Nancy Butler also writes under her real name, Nancy J. Hajeski.
Nancy Butler has been an Anglophile since she was nineteen, when she traveled to England to see Carnaby Street. (“I blame it on the Beatles!”) Her frequent visits to an American friend living in London have furnished her with enough inspiration to keep writing Regencies well into the new millennium.
Butler resides in northern New Jersey with two cats, Aja and Puck, surrounded by her collection of artwork, funky antiques, and books. When she manages to get away from her computer, she can usually be found riding her quarter horse mare, Ginger, through the scenic wilds of Bergen County.
Butler is the 1998 Golden Leaf Award winner for Best First Novel.
I reread this just now and liked it even better than the first time. Both protas are very likeable and well-written, and the story setting is plausible and entertaining although it sounded a bit far-fetched to me at my first reading. The hero has serious case of stubborn and stupid pride isolating him from what he wants, but it's one of the plotlines of the story that he learns to understand this and grow beyond it - this doesn't happen often in this way, and I like the story better for it being done this way.
So this is one of the books I got after I checked out the All About Romance website that Kristin told me about. It was short, clean and a quick happy read. I like ones where the women are strong and independent types which is saying lots for the Regency Era!