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After many years of struggling to break into the romance novel market, native Texan Deanna Raybourn has finally struck gold by switching gears and writing a finely detailed, impressively authentic, and utterly mesmerizing historical mystery titled Silent in the Grave. Now that Raybourn has published her debut critically acclaimed novel, she ensures her new readership that there she has plenty more mystery in store for them.
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October 07, 2009: The world of Lady Julia was well drawn in "Grave." I loved the details of Julia's home, her clothes, her interests, her friends, her meals, her maids, etc. Everything was fascinating and very realistic - that is, I could believe in the reality of the character's experiences, especially her childhood and family. In "Sanctuary," we go to Lady Julia's childhood home for Christmas. Five of the ten children are visiting, along with two cousins, a moldering aunt, her father's paramour, and assorted other characters - including Julia's heartthrob, Brisbane, who arrives sporting a new title and a new fiancee. The details of Julia's experience and the experiences of her family and friends again ring true and are enthralling. I loved everything about this book; this is the one that "Grave" wanted to be. SILENT IN THE SANCTUARY is an interesting blend between romance and mystery. Raybourn is clearly a talented author--I'll certainly look for more of her books in the future.
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June 06, 2009: This second book develops the relationships within Lady Julia's family and within her circle of friends and acquaintances, as well as the growing attraction between Nicholas Brisbane, private inquiry agent and Lady Julia. There is another murder to be solved and Nicholas wants Lady Julia to refrain from interfering with his work, as he fears for her safety. Lady Julia is determined to assist Nicholas and we have the opportunity to view the push away from Nicholas and the interference from Julia in her efforts to be helpful. Nicholas and Julia are confronted with the intricacies of the murder situation and their own increasingly complex relationship.
The author maintains the readers interest throughout this book and ensures the reader will want to read the final book of this trilogy to find out if this complicated relationship between Julia and Nicholas is one that blossoms into one that grows into a more permanent one than seen in the prior booksName:
Deanna Raybourn
Current Home:
Williamsburg, Virginia
Date of Birth:
June 17, 1968
Place of Birth:
Ft. Worth, Texas
Education:
B.A. in English and History, University of Texas at San Antonio, 1990
If there is one thing that novelist Deanna Raybourn has learned, it is the old adage "write what you read." Before penning her critically hailed debut, a spellbinding historical mystery titled Silent in the Grave, she spent years struggling to perfect the romance novel. Native Texan Raybourn wrote her first romance at the age of 23. Although she did receive some attention from potential publishers, she failed to publish the book. Ultimately, she stored it away in a box in her attic. Over the next several years, that manuscript would be joined by eight more, all written in the same lusty vein. That's when she finally had the revelation that would lead to her first published novel. "I lean more towards mystery and historical fiction in my reading, so I finally decided to write what I read," she explains on her website. "Apparently THAT is the magical formula for success, in case anyone is writing this down." Two years later, she had finished Silent in the Grave and Mira Books ("known in my house as The Finest Publishing Company on The Planet," Raybourn says) picked it up.
Raybourn's sprawling debut novel takes its title from a foreboding quote in the Bible's book of Psalms: "Let the wicked be ashamed and let them be silent in the grave." This is the final threat that London society hound Sir Edmund Grey receives before he unexpectedly falls dead in the middle of a dinner party. While his wife Julia initially believes Edmund's death to be the result of a preexisting heart condition, private agent Nicholas Brisbane informs her that he believes her husband's death to be of a more insidious nature. When Julia solicits Brisbane to find the killer, they are both drawn into a dangerous mystery and drawn to each other.
Silent in the Grave has already been garnering much praise from Raybourn's fellow writers, the online community, and the literary press for its masterfully paced suspense and historical authenticity. Karen Harper, who wrote the bestselling thriller Hurricane, applauded, "This debut novel has one of the most clever endings I've seen." Dana Stabenow of PoisenedPen.com declared that Raybourn has a "strong voice akin to Amelia Peabody's, a superbly realized setting -- you'll choke on the coal smoke of Raybourn's Victorian London." Meanwhile, Publishers Weekly called Silent in the Grave a "perfectly executed debut," while Kirkus insisted, "Bring on the sequel"! That demand is about to be met, as Raybourn is currently working on the next two books in her budding saga, which will also be published by Mira sometime in the future. Considering that she is currently mounting an extensive book tour in support of Silent in the Grave and managing her new web site (which she says will soon incorporate personal podcasts), one has to wonder where she even finds the time.
Although Raybourn says that the ultra-busy schedule of a hot new writer does not allow for much free time, she admits that she regularly allows herself spare moments throughout the day to mourn the loss of her favorite show Will & Grace.
On her web site, Raybourn boasts, "I double-majored in history and English, which means I know how to find Jesus imagery in any book you care to give me, and then I can write a fifty-page paper about it with footnotes."
A few interesting outtakes from our interview with Raybourn:
"I taught English for three years, and my favorite lesson was my Trojan War lecture. It lasted three days. Aside from teaching, I was written up for insubordination at every job I ever had. The first book I remember writing was a diary of Marie Antoinette when I was in third grade."
"I read like a fiend. I knit badly, but I just learned to purl, so I'm hoping things will pick up. I am addicted to podcasts -- I currently have 600 loaded onto my iPod that I have yet to listen to. I watch too much television, usually classic movies, the History Channel, or Will & Grace reruns. I adore astrology and am always downloading natal charts. I am a Gemini with Libra rising and a Pisces moon."
What was the book that most influenced your life or your career as a writer?
There is no one single book. Life is too short to read books you don't like, so any book I finish is one I wanted to read in the first place. Each of them has shaped me, and by extension my work, in some way. If I read gorgeous fiction, I try to figure out what makes it so appealing and how I can extend that technique into my own writing. If it is a nonfiction book, and I read lots of those, I try to incorporate what I've learned into my life, whether it's a new meditation or a philosophy that broadens what I believe. Every new book is an invitation down a new path.
What are your ten favorite books, and what makes them special to you?
What are some of your favorite films, and what makes them unforgettable to you?
What types of music do you like? Is there any particular kind you like to listen to when you're writing?
I don't go anywhere without my iPod, and it is stocked with music that is all over the map, everything from Loreena McKennitt to Panic at the Disco! to Aerosmith. I always write to music, usually soundtracks. It doesn't have to relate directly to the time period I'm writing about, but it has to evoke the proper feeling. Right now I'm writing to the second half of the Marie Antoinette soundtrack. If all else fails, I write to Bach.
If you had a book club, what would it be reading?
Something English, no doubt. I am a huge Anglophile, and I love the comfortable exoticism of English writing.
What are your favorite kinds of books to give -- and get -- as gifts?
I love to give (and receive!) the serendipitous book -- the one the recipient would have pounced on in the store, but didn't even realize was there. The latest in a beloved series, or something that is similar in tone to books they already have but new and fresh. I love new discoveries and old favorites. If all my presents came from a bookstore, I would be perfectly happy.
Do you have any special writing rituals? For example, what do you have on your desk when you're writing?
I have a small sacred space with candles and incense that sits opposite my desk. It usually smells of roses, but if I need a little extra energy I burn orange or tangerine oil. There is also a beautiful crystal bowl given to me by my publisher. I keep it where I can see it because it is tangible proof of their faith in me. Just above it is perched a stuffed raven. I put together enormous collage boards for each book, pasted with images that invoke the current mood of the particular story -- faces, settings, snippets of letters or poems, clothing. The current collage board is also propped where I can see it as I work. Behind me is a wall of books, including the reference materials I use most, although I am just as likely to scurry to the internet as open a book. On the desk itself I keep a julep cup full of purple pens and a tiny carved cherub's head. In my drawer I have a few toys for when I'm feeling cranky: a wind-up monkey, a Jane Austen action figure, and a boxing nun I call Sister Mary Pugnacious.
Many writers are hardly "overnight success" stories. How long did it take for you to get where you are today? Any rejection-slip horror stories or inspirational anecdotes?
I am about as far from an overnight success as you can get. I wrote my first novel when I was 23. It took several more manuscripts and fourteen years' worth of rejection letters before I got published. The worst -- and best -- part of those rejection letters was that almost all of them contained some seed of hope. Almost every editor found something to compliment, and many of them read whole manuscripts before they decided to reject them. I was tantalizingly close to getting published for years before it actually happened.
If you could choose one new writer to be "discovered," who would it be?
Well, I would love for it to be me! It is absolutely thrilling to be able to put a story on paper and have a reader connect with those characters. When someone picks up a book you have written and "gets it", there is nothing quite like it in the world. It feels as if you have made a contribution to someone's life, even if it was just taking them out of the reality of the mundane for a little while. And sometimes that is the most important thing you can do for another person.
What tips or advice do you have for writers still looking to be discovered?
Do not ever give up. Keep writing, write every day, and refuse rejection. If there is anything useful in the rejection letters, and there often is, use it and move on. Rejection is not always "no". Sometimes it is just "not right now".
Loading...I threw my elder brother a repressive look. "Do not be so morose, Plum. Fathers only really angry with Lysander," I pointed out, brandishing the letter from England with my fingertips. The paper fairly scorched my skin. Fathers temper was a force of nature. Unable to rant at Lysander directly, he had applied himself to written chastisement with great vigour.
"The rest of us can go home easily enough," I said. "Just think of itChristmas in England! Plum pudding and snapdragon, mistletoe and wassail"
"Chilblains and damp beds, fogs so thick you cannot set foot out of doors," Plum put in, his expression sour. "Someone sobbing in the linen cupboard, Father locking himself in the study after threatening to drown the lot of us in the moat."
"I know," I said, my excitement rising. "Won't it be wonderful?"
Plum's face cracked into a thin, wistful smile. "It will, actually. I have rather missed the old pileand the family, as well. But I shall be sorry to leave Italy. It has been an adventure I shall not soon forget."
On that point we were in complete agreement. Italy had been a balm to me, soothing and stimulating at once. I had joined two of my brothers, Lysander and EglamourPlum to the familyafter suffering the loss of my husband and later my home, and very nearly my own life. I had arrived in Italy with my health almost broken and my spirit in a sorrier state. Four months in a warm, sunny clime with the company of my brothers had restored me. And though the weather had lately grown chill and the seasons wereturning inward, I had no wish to leave Italy yet. Still, the lure of family and home, particularly at Christmas, was strong.
"Well, who is to say we must return permanently? Italy shall always be here. We can go to England for Christmas and still be back in Venice in time for Carnevale."
Plum's smile deepened. "That is terribly cunning of you, Julia. I think living among Italians has developed a latent talent in you for intrigue."
It was a jest, but the barb struck too close to home, and I lowered my head over my needlework. I had engaged in an intrigue in England although I had never discussed it with my brothers. There had been an investigation into my husbands death, a private investigation conducted by an inquiry agent. I had assisted him and unmasked the killer myself. It had been dangerous, nasty work, and I told myself I was happy to be done with it.
But even as I plunged my needle into the canvas, trailing a train of luscious scarlet silk behind it, I felt a pang of regretregret that my days were occupied with nothing more purposeful than those of any other lady of society. I had had a glimpse of what it meant to be useful, and it stung now to be merely decorative. I longed for something more important than the embroidering of cushions or the pouring of tea to sustain me.
Of my other regrets, I would not let myself think. I yanked at the needle, snarling the thread.
"Blast," I muttered, rummaging in my work basket for my scissors.
"We are a deceptively domestic pair," Plum said suddenly.
I snapped the threads loose and peered at him. "Whatever do you mean?"
He waved a hand. "This lovely villa, the fireside, both of us in slippers. I, reading my paper from England whilst you ply your needle. We might be any couple, by any fireside, placidly whiling away the darkening hours of an autumn eve."
I glanced about. The rented villa was comfortably, even luxuriously appointed. The long windows of the drawing room overlooked Lake Como, although the heavy velvet draperies had long since been drawn against the gathering dark. "I suppose, but"
What I had been about to say next was lost. Morag, my maid, entered the drawing room to announce a visitor.
"The Count of Four-not-cheese."
I gave her an evil look and tossed my needlework aside. Plum dashed his newspaper to the floor and jumped to his feet.
"Alessandro!" he cried. "You are a welcome sight! We did not expect you until Saturday."
Morag did not move, and our visitor stepped neatly around her, doffing his hat and cape. They were speckled with raindrops that glittered in the firelight. He held them out to Morag who looked at him as though he had just offered her a dead animal. I rushed to take them.
"Alessandro, how lovely to see you." I thrust the cape and hat at Morag. "Take these and brush them well," I instructed. "And his name is Fornacci," I hissed at her.
She gave me a shrug and a curl of the lip and departed, dragging the tail of Alessandro's beautiful coat on the marble floor as she went.
I turned to him, smiling brightly. "Do come in and get warm by the fire. It has turned beastly out there and you must be chilled to the bone."
He gave me a look rich with gratitude, and something rather more as well. Plum and I bustled about, plumping cushions and making him comfortable with a chair by the fire and a glass of good Irish whiskey. Alessandro had never tasted whiskey until making the acquaintance of my brothers, but had become something of a connoisseur in the months he had known them. To begin with, he no longer made the mistake of tossing his head back and drinking the entire glass at one gulp.
After a few minutes by the fire he had thawed sufficiently to speak. "It is so good to see you again," he said, careful to look at Plum as well as myself when he spoke. "I am very much looking forward to spending Christmas with you here." His English was terribly fluent, very much better than my Italian, but there was a formality that lingered in his speech. I found it charming.
Plum, who had poured himself a steady glass of spirits, took a deep draught. "I am afraid there has been a change in plans, old man."
"Old man" was his favourite nickname for Alessandro, no doubt for its incongruity. Alessandro was younger than either of us by some years.
The young man's face clouded a little and he looked from Plum to me, his silky dark brows knitting in concern. "I am not invited for Christmas? Shall I return to Firenze then?"
I slapped Plum lightly on the knee. "Don't be vile. You have made Alessandro feel unwelcome." It had been arranged that Alessandro would come to us in November, and we would all spend the holiday together before making a leisurely journey to Venice in time for Carnevale. There was no hope of such a scheme now. I turned to Alessandro, admiring for a moment the way the firelight licked at his hair. I had thought it black, but his curls shone amber and copper in their depths. I wondered how difficult it would be to persuade Plum to paint him.
"You see, Alessandro," I explained, "we have received a letter from our father, the Earl March. He is displeased with our brother Lysander and wishes us all to return to England at once. We shall spend Christmas there."
"Ah. How can one argue with the call of family? If you must return, my friends, you must return. But know that you will always carry with you the highest regard of Alessandro Fornacci."
This handsome speech was accompanied by a courtly little bow from the neck and a noble, if pained, expression that would have done a Caesar proud.
"I have a better idea, and a very good notion it is," Plum said slowly. "What if we bring Alessandro with us?"
I had just taken a sip of my own whiskey and I choked lightly. "I beg your pardon, Plum?"
Alessandro raised his hands in a gesture I had seen many Italians employ, as if warding something off. "No, my friend, I must not. If your father is truly angry, he will not welcome an intruder at this time."
"Are you mad? This is precisely the time to bring someone outside the family into the fold. It will keep him from killing Lysander outright. He will behave himself if we cart you back to England with us. The old man has peculiar ideas, but he is appallingly hospitable."
"Plum, kindly do not refer to Father as 'the old man'. It is disrespectful," I admonished.
Alessandro was shaking his head. "But I have not been invited. It would be a great discourtesy."
"It would be a far greater discourtesy for Father to kill his own son," Plum pointed out tartly. "And you have been invited. By us. Now I must warn you, the family seat is rather old-fashioned. Father doesn't hold with new ideas, at least not for country houses. You'll find no steam heat or even gaslights. I'm afraid it's all coal fires and candles, but it really is a rather special old place. You always said you wanted to see England, and Bellmont Abbey is as English as it gets, dear boy."
Alessandro hesitated. "If I may be so bold, why is his lordship so angry with Lysander? Surely it is not"
"It is," Plum and I chorused.
Just at that moment, sounds of a quarrel began to echo from upstairs. There was a shout and the unmistakable crash of breaking crockery.
"But the earl, he cannot object to Lysander's marriage to so noble and lovely a lady as Violante," Alessandro put in, quite diplomatically I thought.
Something landed with a great thud on the floor, shivering the ceiling and causing the chandelier above our heads to sway gently.
"Do you suppose that was one of them?" Plum inquired lightly.
"Don't jest. If it was, we shall have to deal with the body," I reminded him. Violante began to shriek, punctuating her words with tiny stamps of her heel from the sound of it.
"I wonder what she is calling him. It cannot be very nice," I mused.
Alessandro gave an elegant shrug. "I regret, my understanding of Napolitana, it is imperfect." He dropped his eyes, and I wondered if he understood more than politeness would allow him to admit.
"Probably for the best," Plum remarked, draining the last of his whiskey.
"Do not finish off the decanter," I warned him. "Lysander will want a glass or two when they have finished for the evening."
"Or seven," Plum countered with a twitch of his lip. I gave him a disapproving look. Lysander's marital woes were not a source of amusement to me. I had endured enough of my own connubial difficulties to be sympathetic. Plum, however, wore a bachelors indifference. He had never said so, but I suspected his favourite brothers defection to the married state had rankled him. They had travelled the Continent together for years, roaming wherever their interests and their acquaintance had directed them, exploring museums and opera houses and ruined castles. They wrote poetry and concertos and painted murals on the walls of ancient abbeys. They had been the staunchest companions until Lysander, having left his thirtieth birthday some years past, had spotted Violante sitting serenely in her uncles box at La Fenice. It was, as the Tuscans say, un colpo difulmine, a bolt of lightning.
It was also a bit misleading. Upon further investigation, Lysander discovered Violante was Neapolitan, not Venetian, and there was quite simply nothing about her that was serene. She carried in her blood all the warmth and passion and raw-boned energy of her native city Violante was Naples, and for a cool-blooded, cool-headed Englishman like Lysander the effect was intoxicating. He married her within a month, and presented Plum and me with a fait accompli, a sister-in-law who smothered us in kisses and heady jasmine perfumes. For my part, I found her charming, wholly unaffected if somewhat exhausting. Plum, on the other hand, was perfectly cordial and cordially perfect. Whenever Violante stepped from a carriage or shivered from the cold, Plum would offer her a hand or his greatcoat, bowing and murmuring a graciously phrased response to her effusive thanks. And yet always he watched her with the cool detachment one usually reserves for specimens at the zoological garden. I often thought there might be real fondness there if he could unbend a little and forgive her for coming so precipitously into our lives.
But Plum was nothing if not stubborn, and I knew a straightforward approach would only cause him to dig his heels into the ground like a recalcitrant pony. So I endeavoured to distract him with little whims and treats, cajoling him into good temper in spite of himself.
And then we met Alessandro, or to be accurate, I met Alessandro, for he was a friend of my brothers of some years' duration. Rome had been too hot, too noisy, altogether too much for my delicate state when I first arrived in Italy. My brothers immediately decided to quit the city and embark on a leisurely tour to the north, lingering for a few days or even weeks in any particularly engaging spot, but always pushing on toward Florence. We settled comfortably in a tiny palazzo there, and I began to recover. My fire-roughened voice smoothed again, never quite as it had been, but not noticeably damaged. My lungs were strengthened and my spirits raised. Lysander felt comfortable enough to leave us to accept an invitation for a brief trip to Venice to celebrate the private debut of a friends opera. Plum pledged to watch over me, and Lysander departed, to return a month later after endless delays and a secret wedding, his voluble bride in tow.
Alessandro had kept us company while Lysander was away, guiding us to hidden piazze, revealing secret gardens and galleries no tourists ever crowded. He drove us to Fiesole in a beribboned pony cart, stopping to point out the most breathtaking views in that enchanted hilltop town, and introduced us to inns in whose flower-drenched courtyards we were served food so delicious it must have been bewitched. Plum always seemed to wander off, sketchbook in hand to capture a row of cypresses, stalwart and straight as a regiment, or the elegant curve of a si-gnorina's cheek, distinctive as a goddess out of myth. Alessandro did not seem to mind. He talked to me of history and culture and we practiced our languages with each other, learning to speak of everything and nothing at all.
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