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Please Welcome Debut Author Jenny Brown

Must the Rake be Tamed?

I want to thank Margo Maguire for inviting me to post here. It’s an honor to have my thoughts appear among those of so many excellent authors.

There’s no getting around the appeal of the bad boy hero: Dark and dangerous, the most infamous rake in England, an abandoned libertine–if you’re like me, you need only see these words on a cover blurb to reach for your wallet. While others may prefer spies or wealthy dukes, no hero interests me more than the man who, heedless of society’s strictures explores the outer limits of his sexuality 

So when I set out to write the Regency set novel that became Lord Lightning that was the kind of hero I chose to write about. The man society has nicknamed Lord Lightning in tribute to his shocking behavior has behaved so badly he is forever barred from polite society. He is famed for his cold heart and his boast that he will never give his heart to a woman for even a single moment.  He is also, like most bad boy heroes, witty and devastatingly charming, exuding sexual power from every pore.

But what sets him apart from a thousand other heroes of historical romance is this: My hero really is a rake, and as Lord Lightning unfolds he continues to act like one. Unlike so many supposedly rakish heroes, he is not a very nice man pretending to be a rake. He is not misunderstood. The transgressions for which society has excluded him are real.          

Nor does he instantly fall in love as soon as the heroine, the gently bred amateur astrologer, Eliza Farrell, appears on his horizon. For from it. Her confidence that his astrological chart shows him to be a man who needs to love and be loved annoys him, and he sets out at once to prove her wrong.

This should be easy, as Eliza is destitute and easily lured into his bed.  It should be a simple matter to seduce and abandon her, but even her trusting response to his sexual predation does not make him fall in love with her.  We are not following the usual script here at all.

It is only when Eliza gives Lord Lightning a taste of his own medicine—and behaves in ways that are never what he expects –showing herself as capable as he is of outrageous behavior—that he begins to find her interesting. But even then, it is a toss up whether Eliza’s astrological art will transform the notorious rake into a better man or his seductive skills that will transform her.

It’s always been a pet peeve of mine that in most rake stories the heroine falls in love with the bad boy hero and joins him in an adventure filled with forbidden, edgy sex, but by the end of the story this wild, exciting man’s love for the heroine traps them both in a conventional marriage. We find them in the sequel dwelling in their comfortable home surrounded by perfect children—living the same life the heroine would have had if she’d married a nice man who had never thumbed his nose at the rules of the society. The author may wish us to believe this domesticated pair is still having the same kind of earth shaking sex they had when they were strangers taking bold sexual risks, but I don’t buy it.  

So that isn’t kind of ending you’ll find in Lord Lightning. Though the delicious man who loves to shock will, by the end of the story, find happiness with his Eliza, it won’t be because she’s turned him into a nice suburban husband. For before Eliza can finally find happiness, she will have to accept that she loves Lord Lightning for what he has always been—in all his rakish glory—as much as she loves the “better” man he has become. And I hope that when you read Lord Lightning you will, too!

You can read an excerpt from Lord Lightning at Jenny Brown’s website.

Do you believe a truly dark and dangerous hero can be domesticated? Should he be? Post your comments here. One lucky commenter will win a signed copy of Lord Lightning.

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  1. Virginia C Said:

    Hi, Jenny! Congratulations on the release of “Lord Lightning”! Best wishes for the “Lords of the Seventh House” series : )

    I don’t think that a rogue surrenders his heart until he is ready to do so–even then he may act somewhat indifferent. If you love a rogue, then don’t expect to live with a saint. You know you love his bad boy ways, that’s what attracted you in the first place! Wouldn’t you rather have your dark, dangerous and imperfect hero above all others? If he became tame and complacent, might you lose interest and seek another bad boy? I say keep the spark that fans the flames, enjoy your wicked love and his naughty games!

    - Reply
  2. Christi Said:

    Hi Jenny, I just recieved my copies of your book at my store yesterday and I love the cover, very eye catching! So glad you posted here today now I am going to go to work and grab a copy for myself and also now I know which customers I will be able to recommend this too, sounds really good! Good luck I hope it sells well for you.

    - Reply
  3. Linda Henderson Said:

    I’d like to think that a good woman can make a bad man better, but sadly that usually isn’t the case in real life so why should it be so in books. I don’t want the hero to be totally unlikeable so he needs to have some qualities I can admire.

    - Reply
  4. Jenny Brown Said:

    Linda, One thing I admire in my rake hero is his lack of hypocrisy. Regency society valued appearance over reality in a way that quickly shaded into hypocrisy. My hero does what he does openly and pays for it, and much of the conflict in the story comes from the opposition of people whose social behavior is correct but whose lives are corrupt.

    Christi, I’m thrilled to hear your store is stocking Lord Lightning. I’m running a contest over on my web site where if you post a photo of the book where you spotted it, you get a chance at winning an Advanced Reading Copy of my next book or a collector Titanium bead. I’d love it if you’d upload a snapshot of the book in your store!

    - Reply
  5. Maureen Said:

    I think a dark and dangerous hero can become a good husband and father so some things have to change for that to happen but I think they can still be dark and dangerous to others, just not their families.

    - Reply
  6. Margo Maguire Said:

    Hi Jenny – so glad you’re here with us today!
    Lord Lightning sounds intriguing… especially the ending. Can’t wait to get my copy.

    As to your question about a dark and dangerous hero becoming domesticated – I’ve never seen it happen, but I guess there could be a first time, right? ;-)

    - Reply
  7. Shana Said:

    Wow! This sounds like a great book. I’m really interested to read it. Congrats on your debut, and I hope it’s the first of many :-)

    - Reply
  8. Serenissima Said:

    Could a really dark and dangerous hero be totally domesticated? I don´t think so. Some things may change and take better routes, but not everything. He can become a better person, but not totally different one.

    Congrats on your release Jenny!

    - Reply
  9. Nancy Robards Thompson Said:

    Hi Jenny,

    So glad you’re blogging with us today! Congratulations on your debut. It sounds like a fabulous book. :grin:

    - Reply
  10. Rebekah E. Said:

    Congrats on your debut. Sounds like a great book. I don’t think you can change dangerous hero. I wouldn’t want to anyway. You tend to like them the way they are to begin with.

    - Reply
  11. Emily McKay Said:

    Hi Jenny,

    Your Lord Lightening sounds like a fabulous and intriguing hero. I can’t wait to read more.

    - Reply
  12. catslady Said:

    I’ve been hearing a lot of good things about your book. No, don’t change him – just as long as they both understand each other. After all, that’s why you fall in love with them in the first place.

    - Reply
  13. chey Said:

    I don’t think a dark and dangerous hero can become totally domesticated. That would turn him into someone else.

    - Reply
  14. Jenny Brown Said:

    Glad to see so much agreement! One of the things I’ve noticed is that writers who write the D&Ds tend to be partnered with Very Nice Men in real life. I certainly am.

    I chased the D&Ds in my youth, after reading too many of the old Gothic romances with the governess running from the mysterious house high on a hill. But learned the hard way that in real life most D&Ds turn out to be self-involved jerks, not Mr. Rochester. But the fantasy archetype, that’s another story!

    And, thanks for all the kind words about the book!

    - Reply
  15. Jane Said:

    Hi Jenny,
    Congrats on the release of your debut historical romance. I do think it’s possible to tame a dark and dangerous hero, but only to a certain degree. I think it would be quite nice if he retained a few of his rakish characteristics.

    - Reply
  16. Jenny Brown Said:

    Have any of you read the brilliant essay Laura Kinsale wrote about this in the book Dangerous Men and Adventurous Women?

    Her idea was that women respond to so strongly to a rake hero because they identify with him. The rake is expressing all the intense stuff that we nicely raised women can’t.

    I know when I’m writing I tend to write from the hero’s perspective more than the heroines because it is so much more fun to imagine myself being someone so different.

    - Reply
  17. Gail Said:

    Jenny,

    I offer my congratulations as well. I like the cover of your book because I’m one of those (in the minority?) who prefer blond haired guys. A blond haired guy who is an admitted rogue. . . all the better! I have read Laura Kinsale’s essay. Actually, I read it because I feel like I married one of those “bad boys.” I found reading it was so interesting because I could apply a bit of what she was saying to my own situation. I was definitely the goody-goody straight A student who wouldn’t consider do anything too outlandish and I married my opposite, blond bad boy. Although it gave my parents loads of concern and grief, it obviously worked for us. We’ve been married 25 years.

    - Reply
  18. eap Said:

    I’m sometimetimes spectical of a completely reformed rake.

    - Reply
  19. Jenny Brown Said:

    Gail,

    It’s great to hear of a long term relationship like yours working out so well. Congratulations!

    - Reply
  20. Minna Said:

    Oh yes, even dark and dangerous hero needs to have some good qualities.

    - Reply
  21. Quilt Lady Said:

    I don’t think they can be totally domesticated, because it would change them to much. They need to stay a little on the dangerous side.

    - Reply
  22. Laurie G Said:

    Ooh these are my favorite kind of heroes. These men feel like they don’t need love, or don’t deserve to be loved. A challenge for the young women who fall for these “hard to hold” men.

    Are they redeemable definitely! Anything’s possible with love!!

    Your book sounds fabulous!

    johnslake at usa dot com

    - Reply
  23. Karen H in NC Said:

    Hi Jenny,

    Congratulations on the release of your book. After reading the excerpt, I must put this one on my BTB list.

    Yes, I think the dark and dangerous hero can and should be tamed….but not 100%….after all, dark and dangerous makes him very, very interesting!

    - Reply
  24. Karyn Gerrard Said:

    I got to review this for The Season and just posted a review at my own blog, I enjoyed this!! All the best for your release! Great cover, BTW! ;-)

    - Reply

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