Guest Blog

It started as a joke.  A few of my dearest best friends thought it would be funny to get me some novels for my fifteenth birthday.  I was presented with a selection of four extremely hot historical pirate romance novels (Sabrina Jefferies’ The Pirate Lord, Gaelen Foley’s The Pirate Prince, Johanna Lindsey’s A Pirate’s Love,-though I prefer Gentle Rogue- and Virginia Henley’s The Pirate and the Pagan) complete with the giggles and jokes that naturally accompany explicit sex scenes.  I had already been a huge fan of Young Adult historical love stories (and even Becky read my favorite trilogy – Jean Ferris’ American Dreams) but this, THIS was amazing.  My collection quickly expanded from those four to the over five hundred or so historical romance novels that I have today.  My four or five book a week habit can get expensive, but it is nearly as vital to my existence as food.  Thank goodness I like to re-read.

Naturally, you think I must be a lonely, sex starved woman with only my cats for company.  You. Are. Wrong.

I’m happily living with the love of my life, my own personal romance hero.  He’s sexy, just my type and as even his mother pointed out to me, as close to my fantasy of a pirate as I’m ever going to get.  We have a healthy sex life, great communication and could have written the words as the sun set over the deserted island beach… well, you get where I’m going.

Here is the thing.  Romance novels are not a substitute for love and dating.  We, the extremely loyal readers, enjoy the escape to a different time, or place.  We love the details of the human interpersonal relationships.  Most importantly, we love the happily ever after.  We are proud to hold our heads high as we sigh and cry with the characters unembarrassed and empowered by the obvious scantly clad hunk on the cover. We don’t read this genre because we are unlucky in love and desperate for semblance of sex that we’ll never achieve. We read because we love this genre and the satisfaction these novels give us on so many levels.

I’ve spent a lot of time defending my choice of literature.  I’ve had people ask if I’ve read any real books recently, and I’ve been teased for heading many miles away to attend huge romance novel conferences to hang with my favorite authors.  These women, these amazing, creative women, who write romance novels get it.  This world is not a happy place.  People fall in love, fall out of love and get divorced.  People get rejected in the cruelest of ways. Women (and men) are abused physically and mentally.  Relatives cause terrible problems, and illness and death some more. But these authors allow everyone to have faith that they, too, will find that special someone who is that tall, blue eyed sailor of your dreams, who brings you flowers for no reason, makes the best meatloaf on the planet and loves you completely.

Romance novels, as a genre, have changed over the last twenty or thirty years.  The bodice rippers and violent captive relationships (which I don’t like) have given way to a whole selection of common human interactions (which I love.)  The men in these books are as flawed as the men we meet in our lives.  They forget to call (or write.) They say the wrong things; they fuck up.  The women are human, too.  They have the insecurities and thoughts that women do all the time.  Some are strong willful women, and others are timid.  These books allow you to relate, and learn from their mistakes.  They show you that even the people who have the hardest lives, are the biggest rakes (ok, players) and the worst luck in love can find that special someone who really gets them.

One of my favorite parts of these novels is how in nearly every story I can relate to something. Sometimes it’s the motives of the heroine.  In one of my original favorites Captain Jack’s Woman by Stephanie Laurens, I totally got the heroines need to find some adventure in this world and loved the rugged smuggler she fell in love with.  In one of her later books A Secret Love I connected to the romance between good friends, who had stifled a romantic spark for years.  In Madeline Hunter’s The Romantic I fell hard for the hero who secretly wrote letters to his love and never sent them for over a decade.  I know I will adore Karen Hawkin’s release in March since I’ll connect to the heroine’s name, her chosen profession and her sea captain love.  These books all somehow connect to my life and my loves and it allows me to transport myself to a less complicated time and lose myself in those stories.

Aside from all that heavy stuff, these books are FUN!  There is adventure, there is conflict and there is sex.  It’s like adding some classy porn in the middle of a movie like Pirates of the Caribbean or Spiderman.  It is entertainment at its finest, plus it’s hot.  Who doesn’t like hot?  It can give you ideas, and motivation.  My dear author friends have very active imaginations- I definitely recommend taking some of their important plot points as advice. (Wink, Wink)

Now, I dare you to go find a copy of Captain Jack’s Woman and read it aloud with your partner.  Need other novel recommendations?  Ask away! And if you feel like discussing romance novels on a regular basis visit The Romance Dish, or The Romantic Times.  Learn about the romance genre at the RWA National website. If you just want to get to know fans and authors visit awesome blogs like The Goddess Blogs or any number of the author blogs out there.

So, tell me: what do YOU think about the best selling, most lucrative sector of publishing today?

Great Historical Romance Authors (on my auto buy list):

Sabrina Jefferies Suzanne Enoch Johanna Lindsey
Karen Hawkins Eloisa James Kathryn Caskie
Madeline Hunter Sophia Nash Tessa Dare
Liz Carlyle Claudia Dain Julia London
Lisa Kleypas Nicole Jordan Mary Balogh
Celeste Bradley Lorraine Heath Joanna Bourne
Stephanie Laurens Julia Quinn Gaelen Foley

Contemporary/Suspense/Urban Fantasy Authors to check out:

Karen Rose Rachel Gibson Lori Handeland
Nora Roberts Christina Dodd Charlaine Harris

15 Comments

 
  1. avatar
    Posted by Sabrina Jeffries

    Thanks for recommending my books! And I agree with everything you said–it was romance novels that got me through the early years of my son’s autism and romance novels that helped me survive grad school. I’ll never stop loving them!

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    • Posted by pirategirl

      Of course! You know very well that you’re one of the ones that got me hooked. Reading romance really is such a great stress relief.

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  2. avatar
    Posted by TigersFan123

    Great blog, pirategirl. Everybody needs an escape, and it sounds like you found a very sexy one. Which book would you be the heroine of, if you could enter the book like that kid in Action Hero?

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    • Posted by Becky

      pirategirl IS captain Jack’s woman (I would say)

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    • Posted by pirategirl

      Well, I thought about that long and hard… and decided that it’s pretty hard to decide! I might have to go with CJW, but I really truly adore A Secret Love. I love both the heroes! I think I would pick Kit’s (CJW) struggles over Alathea’s (ASL) until the climax of the book. Then I would pick Alathea’s ‘scary’ moment over Kit’s. (wow, it’s hard talking about this without giving away plot!)

      So basically. I don’t know. I think I might just go with running to Greta Green with Sebastian (from The Devil in Winter) to avoid this whole dilemma.

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  3. avatar
    Posted by Kathy T

    “classy porn” is my new favourite phrase!

    I completely agree! I’ve been hooked on historical romance since the age of 12.
    I’m also so tired of defending my right to read them.

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    • Posted by pirategirl

      Hear, hear! I wish this could be our last defense of the genre!

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  4. Posted by SilverTuna

    Romance Novels Deserve Respect

    Check out Northrop Frye’s “The Secular Scripture: A Study of the Structure of Romance”

    “Romance, a mode of literature trafficking in such plot elements as mistaken identity, shipwrecks, magic potions, the rescue of maidens in distress, has tended to be regarded as hardly deserving of serious consideration; critics praise other aspects of the Odyssey, The Faerie Queene, Shakespeare’s last plays, and Scott’s Waverley novels, for example, while forgiving the authors’ indulgence in childishly romantic plots. Frye, however, discerns in the innumerable romantic narratives of the Western tradition an imaginative universe stretching from an idyllic world to a demonic one, and a pattern of action taking the form of a cyclical descent into and ascent out of the demonic realm. Romance as a whole is thus seen as forming an integrated vision of the world, a “secular scripture” whose hero is man, paralleling the sacred scripture whose hero is God.”

    http://www.amazon.com/Secular-Scripture-Structure-Romance-paperbacks/dp/0674796764

    I would be glad to loan you my copy, pirategirl.

    ;)

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    • Posted by pirategirl

      Awesome! I’ve seen a few pieces analyzing romance, but I haven’t read this book. I’ll have to check it out!

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  5. Posted by singlegal

    i had no idea these books were so popular! i’ve never really gotten into them, but they sound like awesome summer reads. is there one that’s really good to start with? like, THE intro to romance novels?

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    • Posted by pirategirl

      My go to first recommended read is Captain Jack’s Woman. (I actually have two copies, since I lend it so often.) The reason I suggest that one is that I adore the plot (and it happens to have one of my favorite plot themes) and it’s a prequel to a series I like. Most of my other favorites come at the end or middle of series and I just don’t believe in picking up a series in the middle, regardless of how good the book is. I’m a sucker for series since you get to see old favorite characters again and again.

      If you’re in the mood for a few books (they’re often quick reads) I recommend Eloisa James’ The Essex Sisters quartet, Sabrina Jeffries’ School for Heiresses Series, Mary Balogh’s Bedwyn Series, Stephanie Lauren’s Cynster Series (although, that might take a while.) Nicole Jordan’s Courtship War series, Sophia Nash’s Widow’s Club series, and Lisa Kleypas’s Wallflower Series.

      The Wallflower series contains Devil in Winter which is another favorite reread that I didn’t have time to mention in the blog (but at least I got to put an image of it.)

      Karen Hawkin’s MacLean Curse series is great, (and her contemporary Lois Lane Tells All is great too.) Suzanne Enoch’s Griffen Family series is a must read…. ok. really, I could go on forever.

      Basically, start with Captain Jack. Even my boyfriend liked it.

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  6. avatar
    Posted by CoastieDaughter

    Great post!! I’m thinking I need to start reading some of these books now… (btw, it’s Catherine;) )

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    • Posted by pirategirl

      I’ll happily lend you one. I was reading Captain Jack’s Woman today when you saw me at work!

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  7. avatar
    Posted by Cinderella

    Pirategirl introduced me to romance novels (Captain Jack’s Woman, of course) when I was going through a really, really painful breakup. I had been skeptical, but they definitely did the trick. What a wonderful escape! I was able to completely lose myself in the delicious story and ease my aching heart for a few hours. Now I tend to gravitate toward chick lit (which is often similarly stigmatized and sneered at by literature snobs), but this blog has me itching to pick up a good historical romance. Thanks, pirategirl. xo

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    • Posted by pirategirl

      You totally should! I think I know what to get your for your birthday this year!

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