Three popular Regency romance authors share stories set in cozy inns and amidst glittering London seasons in which a series of devious schemes result in snowbound marriage ceremonies. Original.
Janice Bennett never intended to be a writer, but with B.A. degrees in anthropology and classical civilizations and an M.A. in folklore and mythology, what choice did she have? Her first jobs included the usual abc's—archaeologist, bookkeeper and college craft instructor. Then, on a whim, she submitted her first novel, a Regency, and life took on a fascinating new twist. Several books later, she began presenting work-shops, teaching novel writing at a community college, serving as a writing panel member at WorldCons...then became an editor. So far, she has written twenty-six novels and more than twenty novellas and received a number of awards, including two Lifetime Achievement awards from Romantic Times/Rave Reviews. In her spare time, she spins wool (and pet hair), knits, crochets, weaves, and quilts. She lives in a rural town with her husband, never enough cats, a huge dog, an organic garden—and a computer she swears runs on chocolate chips, not silicon ones, which explains a lot about her. www.janicebennettbooks.com
Pretty standard three short story Regency collection. Carola Dunn is generally pretty good, though the other two I'm not particularly familiar with. I was going to call shenanigans on the third story for not featuring a wedding, but then it pulled one out at the end.
I really miss the old Zebra Regency Romances. I don't love them all, but they're like eating a particularly delicious dessert. And here are three stories that work well.