey and me.”

I am a tenacious interviewer, however, and continue to press. “Then how about the Reader’s Digest condensed version?”

“Alright,” he concedes with a false groan. “Sukey , Lady Messingham, and I first met in a gaming room at the Rose Tavern at Marylebone Pleasure Gardens…”

“That place?”

“It was much more respectable back then,” he laughs. “I was having a singular night at the Hazard Table and ready to throw out another cast when a purse of fifty pounds dropped onto the table. I looked up to see a bemasked goddess in a green gown. I was instantly smitten.”

“And?”

“She would have none of me, or at least not in the way I envisioned.” He smirks. “Yet, she had set her sights on me.”

“Really? In what way?”

“I was singled out to become her gaming pedagogue. Sukey was recently widowed and in dire need of money and had had for some unfathomable reason the inane notion that gaming could keep her housed, clothed, and fed in a fashionable manner.”

“Come, Philip, be fair! That seems an unjust judgment on your part, given thatyou had maintained yourself in precisely that way for a number of years.”

“But it’s not the same for a woman,” he argues, “especially such a desirable woman as Sukey. When a man loses at the tables, he is expected to pay. If he cannot, he can expect drawn swords at dawn with a potentially fatal, but nevertheless, honorable outcome. If a woman loses and is unable to pay her debt of honor, her only option of payment is ….let us say… not quite so honorable. So I endeavored to dissuade her, and failing that, saw myself as her protector, a role she greatly resented.”

“Indeed a rocky start!”

“I fear we have been at odds more times than not, but she is indeed my soul mate.”

The taut lines of his face soften and his eyes glow with warmth as he speaks of her. (Sigh.) I realize I never would have stood a chance.

“Final question, Philip – how would you best describe yourself now?”

“Now? The rogue resurfaces in his reply. “I am a virtual paragon, don’t you know. A shining example of a man reformed…outwardly.” He pauses and grows suddenly solemn. “Inwardly, I would best say I am a man who has finally made peace with himself. “

 

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BOOK LAUNCH PARTY!

When I began writing FORTUNE’S SON, I was obsessed with capturing the tone and excitement of the Georgian gaming world. Second only to creating an intense chemistry between Philip and Lady Susannah, my greatest desire was to completely immerse the reader in their world.

What would it look like?
Sound like?
Feel like?

You cannot even imagine how I shook when I read my first review:

“Lee brings the atmosphere of the Georgian era to life with lush descriptions that beg the reader to see, hear, feel and touch it all….with a lively cast of characters and surprising twists and turns that are reminiscent of Fielding’s Tom Jones or Defoe’s Moll Flanders.” -RT Book Reviews

Now, I bid you all welcome to the Georgian gaming world of FORTUNE’S SON

LINK TO FULL POST WITH EXCERPT: http://casablancaauthors.blogspot.com/2011/11/fortunes-son-book-launch.html

Posted in AUTHOR BLOG, AUTHOR EMERY LEE, BOOK PROMOTION, BOOK REVIEWS, FORTUNE'S SON, GAMBLING AND VICE, GEORGIAN ENGLAND | Leave a comment

The Rocky Road to LOVE – A Guest Post at ROMCON

In Shakespeare’s A Midsummernight’s Dream, Lysander makes the sage observation that “the course of true love never did run smooth.”

FORTUNE’S SON is precisely such a story in which the path to love is fraught with many obstacles. It chronicles a complicated relationship between two very flawed and multifaceted characters who by outward appearances seem completely incompatible, but who inwardly mirror one another in many ways. And while neither the young and feckless adventurer, Philip Drake, nor the jaded widow Lady Susannah Messingham has any intention of romantic entanglements, Fate, however, has other things in store.

FORTUNE’S SON is about failings, foibles and forgiveness; selfish desires and self-less sacrifice, and ultimately of the redeeming power of love.

Linnk to full post with Book Excerpt: http://www.romconinc.com/index.php?option=com_lyftenbloggie&view=entry&year=2011&month=11&day=06&id=1647:fortunes-son-by-emery-lee

Posted in AUTHOR BLOG, BOOK PROMOTION, FORTUNE'S SON, GAMBLING AND VICE, GEORGIAN ENGLAND | Leave a comment

CHARACTER ARCS AND SECOND CHANCES

FORTUNE’S SON is an atypical love story. It is about second chances  and redemption. It chronicles a long and rocky road to true love between two very flawed characters. It is also a story that I never intentionally set out to write…

More at  Petite Fours and Hot Tamales

http://petitfoursandhottamales.com/2011/11/9327/

Posted in AUTHOR BLOG, BOOK PROMOTION, BOOK REVIEWS, FORTUNE'S SON, GAMBLING AND VICE, GEORGIAN ENGLAND | Leave a comment

Emery Lee Guest Post at ROMCON

Guest post with book excerpt:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

http://www.romconinc.com/index.php?option=com_lyftenbloggie&view=entry&id=1647

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Just Call Me AUTHOR FRANKENSTEIN

THE HISTORICAL REANIMATOR

Link to Full Post:   http://casablancaauthors.blogspot.com/2011/10/emery-lee.html

Posted in AUTHOR BLOG, AUTHOR EMERY LEE, BOOK PROMOTION, FORTUNE'S SON | Tagged | Leave a comment

FORTUNE’S SON VIRTUAL BOOK TOUR

Date Blog NAME
Fri 10/28/11 My book Addiction and Morehttp://mybookaddictionandmore.com/
SAT 10/29/11 Casablanca bloghttp://casablancaauthors.blogspot.com/
Mon 10/31/11 Christy English Bloghttp://www.christyenglish.com/
Wed 11/2/11 Petit Fours and Hot Tamales http://petitfoursandhottamales.com/
Fri 11/4/11 RHFL Book Club on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/groups/GoodreadsRHFL/
Sun 11/6/11 RomCon (historical blogs)http://www.Romcon.com
Tues 11/8/11 History Undressed http://www.historyundressed.blogspot.com/
Thurs 11/10/11 SOS ALOHAhttp://sosaloha.blogspot.com/
Fri 11/11/11 Casablanca bloghttp://casablancaauthors.blogspot.com/
Sun 11/13/11 Risky Regencieshttp://riskyregencies.blogspot.com/
Fri 11/18/11 Fresh Fictionhttp://freshfiction.com/pages.php?id=blog
Fri 11/ 25/11 Thoughts Over Coffeehttp://siamckye.blogspot.com/
Mon 11/28/11 Night Owl Reviewshttp://www.nightowlromance.com/nor/
Mon 11/28/11 Historical Hussieshttp://historicalhussies.blogspot.com/
Posted in AUTHOR BLOG, AUTHOR EMERY LEE, BOOK PROMOTION, FORTUNE'S SON, GAMBLING AND VICE, GEORGIAN ENGLAND | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment