Intrigue and Passion Collide: Unveiling the Heiress with a Bite!
Louisa: She's the hidden jewel among the heiresses, a fiery spirit cloaked in a demure facade and a secret love for fairy tales with a twist. Yearning for passion, she wrestles with the very desire that sets her heart ablaze for a man as rugged as the Scottish Highlands.
Colin Campbell: This beast of a Highlander thrives on navigating treacherous business deals, not domestic bliss. A marriage of convenience is precisely what he needs, not a fiery temptress who ignites a wildfire of doubt about everything he thought he wanted.
Secrets simmer, desires ignite, and wills clash when a marriage of convenience ignites a passion that refuses to be tamed. Can Louisa break free from her gilded cage? Will Colin be consumed by the flames he's helped to unleash?
This is not your typical love story. Dive into the Heiresses of Eris series, where unconventional women and the men who dare to love them rewrite the rules of happily ever after.
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What others have to say about the series:
"Oh laugh out loud funny, funny! Read the story. It's a real hoot from beginning to end!"
"Come join the fun, you will want to laugh throughout the book."
This steamy regency romantic comedy series will delight you if you are the type to laugh out loud at the antics of a "talking" dog, or cheer on difficult women, or scowl at men being nobcocks. This series is not for the women looking for Georgette Heyer or Jane Austen. As amazing as they are, I have no wish to write like them, though I am not above borrowing a trope or two. If you are the type to quibble about a social faux pas you won't be happy with this series. In short, this is not your mother's Regency. These girls are rebels who cross class lines like they skewer men's hearts. Oh but these men! It takes a strong man to love a difficult woman.
Author Interview:
Why do Regency Romance if you aren't going to write it "correctly"?
Because as much as I love Regency tropes the actual language and social customs are torturous. Have you read dear Jane? I mean all credit to her, she invented the novel as we know it and I adore anything that puts Colin Firth in breeches but to sit down and read one of her stories now is onerous. We don't speak like that anymore and there are hours of nothing to do. I love Regency love stories for the tension that the social mores of that time yield. But I also love a good laugh. These books give me the tropes I love, laughter, and women I can see myself and my friends in. These are women you can imagine hatching plans with and enjoying a good laugh at how it all turned out afterwards.
If the women aren't related how are they the "Heiresses of Eris"?
One of the Regency tropes I love is the informal "club", usually men bound together over a common distrust of women or some such nonsense which in the end they all get over. Eris is the Greek goddess of chaos. She's the one who started the Trojan War by tossing an apple into a group of goddesses that said "to the fairest". She really knew how to stir the pot! These girls cause their own sort of mayhem. None of them were comfortable in the roles society assigned them. All of them decided to take matters into their own hands. That they all met was fate. When they did, they dubbed themselves the Heiresses of Eris. They knew what they were from the start.