Showing posts with label Regency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Regency. Show all posts

Thursday, November 16, 2017

God’s Timing, and Stepping Out in Faith


I don’t know about you, but sometimes I can get a little caught up in production mode. I’ve had a pretty busy year with lots of deadlines to meet, and at times I’ve felt a little bit like a meerkat being busy, busy, busy then when I’ve met my deadline, poking my head up to peer around to see who and what is available for a chance to relax, refresh and reinvigorate.

Last month, a week before the Omega Writers Conference in Sydney, I had such a moment, and just so happened to attend my local chapter of the Jane Austen Society. We were fortunate enough to have a guest speaker, Tim Bullamore, who is the editor for Jane Austen’s Regency World magazine (and who also, incidentally, writes obituaries for The Times newspaper). After his talk about Jane Austen’s life, death and legacy, I spoke to him, where it just so happened someone mentioned I was a writer. He gave me his card, saying if ever I would like to submit an article for his magazine (which Jane-ites from around the globe subscribe to) then to send him an email. I took his card, thanked him, and went back into busy mode, all the while thinking, thinking, thinking.

Having done a fair amount of historical research for my Regency novels I wondered if he might be interested in an article about Brighton, England’s Royal Pavilion, something I mention in my latest book The Dishonorable Miss DeLancey (and something Donna Fletcher Crow just so happened to write about last week). I sent off an email, went to the conference, and had a great time. The following week was back to busy, busy, busy as I work to get my sixth book ready for submission next month. In the midst of my busyness, mothering duties called me to Sydney (1½ hours away) to pick up my daughter from a concert at the Sydney Opera House. Having some time to kill I thought I’d visit the nearby New South Wales State Library, where they just so happen to hold a copy of the most marvellous book, The Making of the Royal Pavilion: Designs and Drawings by John Morley. This book examines the renovations and refurbishments that took the Royal Pavilion from Brighton farmhouse to the jaw dropping edifice of Moorish / Chinese / Indian design that it is today. I was able to read this, take a few colour photocopies of some of the designs, then pick up my daughter, all the while marvelling that I had such (relatively) easy access to one of the only copies of this book in Australia. Why did I want to read this? It was a faith step, just in case Mr. Bullamore said yes to my article proposal.
 
It just so happened that two days later I received an email saying – you guessed it – yes, love that idea, please submit, etc, etc.

As a Christian, I’m trusting God will open the right doors at the right time. Not everything works out, but so many times when I’m asking God to direct my paths and submitting my plans to Him it just so happens that I see Him provide opportunities, opportunities that I’m learning to say yes to. Life can get pretty busy, but taking time to follow those Holy Spirit nudges can be so much more rewarding than we realise. Sometimes we need the reminder that God holds our lives in His hands, and we just need to trust Him and His timing, and step out in faith.

Carolyn Miller lives in the beautiful Southern Highlands of New South Wales, Australia, with her husband and four children. Together with her husband she has pastored a church for ten years, and worked part-time as a public high school English and Learning and Support teacher.
A longtime lover of romance, especially that of Jane Austen and Georgette Heyer’s Regency era, Carolyn holds a BA in English Literature, and loves drawing readers into fictional worlds that show the truth of God’s grace in our lives. Her Regency novels include The Elusive Miss Ellison, The Captivating Lady Charlotte, and The Dishonorable Miss DeLancey, all available from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Book Depository, Koorong, etc

Connect with her:        www.carolynmillerauthor.com
                                     www.pinterest.com/camillering


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Wednesday, November 8, 2017

The Joys of Serendipitous Research



My father always told me, “You never learn anything you don’t use sometime.”

Just like most of the things my father taught me, I have found this to be true—especially when it comes to research for my novels. Because I live in the western US and set most of my novels in England, and because I try never to write about a place I haven’t visited, research looms large in my writing life. And because I’m always working on a tight schedule I’m very focused in my research.

I always set out knowing what I need to know and where I hope to find it. At least, I always “think” I know what I need to know—and how it will fit into my story. When something unexpected turns up—someone answers a question I didn’t ask, or suggests I go someplace I hadn’t planned to go—I used to dismiss that “extraneous” information.

Until at least the third or fourth time I was back in my office writing and discovered that that superfluous material was just what I needed—if only I could remember it, since I had failed to write it down.

I had an example of this when my husband and I visited the Royal Pavilion in Brighton as background for the novel I’m currently writing—A Lethal Spectre, book 5 in my Victorian true crime series Lord Danvers Investigates—I was enchanted to encounter a Regency dance group rehearsing to perform a program for an event later that night. But they were Regency, a whole generation earlier than the 1857 setting for my story. It was charming, but I needn’t take notes.

But wait, this was something I could report to the JaneAusten Society of North America newsletter. I sought out a pavilion official and got permission to take pictures—in spite of the prohibition against photography. 


Although I submitted the article to JASNA News, it was never published. A few days ago, however, when I needed to place my Victorian characters at a ball in the Royal Pavilion, I had my pictures to refer to for accurate details—adjusting for the changes in dance and dress fashion, of course.

You can see the results when A Lethal Spectre is published early next year, but in the meantime, my latest release is the all-new edition of ATincture of Murder, book 4 in Lord Danvers Investigates:

A devastating fire at Danvers’s ancestral home induces Charles to accept his brother Frederick’s plea for help with his work among fallen women and impoverished orphans in York. Charles soon finds himself struggling to identify a ruthless murderer while Antonia helps feed the women and children living in the asylum Frederick runs. The trial of notorious poisoner William Dove leads to surprising discoveries and sets legal precedent still followed today.

Posted by Donna Fletcher Crow. You can see more about all her books on her website.


                                                                                                                          

Thursday, June 1, 2017

Facing Fears

by Carolyn Miller

I like to think I’m braver than I am, that I’d be the person who saves a life by standing up to someone, or puts my life in danger in some dramatic rescue. Truth is, I’m not terribly brave. I prefer my cave to lots of people, I shriek when I see mice and snakes – and don’t get me started on rats! (Funny thing though, this little Aussie is perfectly okay with spiders)

The past few months have provided lots of opportunities for me to face my fears as I embark on published author life. From having to ask complete strangers for help in promoting my work, to asking authors I look up (but have never met) to read and then provide endorsement (hello, Angela! 😊), to being presented with opportunities to speak at conferences with far more knowledgeable people than I, sometimes it seems like I’m forced to face my fears every day.

Aren’t we all?

I think sometimes we believe that God is supposed to protect us from trouble, that the Christian life should be stress-free. I know people who have walked away from faith because they couldn’t understand why a good God would allow such hardship in their life. But God doesn’t promise stress-free. The Bible says many times that trouble comes but God is with us. That though we walk through the valley of the shadow of death we need not fear, because God is with us (Psalm 23.4). That God is our refuge and strength, our ever-present help in times of trouble (Psalm 46.1). These verses are easy to agree when life is cruisy, but how much harder when things seem overwhelming. (Can I hear an Amen?)

There have been times this past year when I’ve been literally trembling as I face my fears, even if it’s only about sending (or reading) a particular email. I remember saying to my mother-in-law how the challenges felt a bit like labouring in childbirth, where each band of pressure and contraction was leading to enlarged capacity, and the promise of new things. I might understand that intellectually, but I still had to walk through it. And in each of those moments, I found myself taking a deep breath and calling to mind God’s promises. My trust is in Him, that He will continue to order my steps and lead me where He wants.

The Captivating Lady Charlotte

I need to remember this as my second inspirational Regency releases soon. I know there might be some who don’t ‘get’ parts of it, but that’s okay. I don’t want to let my fears shape me by writing less than what I feel God says is okay, just to make some people happy. I want to be braver, write stronger, knowing God is with me, strengthening me for all that lies ahead. For this to happen I need to continue to face my fears.


Don’t we all?

Carolyn Miller lives in the beautiful Southern Highlands of New South Wales, Australia, with her husband and four children. A longtime lover of romance, especially that of the Regency era, Carolyn holds a BA in English Literature, and loves drawing readers into fictional worlds that show the truth of God’s grace in our lives. She is represented by Tamela Hancock Murray of the Steve Laube Agency. Her Regency novel 'The Elusive Miss Ellison' released in the US in February 2017, and is available at Amazon.com, CBD, Barnes & Noble and Book Depository, and her second novel ‘The Captivating Lady Charlotte’ releases June 27 and  is available for preorder now.


Connect with her:  https://www.carolynmillerauthor.com/                              
https://www.facebook.com/CarolynMillerAuthor/
https://twitter.com/CarolynMAuthor
http://www.pinterest.com/camillering
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