Introducing Flora

Today I’m blogging about Flora MacLean, the hero’s sister in The Sins of the Sire, my debut novel published on 13 March 2019. It won’t be a spoiler to say that Flora doesn’t survive the story because by the time the story begins she has already died at the hands of an English nobleman. But Flora has an important part to play in the book. Not only is she prominent in her brother’s memory but it’s her death which gives rise to the central plot.

The second child of a Highland chieftain, Flora was born after her brother, Tavish. By the time of her birth, The MacLean already had his son and heir and therefore lacked the desperation most clan chiefs or kings had for a male child. The MacLean had three children in total and Flora’s younger brother Callum grew up worshipping his big sister because she used to take care of him and sing him songs at night to help him sleep.

She inherited her father’s colouring, as did both her brothers. Her family did everything they could to protect her from the hardships of the time so she spent much of her time enjoying life, oblivious to the conflict between the English and the Scots. She could often be heard singing in her family home of Glenblane Castle and her brother once spotted her singing and dancing in the forest nearby when she thought nobody was looking.

The heroine of the story, Elyssia, grew up in England, but she met Flora before the story begins and remembers her as “a young girl with bright red hair and vivid green eyes.” Elyssia’s upbringing had significantly less love than Flora’s but this gave her a level of understanding of the world which better equipped her to survive it. Elyssia’s defining characteristic is her determination to defend the gentle and the weak, and she’s fiercely protective of her own sister, Alice. At one point in the story, Tavish wonders whether Flora would have survived if she’d had Elyssia to protect her.

Flora’s father doted on her so when she died he was unable to deal with the grief. On his deathbed he made Tavish swear an oath of vengeance, an oath which Tavish has to come to terms with when faced with the reality of carrying out the deeds he has sworn to undertake.

Though she’s dead, she’s an important character whose memory is kept alive by her family and the story shows glimpses of her in flashbacks. It’s his love for Flora and duty to his Clan that drives Tavish forward but at times he wonders whether vengeance is the best way to honour the memory of such a gentle young woman. It remains to be seen whether he’ll be able to lay her ghost to rest and find peace.

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Publishing Contracts vs Underground Trains

Publishing Contracts vs Underground Trains

It’s with enormous pleasure that I can announce I’ve signed a contract with Tirgearr Publishing, for a historical romance involving a hot Highlander! This comes hot on the heels of the medieval romance I signed with Wild Rose Press in the summer.

Hence the London underground analogy. You wait for a train for ages, then two come at once.

In my case I heard the rails rattle a few times and even felt the ground rumble under my feet when I thought an offer was on the cards last year; but the train never arrived. My novel fell at the final stage of submission after a lot of editing, submitting and waiting. I was close to thinking I’d never secure a contract and chalked up 2017 as the “year of the no”. But in contrast, 2018 has turned out to be the “year of the yes”.

It’s a pitch party!

This latest contract arose from a twitter pitch party and was entirely unexpected, a bit like those elusive unicorns which you can only see when you’re not looking. I’ve occasionally taken part in twitter pitches, mainly to gauge whether I can summarise a 100k-word novel in 140 characters in an appealing fashion. This one, #pitdark, piqued my interest because of the dark theme. Better still, it listed dark romance as a category. The novel I pitched is quite dark – even my agent baulked at it – but I recognised a couple of the publishers on the pitch list so I thought I’d give it a try.

My pitches attracted a couple of likes but not from anyone I felt was a good fit, so I chalked it up as an experience and forgot about it. However, the next day, two of my tweets clocked a “like” from an editor from Tirgearr who I had no idea was watching the hashtag. I’ve heard good things about them so sent the novel in. I wasn’t expecting interest given that the novel wasn’t a 100% fit – something I confessed quite frankly in my covering note – so I forgot about it again!

Imagine my surprise when an e:mail came right out of the blue saying they liked it – more so because they were happy to discuss the fit and after some dialogue where we discussed how I could bring the novel into line a contract came whizzing over the ether!

The luck of the Irish?

I’m sure the Leprechauns were watching over me. Not only is Tirgearr based in Ireland, but they first made contact when I was at a conference in Dublin (the first time I’ve ever been to Ireland) and the name Emily Royal comes from my Irish grandmother.

Given that I’m all about romance, that sounds like a happily ever after to me!

So, my four big writerly lessons learned from 2018

1 Be patient. When the rails rattle, keep waiting – the train will come eventually

2 Give twitter pitches a go – they really do work!

3 Never give up. Good things happen when you least expect them

4 Never underestimate the luck of the Irish

Here’s to 2019 and a shedload of editing, sequels and book launches!

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