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8/28/2018

NEW RELEASE from Bestselling Author Regan Walker

Love in the time of revolution

France 1794

Zoé Ariane Donet was in love with love until she met the commander of the royalist army fighting the revolutionaries tearing apart France. When the dashing young general is killed, she joins the royalist cause, rescuing émigrés fleeing France.

One man watches over her: Frederick West, the brother of an English earl, who has known Zoé since she was a precocious ten-year-old child. At sixteen, she promised great beauty, the flower of French womanhood about to bloom. Now, four years later, as Robespierre’s Terror seizes France by the throat, Zoé has become a beautiful temptress Freddie vows to protect with his life.


But English spies don’t live long in revolutionary France.

Excerpt from A Fierce Wind by Regan Walker

Suddenly looking impatient, her uncle turned to the nuns. “We must make haste; my ship awaits and, by now, I fear my quartermaster is cursing me under his breath.”
They were nearly to the quay when two soldiers in the blue and white uniforms of the republican army stepped out of the fog and into their path.
Her uncle muttered a curse.
Beneath his bicorne, the fat soldier displayed plump red cheeks and a bushy brown mustache. The cold eyes of his companion matched his thin lips, curved into a cruel smile, as his gaze roved over Zoé and the younger nun. “Eh bien… what have we here? One man with three women? That seems hardly fair when, as you can see, we servants of the revolution have none.”
The soldier with the mustache laughed, one hand on his ponderous belly, the other on his long musket. “Surely you can share, citoyen.”
From their leering eyes, Zoé did not put rape past either of them. Rumors abounded of the soldiers’ abuse of the local women. The thought of one of these touching her made Zoé’s skin crawl.
The younger nun gasped and was stilled by the hand of the older on her shoulder. Zoé stepped in front of them and slid her hand into the small slit in her full skirt to reach the sharp knife strapped to her thigh.
“Ah, mes amis,” said her uncle, adopting the common speech, “on another occasion, if these were but stray cats, I would be happy to invite you to join my party but, alas, this is family business. These are my sisters and my wife, women under my protection.”
His tone hinted of velvet laid over steel and the red-cheeked soldier did not fail to notice. The smile faded from his corpulent face as his fingers nervously played with the end of his mustache.
Seeing his companion falter, the thin-lipped one aimed his musket at her uncle. “You will share, as I have said, or reap the consequences, mon ami.”
If the republican soldier thought to intimidate Jean Donet, he picked the wrong man. Her uncle had a fierce reputation known to many in France.
Zoé was tempted to inform these idiots, who played at being soldiers, they were dealing with the great capitaine of la Reine Noire, the Black Queen, but she held her tongue, knowing her uncle could swiftly deal them a deathblow if he chose.
Je ne pense pas,” he said to the soldiers. “Not tonight.” Before they realized what was happening, her uncle slipped his knife from the sheath at his wrist and sent the deadly blade hurtling through the air and into the neck of the thin-lipped one. His eyes bulged and he made a gagging sound as he clutched his throat, spurting blood, and dropped to the ground.
Zoé did not even blink. Behind her, Sister Augustin exclaimed, “Mon Dieu!”
The rotund soldier began to back away, apparently forgetting he held a musket.
Her uncle drew a pistol from the pocket of his frock coat and pointed it at the mustached soldier. “Go now and you will live. The streets of Granville are full of enemies and your comrade did not see the blade coming, d’accord ? Neither did you see the one who killed him.
The soldier nodded slowly and then, as if coming out of a trance, turned and ran.
“You have killed him!” Sister Augustin scolded, coming around Zoé and bending over the soldier bleeding profusely from his neck.
The young Sister Angélique, apparently more pragmatic, knelt beside the man and swept her hand over his face, closing his eyes as she murmured a prayer for his departed soul.
Zoé’s uncle retrieved his knife, wiping the blade clean on the soldier’s uniform. “This is war, Sister, and, in war, to hesitate is to accept defeat. That I will never do.”

US: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07FYPFVRL
UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B07FYPFVRL


MEET THE AUTHOR

 Regan Walker is an award-winning, Amazon bestselling author of Regency, Georgian and Medieval romances. After years of serving clients in private practice and several stints in high levels of government, she developed a feel for the demands of the “Crown”. Hence her stories often feature a demanding sovereign who taps his subjects for special assignments. Each of her novels includes real history and real historical figures as characters. And, of course, adventure and love.

Regan Walker’s Readers on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ReganWalkersReaders/
Pinterest (storyboards for my books): https://www.pinterest.com/reganwalker123/
Regan’s blog, Historical Romance Review: https://reganromancereview.blogspot.com/


EE: Tell us about your new book, A Fierce Wind. Where and when is it set?

Regan: It’s set in 1794 in England, France and on the Isle of Guernsey during the French Revolution and the Reign of Terror.

EE: Oh, my. That must have been a challenge. How did you do it?

Regan: I began by diving into that period in history. My desk was littered with books on the French Revolution. So much information, I was on overload. Trying to find an entry point for my story took weeks. Finally, I found something rarely spoken about… a strong resistance movement in the northwest provinces of France.

EE: What about your hero and heroine? What side were they on?

Regan: The heroine, Zoé Donet, is French. Initially, she supports the revolution.  But when it turns bloody, she becomes a royalist aligned with the resistance. The hero, Frederick West, is English, a spy for the British Crown. Both are aristocrats who leave behind the trappings of their place in society to support the rebels and, in Freddie’s case, help England win the war. Since my readers pretty much handed me the hero and heroine (they are minor characters in the 2nd book of the trilogy and my readers wanted them to get together in this book), it’s a “friends to lovers” story. And that was a challenge, too.

EE: Lots of action?

Regan: Oh, yes. Swordfights, ambushes, murder and battles on the English Channel and in the Atlantic. The reader will not be bored.

EE: You write seafaring romance, yes? Is this one of them?

Regan: I do and yes, it is. All of the stories in the Donet Trilogy of which this book is a part, feature sea captains, scenes set on ships and battles at sea.

EE: Will any real historical figures show up?

Regan: Lots, actually. Naval captains on both sides of the war, a despicable French general, a few real English spymasters, the young general who leads the rebellion in the northwest provinces, Captain Victor (a female who fights with the rebels), William Pitt the Younger (England’s Prime Minister) and the author of the Terror himself, Robespierre. Some of my readers have trouble telling the fictional from the real and that makes me happy. I want it to be seamless.

EE: What sound or noise do you love?

Regan: Ocean waves and falling rain. You’ll hear them both in this story.

EE: Do you have a favorite movie?

Regan: There are many but one of my very favorites is The Last of the Mohicans. It’s a romance, you know, as are most blockbusters when you think of it. Most of the movies I like feature some important time in history. Same for the TV series I watch.

EE: Be honest, when reading...do you put yourself in the heroine’s role?

Regan: I think I must, but then I’m often in the head of the hero, too. The story won’t be compelling to readers unless you convince them these people are worth caring about.

EE: Is writing or story-telling easier for you?

Regan: When I first began writing, I wouldn’t have been able to tell you but once the reviews came in, it was clear I am a storyteller. And I like it that way. I want to pull my readers in, to make them a part of the world I create. To make them never want to leave it.

EE: What’s something you’d like to tell your fans?

Regan: I want them to know they are the reason I write my stories. If I can make their lives happy and give them hope for love then I’ve done my job. If they learn something along the way about history, well, that’s gravy.

EE: What’s coming next?

Regan: A Regency… Rogue’s Holiday. It’s book 5 in the Agents of the Crown series, set in 1820 in London and Brighton… as the Prince Regent becomes king and a band of rebels seeks to murder the leaders of the government.


A Fierce Wind is book 3 in the Donet Trilogy; today's giveaway will be book #1, To Tame the Wind

Question for readers: What are your favorite time periods in history for historical romances and why?

a Rafflecopter giveaway

14 comments:

  1. Hello there, E.E.! Thanks so much for hosting me and A Fierce Wind on Get Lost in a Story. It's good to be back on the blog!

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  3. Great interview, thanks for sharing

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    1. You are most welcome, Janet. Thanks for the comment!

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  4. I love the late 1800's and the early 1900's as so much happened and loved the simple but hard work they had also what they had to go thru with their clothes washing and keeping them up. No big box stores etc....Peggy Clayton ptclayton2@aol.com

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    1. That's true, Peggy, if you are speaking of working folks and the American frontier. If you are speaking of the upper classes, they had servants for everything.

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  5. I like the Victorian and Regency time periods.

    Kit3247(at)aol(dot)com

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    1. Both of those are good settings for stories, Rita. I have 6 Regencies but I have yet to write a Victorian.

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    2. Congratulations, Rita! You have won To Tame the Wind. I'll be sending it to you as a gift from Amazon.

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  6. Regency is interesting

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  7. I love anything medieval and I love the 1800s too!! Those times were so fascinating!! Thanks for the chance!!

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    1. Hi, Chastity! I do hope you'll read my Medieval Warriors series. See it here: http://www.reganwalkerauthor.com/medieval-warriors.html

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  8. Congratulations to Rita Wray! She has won To Tame the Wind.

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