The Rose of Winslow Street nominated for Best Cover

Elizabeth Camden The Rose of Winslow Street 3 Comments

Every year I look forward to the Cover Café’s poll for best romance novel covers. I am thrilled to see that The Rose of Winslow Street is in contention for best cover in the Historical category. (woo-hoo!) I am really blessed to have Jennifer Parker as my fantastic cover designer.

Those of you who were reading romance back in the 1980’s probably remember the terrible covers we had to endure. This was before online book shopping spared us the embarrassment of teenaged clerks sneering at us as they rang up books graced with Fabio in all his mighty glory. The content of these books were so much better than the cheesy covers. In my opinion, such covers did massive disservice to the industry and the readers who enjoyed the books. There are still some over-the-top covers today, but for the most part, book covers have gotten much classier.

The winner of each category is selected by popular vote, so feel free to make your voice heard.

There are losts of categories to browse and vote! The 2012 Annual Cover Contest.

Perfectionism in The Rose of Winslow Street

Elizabeth Camden The Rose of Winslow Street 2 Comments

If you have read The Rose of Winslow Street, you will have met the heroine’s father, Professor Willard Sawyer.  Professor Sawyer is an eccentric inventor who is brilliant, creative, but also deeply insecure and suffers from a crippling sense of perfectionism.  His inability to settle for anything less than a flawless invention has stunted his ability to publish any of his work or release his inventions.   

I got the inspiration for this character from a lovely woman named Anne Bradstreet (1612-1672).  She was an English woman who came over on one of the first ships of Puritans immigrants to America, when the land was a raw, unsettled wilderness.  Her father had been a steward to an English duke, so she grew up in an actual castle….then she found herself living in a crude hut with a dirt floor in Massachusetts.  During those early, difficult years she wrote poetry.  Hundreds and hundreds of poems.  Unbeknownst to Anne, in 1647 her brother-in-law travelled for a visit to England with copies of her poems in tow.  He had them printed and distributed in England, and returned to “surprise” her with news of their publication.

From the distance of over four hundred years, it is difficult to know Anne’s reaction, but in a subsequent poem she wrote of her dismay, bemoaning the flaws in her poems she would never be able to correct now they were released into the world.  Here is a snippet of An Author to Her Book, in which she compares her poems to blemished, imperfect children:

My rambling brat (in print) should mother call.
I cast thee by as one unfit for light,
The visage was so irksome in my sight,
Yet being mine own, at length affection would
Thy blemishes amend, if so I could.
I washed thy face, but more defects I saw,
And rubbing off a spot, still made a flaw.
 

 

Poor woman!  Psychiatrists recognize severe perfectionism as a pathology which can cripple a person’s ability to be a productive, functioning person.  Although there is no evidence that Anne Bradstreet suffered from this level of the condition, I exaggerated her anxiety to help me create Professor Sawyer’s brilliant, frustrated persona.   

Lest the excerpt above give you the impression that Anne Bradstreet was a bitter, difficult woman, I thought I would close with my favorite poem by Bradstreet, a joyous celebration in which she shouts her love for her husband, Simon Bradstreet, to the world:

 If ever two were one, then surely we.
If ever man were lov’d by wife, then thee.
If ever wife was happy in a man,
Compare with me, ye women, if you can.

 

Wild at Heart: Discovering the Secret of a Man’s Soul

Elizabeth Camden Recommended Reading, The Rose of Winslow Street 1 Comment

I loved this book.  I’ve been happily married to a “manly-man” for ten years.  Although it is not politically correct to say, I do believe that there are inherent differences in the way men and women are wired.  The author of Wild at Heart thinks so too, and it helped me understand some of the reasons men behave the way they do.  It celebrates manhood…the rugged, daring aspects that are often stamped out in an attempt to make boys behave in the classroom or on the playground.     

Eldredge’s thesis is that built into the soul of every man is the desire to be a hero, live a life of adventure, take risks, and be a warrior.  Little boys like to play with toy guns.  If you take the toy gun away, they will pick up sticks and make bang-bang noises to simulate a gun. If you take the sticks away, they’ll point with their finger and thumb.  They are boys!  Eldredge suggests that rather than try to stamp these qualities out of boys, these impulses should be channeled to allow boys to become the heroic warriors they have the potential to become.  He is careful to draw the distinction between a heroic man and the dim-witted macho version of the unthinking male.  Most importantly, he tackles the dicey aspect of how modern interpretations of Christianity are often at odds with those ideals, in which men are pressured to be “nice guys” who would be comfortable in great-aunt Irma’s parlor fetching her a cup of tea.

This is a controversial book.  You will see from some of the excoriating reviews on amazon that many people reject Eldrege’s thesis.  Anytime an author attempts to characterize 50% of the human race in broad brushstrokes, you are going to be able to point out thousands of exceptions.  Nevertheless, I found Wild at Heart to be a wonderful, unapologetic celebration of manhood.   HIGHLY recommended.

A Man with a Capital M

Elizabeth Camden Ramblings about Romance, The Rose of Winslow Street 6 Comments

I am getting pretty psyched about the release of The Rose of Winslow Street.  I am really proud of this book, mostly because of the hero, Michael Dobrescu.  The Rose of Winslow Street is a celebration of manhood.  Michael is a raw, brash hero with blunt edges and an earthy sense of humor.  He is a man with a capital M.   

I am sorry when I hear women in contemporary society denigrate men or emasculate our boys, because Men with a capital M are the fuel and the engine that makes this world go around.  Yes, men often have a crude sense of humor or act like slobs on the weekend when a good football game is on, the beer is cold, and the wings are hot.  So what?  My husband works like a maniac all week, and if he wants to kick back with the NFL on the weekend, I’m happy to bring him a cold one and make the nachos.  

So what makes a Man with a capital M?  This is the guy who will run into a burning building to save a kid, and then be able to joke with the kid until the tears stop.   He will calm my rattled nerves when the roof springs a leak in the middle of a hurricane.  He doesn’t care if his coffee comes from Starbucks or 7-11, so long as it is hot.  He does not whine, he does not hold grudges.  He saddles up and get the job done, whether that means fixing the roof, signing up for a tour of duty in Afghanistan, or coaching kids on the little league teams.  I love Men with a capital M.

If you do too, check out The Rose of Winslow Street.  You won’t be disappointed!

 

The Rose of Winslow Street

Elizabeth Camden The Rose of Winslow Street 5 Comments



It seems odd to begin promoting a new book when The Lady of Bolton Hill is still fresh off the press, but such are the vagaries of publishing!  I am thrilled to present the new cover and blurb for The Rose of Winslow Street.  Look for it in January 2012.

A short description:

The last thing Libby Sawyer and her father expected upon returning from their summer home was to find strangers inhabiting their house in town. Widower Michael Dobrescu brought his family from Romania to the village of Colden, Massachusetts with a singular purpose: to claim the house that had been willed to him long ago. Since neither party has any intention of giving up their claim, a fierce legal battle ensues between the two families.

When important documents go missing from the house, Libby suspects Michael is the culprit. Determined to discover the truth behind the stolen papers, Libby investigates, only to find more layers of mystery unfolding around Michael and his family.  Despite their fierce rivalry, Libby finds herself developing feelings for this man with the fascinating past.

Libby must weigh the risks of choosing between loyalty to her family and a man she is coming to love.  As a decision about the house looms in the courts, Libby fears giving her heart to a man whose intentions and affections are less than certain.