Ruth Axtell and Setting for a Story

Please welcome Ruth Axtell, an exquisite storyteller. I always learn something new from Ruth. I think you’ll find this post and her new book enjoyable. And speaking of her new book, Ruth has kindly offered to give away a copy of Moonlight Masquerade. Please leave your e-mail in a spam safe format, ie., jill (at) jilliankent (dot) com. The cut off date for entries will be at midnight on March 24th, PST. I’ll post the winner sometime on Monday the 25th. I love a masquerade and look forward to reading this book. Now, here’s, Ruth.

How do we find settings for our regencies?

So much depends on our historical research. As a plot develops, many tidbits of information are uncovered in the research. For example, in my current romance, Moonlight Masquerade, most of the action takes place in the posh Mayfair mansion of my heroine, Lady Céline Wexham. However, I needed to get her out of town, preferably to a country estate, where she could have more encounters with her hero, a man posing as her butler. But I wanted her in a less formal setting, where their chance meetings would allow her to see him more as a man and less as a butler.

Since Lady Wexham is spying for the French, I ended up reading quite a bit about the exiled French community in England at the time, known as the émigrés. The most important was the Comte de Provence, one of Louis XVI’s younger brothers. Louis, as we all remember from history, was beheaded during the French Revolution, along with his wife, Marie Antoinette. His younger brother, the Count of Provence, escaped from France and claimed for himself the right of succession.

The count, or Comte de Provence, aka Louis Stanislas Xavier, spent several years in exile in various European countries, until the British government took pity on him and gave him a small allowance and a place to live.

Hartwell House/Wikipedia

Between 1809 and 1814 the Count of Provence resided at Hartwell House, a beautiful estate in Buckinghampshire, England, not too far from London. However, the impoverished count and his vast retinue soon turned the elegant country house into a mini Versailles with various farming enterprises going on upon its lead roofs and bakeries and small crafts shops established in the outbuildings.

For my story purposes, this house and its vast grounds sounded like the ideal place for my hero and heroine to go unnoticed a bit. It was also the perfect locale for a masquerade ball…and an unexpected encounter between my hero and heroine, hence the title “moonlight masquerade.”

I hope you’ll enjoy traveling back to the regency era, when England was at war with France. It’s a time of intrigue, but more importantly, my story centers around two people who find themselves attracted to each other at an inconvenient time and place but who find it impossible to resist the pull.

Ruth knew she wanted to be a writer ever since she wrote her first story—a spy thriller—at the age of twelve. She studied comparative literature at Smith College, spending her junior year at the Sorbonne in Paris. After college, she taught English in the Canary Islands then worked in international development in Miami, Florida, before moving to the Netherlands, where for the next several years, she juggled both writing and raising her three children.

In 1994, her second manuscript was a finalist in Romance Writers of America’s Golden Heart competition. In 2002, her sixth manuscript took second place in the Laurie Contest of RWA’s Smoky Mountain chapter. The final judge requested her full manuscript and this became her first published book, Winter Is Past, which was spotlighted in Christian Retailing magazine. Since then, Ruth has gone on to publish thirteen historical romances and one novella. Her books have been translated into Dutch, Italian, Polish and Afrikaans. Her second historical, Wild Rose, was chosen by Booklist as a “Top Ten Christian Fiction” selection in 2005.

Ruth lives on the coast of Maine where she enjoys gardening, walking, reading romances and gazing at the ocean plotting her next romance. You can read more about her at http://ruthaxtell.com and http://ruthaxtell.com/blog

15 thoughts on “Ruth Axtell and Setting for a Story

  1. Very interesting post. I enjoyed the history lesson. Moonlight Masquerade sounds like an intriguing book. thank you for offering a copy to a winner.
    may_dayzee (at) yahoo (dot) com

  2. Hi Jillian–

    I have all of Ruth’s books, (my all-time favorite: “Winter is Past”) Thank you for Ruth’s interesting interview and this opportunity to win her latest! p.s. Lovely cover!

  3. Hi Jillian,
    Would love to read this book. I own several others of Ruths books. This one looks really good. Beautiful cover!
    Thanks,
    Chris
    djbarratt at hotmail dot com

  4. Thank you for a terrific interivew. I sat in on the romance class Ruth co-taught with Julie Lessman at the ACFW and I’ve read a number of her previous books. But I certainly learned more about her background and am so impressed! Moonlight Masquerade sounds absolutely fabulous and I admire Ruth for her fastidious research. I’m drawn more and more to the Christian historicals and I’m sure this book will be a classic example of why that is. From the beautiful cover to what’s inside, I’m sure it’s a winner. Thanks for the opportunity to win this incredible book. Blessings. jdurgin9587(at)att(dot)net

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