Showing posts with label Abendlied. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abendlied. Show all posts

25 September 2011

Guest Blog: Jennifer Linforth


This week, we're welcoming historical author and regular contributor, Jennifer Linforth, with an excerpt from her upcoming novel, RONDEAU. Jennifer's here to talk about the book and give away a copy! Here's the blurb:


The Madrigals continue...

While on the run and hiding in Germany, Erik lives like anyone else—until one nobleman strikes back...

When Anna’s secret past is revealed and she is captured by Raoul’s bounty hunter, Erik is forced to avenge her. This time the madness of the Phantom cannot be freely unleashed.  Erik must rein himself in for the sake of his genius son and hideously deformed daughter.

With few allies as he takes to the streets of Paris in pursuit of Anna and his nemesis, Raoul, one man, The Persian, seeks to help while Christine seeks to keep Erik at large. Forced to turn over his control while spinning out of it, Erik’s past as The Phantom of the Opera roars to life before Paris and his unsuspecting children and only The Persian tries to talk sense to him.

But talk is senseless when speaking to a madman.

Overcome by his history and desperate to keep the past from destroying his life, Erik takes Paris by storm...

Two guns.
One bullet.
And a result that changes everything...


**A Q&A with Jennifer Linforth**

RONDEAU is the third book in your series that continues The Phantom of the Opera, MADRIGAL and ABENDLIED being the first two. Why did you wish to continue classic literature and why the original novel and not the widely popular Lloyd-Webber version?
Certain stories transcend time leaving more questions than answers. No author made me question as much as Gaston Leroux. My love for The Phantom of the Opera stemmed from a deep respect for a book that was a mystery, horror and romance rolled into one. After revisiting Leroux’s novel for the third time the questions in my head would not fade. Why—as a jurist—did he leave so many unanswered questions in such a fascinating book? The primary question I had was who was the “Shade” he spoke of.  From that idea came The Madrigals.

I focused on Leroux because Leroux created the story, not Lloyd Webber. Webber created iconic images with his musical and movie, but  Leroux’s original is quite different from the romantic, famous love triangle of Webber’s. Webber’s film created a mildly deformed man oozing sex appeal who happens to have murdered out of desperation and anger. What Webber wished was the basic romance as the focus. In Leroux, Erik was a murderously vengeful personality… a clear madman, while concurrently being a repressed and ardent gentleman. He was the central character in a Death and the Maiden tale and I wish to focus on that challenge instead.

How do you feel about finishing your series?
I actually wrote all three Madrigals in one year and spent the next several polishing the series before and during publication. I cried from relief when I finally polished RONDEAU. I put a great deal of pressure on myself to make sure this series remained true to Gaston Leroux yet still had enough of my vision in it to make it stand out. Now that the series is finished I feel very accomplished and am ready to move on to the next project. I may resist the characters down the road, perhaps continuing the story with primarily the secondary cast.

After spending so much time with these characters is there a sense of loss with the ending?
There is a sense of completion, not loss. I’ve spent seven years with this series from the start of my research to the last book published. A writer does get attached to their characters, however. I will miss crafting the secondary characters that revolved around Leroux’s original cast. I will miss making nasty villains, but I can do that for another work! I don’t feel loss over it because I know the door is open for great things to come in terms of my career as a writer and my personal goals to meet them.

Which were your favorite characters to explore in each book?
Crafting Erik as a true madman was always a delight from book to book. In the first, MADRIGAL, I loved bringing Madame Giry back to her roots. She is so often seen as Webber’s verison. I enjoyed making her that bumbling servant of the Phantom that she was.  In ABENDLIED exploring Philippe de Changy was my passion and still is. He is my favorite character in classic literature. He’s was a character begging to be explored.  I also loved Pappy. In him I enjoyed making a character utterly unexpected in a novel like this but who was pivotal to the growth of both Anna and Erik.  In RONDEAU the Persian was fun to write for he was another under explored character.

What’s next for you?
I am writing Regency romance now. I am working on a book with a unique spin on a heroine. I like to have characters that, like the Phantom, must overcome some mental or social stigma. I am also polishing a historical romance set in Austria for my publishing house.

Thank you, Jennifer, and all the best with RONDEAU. Remember, please leave your comment to win a copy of Jennifer’s latest!

14 February 2010

ABENDLIED Winner!

We have a winner for Jennifer Linforth's ABENDLIED guest blog. A free copy goes to:

BRIEANA!

Contact Carrie to provide your mailing address. The book must be claimed by next Sunday or another winner will be drawn. Please stop back later to let us know what you thought! Congratulations!

07 February 2010

Guest Author: Jennifer Linforth

This week on Unusual Historicals, we're talking with contributor Jennifer Linforth as she celebrates the release of ABENDLIED. This is the second of her "Madrigals" series, which continues Gaston Leroux's The Phantom of the Opera. ABENDLIED is available for purchase from Highland Press and all of the major online bookstores. Here's the blurb:

Desiring normalcy is difficult enough with a price on his head, but when Erik is falsely accused of killing Philippe de Chagny, brother of his nemesis Raoul, he is launched toward madness.

Anna is an unlikely companion, sharing Erik's heart and the bounty on his head. As the manhunt heats, Erik's mysterious relationship with Philippe spurs the campaign against them and exposes her darkest secret: defending her honor ended in murder.

Plagued by his past as The Phantom of the Opera, Erik's memories enslave his heart to Raoul's wife Christine, whose shocking confession brings a ruthless bounty hunter into the fray and blackmail to the Chagny bloodline. Blackmail from a hunter who cares little about the Phantom or Philippe and everything about the one he has lusted for: Anna.

With the past weeping like an open wound, can love endure or will it take the memories of one unlikely man to heal them all?
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This book is the second in a series. Must MADRIGAL be read first to understand the plot of ABENDLIED?

It doesn't. Naturally reading MADRIGAL first will enhance the experience in following the plot of ABENDLIED, but enough back story is built into this book to help the reader follow the plot and pick up MADRIGAL after the fact.

ABENDLIED highlights an unusual character from Leroux's The Phantom of the Opera. Why did you choose Philippe de Chagny to play opposite Erik, the Phantom?

Philippe de Chagny is one of the most underexplored characters in classic literature. Leroux describes him as "a bit haughty toward men and overly kind toward women," yet a man with "irreproachable conscience and great heart." That line caught my attention. He was born and raised in the height of France's nobility and growing old in the days when titles were fossils. Extremely powerful and wealthy--his arrogance came with the territory. I liked that in his character. Yet he had scruples, that "irreproachable conscience" Leroux wrote about. Here was a character with a firm sense of right and wrong, which many readers of Leroux see as the "evil empire" for not permitting his younger brother to marry for love.

Empires were built on marriages of property and money. If you had 600 years of tradition to adhere to, you would marry for gain as well and keep a mistress on the side for emotional love. Philippe had his freedoms but what of his responsibilities? How does taking the reins of one of the most powerful families when barely a young man shape you and your view of what should and should not be done for the good of your name and title? When would you dare break tradition? In all the heartache he caused Raoul in the original novel, I don't think Philippe went charging into the vaults of the Garnier to do anything to prevent Raoul from marrying Christine as see in Leroux's original story.

So why did he go down there to begin with and lose his life in the process? I explored this and my views of Philippe as a philanthropic character throughout "The Madrigals." Though he is mentioned only briefly in book one, book two cracks into his story and explains him as man and mystery. Monsieur le Comte de Chagny is my favorite character of all classic literature. Barely seen in Leroux he is used as "wallpaper." I wanted to bring him to life.

What is harder to write, your characters or Leroux's?

Leroux's hands down, with the exception of Philippe. He rolled off my fingers. The Phantom of the Opera has an enormous fan base. Each "fandom" is devoted to the storyline they follow be it Leroux's or Webber's ideas. A writer can't please every reader with the characters we craft and that goes double when dealing with expanding classic literature. That being said, a writer expanding classic literature must also respect the original author's ideas. A great deal of research went into following Leroux's vision for his characters, but I added enough of a personal twist to them to appeal to my story and in turn my readers.

Erik is a character many find easy to sympathize with, but he is still the 'villain' of Leroux's novel. How did you adjust to this in your series?

I didn't adjust to it--I worked with it. I stand behind my belief that Erik was a madman. In Leroux he was a murderously vengeful personality while concurrently being a repressed and ardent gentleman. He is still that way in "The Madrigals." He had issues with maternal longings just as Christine had issues with paternal needs. While a highly sensual being, he was not a sexual object as many popular versions make him to be. Leroux penned him as a monster for a reason and I did my best to adhere to his original ideas for the story.

The nature of Erik past births sympathy in a reader, he is the deformed and misunderstood genius that everyone passes by in their rush to fend for themselves. I strove to build sympathy for Erik in ABENDLIED via his unique connection to Philippe, but sought to never lose sight of his history. Too often I find if you strip away the unattainable parts of Leroux, you are left with a story that loses many of the original themes and theories. The Phantom of the Opera is not, in my opinion, a strict romance as it is often thought of.

Your villain is an absinthe addict. Why did you choose this route for your historical?

The history surrounding absinthe in the 19th century just screamed to be explored in Loup. I wanted him to have an unforgettable edge that matched Erik's madness, and absinthe, labeled as dangerously addictive with psychotropic elements, was the appropriate vice. Absinthism was the condition coined for addicts of the "green fairy," and by the late 19th century absinthe was considered the worst alcoholic drink ever known to man. Today the psychotropic elements could be argued as being no worse than that of severe alcoholism.

It was rumored that absinthe gave the drinker clarity of thought, which is why many writers and artists favored it. I loved this element and used it to rock Loup between moments of crystal clear sanity and madness. I wanted the reader to always wonder what side of the fence he was truly on, and wanted a quirk to highlight his twisted mindset. Not to mention sipping it while writing proved to be delightfully tasty research!

Can you elaborate on the twist at the end of ABENDLIED with Philippe de Chagny?

I can... but I won't! The major twist in ABENDLIED comes directly from Leroux's original novel...

What's next for you?

We are on to book three in "The Madrigals," current working title of ELEGY. It picks up seven years after the events in ABENDLIED. In it, four characters seen in ABENDLIED are brought to life to bring the manhunt for Erik full circle. Lovers of The Phantom of the Opera will meet the Persian in full force in book three, (I am having a wonderful time rounding him out) and be introduced in depth to the last player seen in ABENDLIED. I am thrilled that I have already have had requests e-mailed to me to tell the story of this one unique character...

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Night Owl Romance 5/5 Reviewer Top Pick: "Jennifer Linforth's latest work is sweet and tender, dark and decadent, a treat to be reached for again and again. For anyone who read Gaston Leroux's The Phantom of the Opera and wanted more, this is the book for you!"

Paranormal Romance Reviews: 5/5 Top Pick: "Ms. Linforth has written another noteworthy tale about the Phantom!"

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Thanks so much for stopping by, Jennifer! Readers, if you're interested in winning a copy of ABENDLIED, please leave a comment or question for Jennifer. I'll draw a name at random next Sunday. If you're not a regular reader of UH, please leave your email address so we can find you! Void where prohibited. Best of luck!

04 February 2010

Excerpt Thursday: Jennifer Linforth

This week on Excerpt Thursday, we're welcoming contributor Jennifer Linforth as she celebrates the release of ABENDLIED, the second in her Madrigals series, which continues Gaston Leroux's The Phantom of the Opera. ABENDLIED is available for purchase from Highland Press and all of the major online bookstores. Join us Sunday when Jennifer will be here to answer questions and give away a signed copy.

Desiring normalcy is difficult enough with a price on his head, but when Erik is falsely accused of killing Philippe de Chagny, brother of his nemesis Raoul, he is launched toward madness.

Anna is an unlikely companion, sharing Erik's heart and the bounty on his head. As the manhunt heats, Erik's mysterious relationship with Philippe spurs the campaign against them and exposes her darkest secret: defending her honor ended in murder.

Plagued by his past as The Phantom of the Opera, Erik's memories enslave his heart to Raoul's wife Christine, whose shocking confession brings a ruthless bounty hunter into the fray and blackmail to the Chagny bloodline. Blackmail from a hunter who cares little about the Phantom or Philippe and everything about the one he has lusted for: Anna.

With the past weeping like an open wound, can love endure or will it take the memories of one unlikely man to heal them all?
***

He thought to lean to one side and be done with it. The exhaustion over fighting his desires for Christine, the constant tug of war with madness coupled with fearing he would destroy the one woman who made him feel alive, was unbearable punishment.

"I never believed in Your sincerity of bringing Anna to me. Shocked are we? Surprised for a brief moment I believed?" Erik rolled his head toward the side and pressed his cheek to the stone. His accusatory eyes could have shattered the pinpricks of light across the heavens. "Congratulations, Oh Merciful God, You failed again. Anna can have You and Your Son." He yanked himself upright, his body going rigid with his anger. "I am pleased Philippe is dead!"

Spittle flew from sob soaked lips. His mouth spread upward. He may be alone for now, but not forever. There was to be an heir to his kingdom, a child with his mind and his madness. Erik spoke to the shattered stone below with an unblinking stare.

"I will have my child, in all his hideous imperfections. I will need no one but him and my music. I will need only his love. As for Christine?" Erik leapt to his feet. The wind flapped his cloak behind him. He leaned into the gust and taunted the streets below like a great yellow-eyed bird ready to swoop on unsuspecting prey. "Our character becomes our destiny. Music, like life, is inexpressible silence without its instrument. Am I not its master? I hold the baton. I will conduct what I want. I will have what I want. What is Erik without Christine?"

Leaping back to the roof he retrieved his mask and turned to the opera house, his boots drumming a cadence so the ferryman could dutifully follow. A haunting whisper carried his sadness forward on the wind.

"What is Erik without the Phantom?"

25 January 2010

Humor: Too Many Ideas Spoil The Book

By Jennifer Linforth

A great many of writers work around distractions...mainly in the family form. These well meaning loved ones support us--and drive us nuts. Come, I challenge any author to claim this to be untrue. We've all had humorous encounters of the family kind while writing our books. In my household it comes in the form ideas for my series that expands The Phantom of the Opera, in particular. Keep in mind the Phantom is a very famous character and my husband...not so famous.

Below are some of his suggestions when I have had cases of writer's block.

When perplexed as to how to turn a scene around during the performance of an opera, he suggested the Phantom come out on stage carrying a violin case with a hidden machine gun inside so he could cause a distraction, a la The Godfather.

Trying to figure out a way for the hero and heroine to escape Paris unknown, he reminded me of Kansas and hot air balloons. No one looks up you know, and if it was good for Dorothy...

I needed to up my conflict. The solution? A fig famine! A huge fig famine across Europe is discovered when the Phantom slipped on a banana peel. It was even suggested to me that this event happened in 1848...

I asked for some insight on ABENDLIED's ARCs. My husband suggested showing off Erik's jewels when the ARC reviews came out. Can you imagine the look on my face with that double entendre? The Phantom with big...*ahems*. He clarified, and thought it would be cool if Erik's father and grandfather had hidden jewels that he inherited...big ones...

Now the author herself is not without her mistakes that make her do double takes. My husband is not the only one giving me whiplash. Take for instance my brain envisioning Raoul drinking scotch on the rocks, but writing it as iced burgundy. Yes...ice in red wine. Or the time I wrote about Erik's stomachs, seeing as he is a cow and has multiple stomachs to begin with! Or the amount of times I wrote grand duck instead of grand duke...

Care to share? I know you are out there and many of you have stories just like this. What are your most famous typos that made you spew latte on your computer screen? Post away!

11 July 2009

Weekly Announcements - 11 July 09

Jennifer Linforth has been saving up her announcements! Her debut novel, MADRIGAL received excellent reviews from Paranormal Romance Reviews, Night Own Romance, Long and Short Romance Reviews, and Coffee Time Romance. How fabulous! Jennifer also received the cover for the sequel, called ABENDLIED, which follows Philippe de Chagny from Leroux's The Phantom of the Opera.

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Carrie Lofty has completed the book trailer for her January 2010 release, SCOUNDREL'S KISS. Hope you enjoy it!


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Join us Sunday when author Minnette Meador will be here to talk about her novel, THE CENTURION AND THE QUEEN, set in ancient Rome!

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We'll also draw the winner of Beth Williamson's THE REDEMPTION OF MICAH. There's still time to leave a comment for your shot at winning!

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Have a great week, and I hope everyone has safe travels to Nationals! There will be no announcements and no guest author next weekend, but we'll be back on schedule with Meredith Duran on July 26!

In the meantime, if you have an announcement to make for next week, email Carrie. See you next week...

15 November 2008

Weekly Announcements - 15 Nov 08

Michelle Styles has been featured in The Hexham Courant, her local paper, about her latest book, A QUESTION OF IMPROPRIETY

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Erastes has done an interview with Romance at Heart magazine and received a nice review for FROST FAIR:
The historical details are obviously very accurate, you can always picture the nineteen century London in which is set the story, and I bet that you can still follow the steps of Gideon around the city still now and seeing the same view he saw. The nice description of the FROST FAIR, an impromptu fair held on the frozen Thames, is the same you can see in some prints of the time.
FROST FAIR was released today, so you can pick up a copy here.

Gideon Frost is willing to do whatever it takes to earn enough money to save the printing shop that was left to him by his father. But when faced with the prospect of having to engage in acts society deems unnatural and the law declares punishable by death, he realized there are limits as to how far he'll go. Then he meets the privileged and handsome Joshua Redfern, the one man who tempts Gideon to break his own rules.

Joshua Redfern has no title or important relations, but his independent fortune allows him a life that is more than comfortable. And more importantly, it enables him to offer assistance to the unfortunate but beautiful Gideon just when the man needs it most. Joshua realizes his interest in Gideon is far more than charitable, but is the man similarly attracted or merely indebted?

When the Thames freezes over and London hosts the great Frost Fair of 1814, trouble and necessity bring Gideon and Joshua together. But just as ice is destined to eventually crack, will the circumstances break these two men as they learn that life isn't always fair?
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Elizabeth Lane received two reviews for THE BORROWED BRIDE from The Good, the Bad and the Unread. Wendy the Super Librarian wrote, "THE BORROWED BRIDE is an emotional read, and Judd is just the ticket for readers who adore haunted, wounded heroes," while Devon said, "The chemistry was good and the tension was involving. I was waiting for that first kiss."

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Hot on the heels of her first release, Jennifer Linforth just sold book two of The Madrigals. ABENDLIED, which weaves in Philippe de Chagny's role in The Madrigals, will be a 2009 release. More details to come!

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If you have an announcement to make for next week, email Carrie. See you next week...