Author of the Month: an interview (and giveaway) with Sylvia Halliday!




For Georgian Month’s Author of the Month, I am delighted to present my favorite romance novelist, Sylvia Halliday (aka Louisa Rawlings, Ena Halliday, and Sylvia Baumgarten). Ms. Halliday– whose work manages to be sweeping, passionate, and historically meticulous– wrote many epic historical romances in the ’80s and ’90s. She’s gained the kudos of many great authors– including Roberta Gellis, who called her work “fascinating”– and she’s won many prestigious awards within the romance community, including the Romantic Times’ award for Best Historical set in France (for “Promise of Summer,” one of my favorite romances ever). Sylvia is with us today, to discuss– among other things– her writing career, swashbucklers, Mad Men, toga parties, the Kennedy assassination, and her past and future projects.

In addition to this exclusive interview with Sylvia, I’m also having a giveaway of her classic story “Summer Darkness, Winter Light”– a 1995 Romantic Times Reviewers’ Choice finalist for Best Historical– which I reviewed here. One commenter has the chance to win a print copy of “Summer Darkness, Winter Light”– and Sylvia will personalize and autograph for the lucky winner! All you have to do is leave a comment below.

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Hi Sylvia! So where are you from? How did you get into writing? Did you always want to be a writer, or is something you decided to get into later in life?

I was born in Toronto, Canada. Because it was during the Depression (yes, I’m that old!), and my father couldn’t get work in Canada, we moved to the US (Massachusetts) when I was just 4. As a small aside: When I saw “The King’s Speech” I cried because, for a few years until we became naturalized, that was MY king! Continue reading “Author of the Month: an interview (and giveaway) with Sylvia Halliday!” »

Summer Darkness, Winter Light: a ribald and action-packed romance classic




Sylvia Halliday Ah, 1995… it seems so long ago. Back in the halcyon days of the Clinton administration, when the Oklahoma City bombings were big news, and Alanis Morrisette was taken seriously. That was the year Sylvia Halliday’s “Summer Darkness, Winter Light” was released. At the time, I was already a staunch fan of Ms. Halliday (real name Sylvia Baumgarten, aka Louisa Rawlings and Ena Halliday), but, for whatever reason, I wasn’t as crazy about “Summer Darkness” as much as her previous books. However, now that I’ve reread it, I can safely say the book is excellent and, if you’re a fan of historical romance, definitely worth a read. It’s aged pretty well too.

“Summer Darkness” is set in 1724, and it tells the adventures of Allegra Baniard, a poor young noblewoman fresh from her exile in the Colonies. She’s come back to England to avenge her family’s ruin; she means to kill the new lord of Baniard Hall, who she thinks is John Wickham, who engineered the fall of the Baniards, but it turns out the new lord is Greyston Morgan, the Viscount Ridley, who has his own demons. She tries to assassinate Morgan by mistake, but this backfires, and she finds herself back in indentured servitude to this man who seems to be nothing but a lecherous drunkard. But hark! Her new master is a sexy beast, who alternately tries to seduce her and piss her off. But our heroine has many surprises and lots of adventures awaiting her before the book is done, and that includes murderous fops, evil smugglers, Indian princes, ferocious bears, and gladiatorial hookers with hearts of gold. It manages to be both ridiculous and awesome at the same time. Continue reading “Summer Darkness, Winter Light: a ribald and action-packed romance classic” »