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- The Home Office, a Government Agency During the Georgian Era + the Release of “Lost in the Lyon’s Garden” from Dragonblade Publishing (Arriving 18 March 2026)
- Umbrellas Play an Important Part in My Upcoming Dragonblade Publishing Release “Lost in the Lyon’s Garden” [Arriving 18 March 2026]
- History of “Diapers” + the Upcoming Release of “Lost in the Lyon’s Garden” from Dragonblade Publishing [Arriving 18 March 2026]
- Traitor Tuesday ~ Celebrating 250 Years of the United States as a Separate Nation: John Hart, a Man Who Sacrificed Everything as a Signer of the Declaration of Independence
- Foundling Hospitals in the Regency Era + the Upcoming Release of “Lost in the Lyon’s Garden” from Dragonblade Publishing (Arriving 18 March 2026)
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Category Archives: eBooks
A Closer Look at MR. DARCY’S BRIDEs: A Pride and Prejudice Vagary
In my book, MR. DARCY’s BRIDEs, by mistake Elizabeth disrupts Mr. Darcy’s marriage to his cousin, Anne De Bourgh. Our daring heroine is in disguise (NOTE: I drape her with a heavy veil attached to her bonnet, which would not … Continue reading
Posted in Austen Authors, British history, Church of England, eBooks, Jane Austen, Living in the Regency, marriage, marriage customs, marriage licenses, Pride and Prejudice, Regency era, Regency romance, Scotland, Vagary
Tagged annulments, Church of England, eBooks, handfasting, Jane Austen, marriage, Pride and Prejudice, Regency Era, Scotland, Vagary
25 Comments
A Closer Look at “Elizabeth Bennet’s Deception: A Pride and Prejudice Vagary”
Although I have written nearly two dozen Austen-inspired retellings, sequels, and mysteries, Elizabeth Bennet’s Deception was my first attempt at what is known as a “variation” in the JAFF (Jane Austen Fan Fiction) community. In a variation, the author changes one of … Continue reading
Posted in book excerpts, book release, books, British history, eBooks, George Wickham, historical fiction, Jane Austen, Living in the Regency, marriage, Pride and Prejudice, Regency era, Regency romance, Vagary, writing
Tagged Elizabeth Bennet's Deception, historical fiction, JAFF, Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice, Regency romance, Vagary
4 Comments
The Great Valley Road, Setting for My Novel, “The Road to Understanding”
When I began writing The Road to Understanding, I needed a perfect route to take my characters across the mountains between Virginia and Tennessee in the late 1780s. Who Traveled Across The Great Valley Road? The majority of the settlers in … Continue reading
Posted in America, book excerpts, book release, books, customs and tradiitons, eBooks, George Wickham, historical fiction, Pride and Prejudice, romance, Uncategorized
Tagged book release, excerpt, history, Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice, Regina Jeffers, The Great Valley Road, The Road to Understanding, Vagary
4 Comments
Twelfth Night Sale! Reduced Price on 30 of Regina Jeffers’s Titles! First, Fill Up Your eReaders with JAFF!
As of Friday, December 22, 2017, thirty (30)of my titles went on sale. The sale will continue through Friday, January 5, 2018. Fill up your eReaders!!!! These 15 Austen-inspired titles should tempt you. Darcy’s Passions: Pride and Prejudice Retold Through … Continue reading
Posted in Austen Authors, book release, books, eBooks, Jane Austen, publishing, Regency romance
Tagged eBooks, JAFF, Jane Austen, Kindle, KoBo, Nook, Pride and Prejudice, sale, Twelfth Night, Vagary
2 Comments
How Did an American Author of the 1840s Influenced “Pride and Prejudice and a Shakespearean Scholar” + a Giveaway
Born in Tallmadge, Ohio, in February of 1811, Delia Saltar Bacon was an American author who was among the first to purport what is known as the Baconian theory, which perpetuates the idea that Sir Francis Bacon and others were … Continue reading
Posted in Austen Authors, blog hop, book excerpts, book release, British history, buildings and structures, eBooks, Elizabethan drama, estates, Georgian England, Georgian Era, giveaway, historical fiction, history, Jane Austen, Living in the Regency, marriage, marriage customs, Pride and Prejudice, publishing, reading habits, real life tales, Regency era, Regency romance, research, Vagary
Tagged blog hop, book excerpt, book release, British history, eBooks, Elizabethan drama, estates, Francis Bacon, Gorhambury House, historical fiction, Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice, Pride and Prejudice and a Shakespearean Scholar, Publishing, Regency romance, Shakespeare, The Taming of the Shrew, Vagary
14 Comments
A Closer Look at “Christmas at Pemberley”
This is one of those books that floats around in the author’s head for some time before it becomes a reality. Although we have a bit about the letters Princess Charlotte wrote to her supposed lover, it deviates from many … Continue reading
Posted in American History, Austen Authors, book excerpts, British history, eBooks, family, Georgian Era, historical fiction, holidays, Jane Austen, Living in the Regency, Pride and Prejudice, publishing, Regency era, Regency romance, romance, Ulysses Press
Tagged American history, Austen Authors, book excerpts, British history, Christmastide, family, historical fiction, holidays, inspirational romance, Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice, Regency Era, Regency romance, Ulysses Press
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A Writing Desk Fit for Jane Austen, a Guest Post from Laurie Benson
A Writing Table Fit for Jane Austen This post originally appeared on Austen Authors, but I wished to share it with you. Laurie Benson shows us how cramped was the desk upon which Jane Austen created some of the world’s … Continue reading
Posted in Austen Authors, book release, British history, eBooks, Georgian England, Georgian Era, Guest Post, historical fiction, Jane Austen, Living in the Regency, Uncategorized, writing
Tagged Austen Authors, Chawton Cottage, Georgian Era, guest post, Jane Austen, Laurie Benson, Publishing, Regency Era, research, writing desk
8 Comments
Proving Lines of Succession + Release of “The Earl Claims His Comfort”
Succession for a Peerage What happens to a peerage if the peer cannot be found or is presumed dead? What becomes of his wife? His children? This is a familiar plot in many Regency novels. I used it in the … Continue reading
Posted in Act of Parliament, Black Opal Books, blog hop, book excerpts, book release, British history, eBooks, estates, excerpt, family, Georgian England, historical fiction, Inheritance, primogenture, Regency era, Regency romance, research, romance, suspense
Tagged Act of Parliament, Angel Comes to the Devil's Keep, Black Opal Books, book release, British history, except, House of Lords, inheritance, Regency, romantic, succession, suspense, The Earl Claims His Comfort, the Twins' trilogy
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The Lady’s Companion in Life and in Literature, a Guest Post by Jude Knight + the Release of “Never Too Late”
The Lady’s Companion in Life and in Literature As we know from reading historical fiction, women born to the aristocracy or gentry in the United Kingdom in the eighteenth or nineteenth century had few options for employment. If she needed … Continue reading
Posted in book excerpts, book release, books, British history, eBooks, historical fiction, publishing, romance, Victorian era
Tagged English civil war, French Revolution, Historical Romance, medieval romance, Never Too Late, New Zealand, older heroine, Regency romance, righting a wrong, Vauxhall Gardens
2 Comments
Birthing Twins in the Regency + Release of “The Earl Claims His Comfort”
Do you adore cute babies as much as I? What about twins? Twins run in my husband’s family. Thankfully, we did not experience twins directly, but his sister and our second son both did. As a 70-year-old grandmother, I enjoy … Continue reading
Posted in Black Opal Books, blog hop, book excerpts, book release, British history, eBooks, excerpt, Georgian England, Georgian Era, heroines, historical fiction, kings and queens, Living in the Regency, medicine, real life tales, Regency era, Regency romance, romance, suspense
Tagged Angel Comes to the Devil's Keep, Black Opal Books, book release, British history, child birth, excerpt, Princess Charlotte, Regency Era, The Earl Claims His Comfort, twins
Comments Off on Birthing Twins in the Regency + Release of “The Earl Claims His Comfort”



