Fresh Fiction...and Scones!

The wonderful folks at FreshFiction were kind enough to have us in for their Valentine’s Deay Recipe Roundup. Here’s our contribution. Be sure to visit them for great news and events and information about your favorite authors and books! Here’s the post…and the recipe!

We're pleased to present another delicious recipe on our Valentine's Day Recipe Roundup from the historical romance writing team, May McGoldrick! 

In Highland Sword, Aidan Grant and Morrigan Drummond are both proud and principled. He is a barrister. She is a trained fighter in search of revenge. They each know their own mind and are certain about what they want. And they end up spending a lot of time together, be it fighting in Inverness alleyways or the training yard at Dalmigavie Castle or duel each other in a battle of wits. But it is during the night of the Samhain celebration that their romance blooms.

Many of our readers already know that May McGoldrick is actually two people – Nikoo and Jim McGoldrick. We write together, live together, love endlessly, and enjoy cooking together. In our household, Nikoo loves the everyday and holiday cooking, and Jim is great at baking.

In this Highland competition, players are banned from using their hands. This game challenges participants to take bites out of treacle scones dangling from string. How can you lose?!

Ingredients:

1 3/4 cups all-purpose flour

4 teaspoons baking powder

1/4 cup white sugar

1/8 teaspoon salt

5 tablespoons unsalted butter

1/2 cup dried currants or raisins (optional)

1/2 cup milk

1/4 cup sour cream

1 egg

1 tsp ground ginger

1 tsp all spice

1 tbsp treacle (molasses)

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F (200 degrees C).

Sift the flour, baking powder, salt and spices into a large bowl.

Gently heat the butter with the sugar and treacle and stir till sugar has dissolved completely

Let this cool a little before adding the egg and milk and sour cream (save a little to glaze the scones before baking) then stir gently in the dry mix until well blended. Add the raisins and currants, if desired.

With floured hands, pat scone dough into balls 2 to 3 inches across. Let the scones barely touch each other. Brush the tops of the scones with the egg and milk leftover. Let them rest for about 10 minutes.

Bake for 10 to 15 minutes in the preheated oven, until the tops are golden brown. Hang them from the strings, and have fun chasing the deliciousness at any time of year.

Publisher's Weekly Article - Blame Jane: Romance Novels 2019–2020

We were delighted to be included in “Blame Jane: Romance Novels 2019–2020: What’s so great about Regency romances anyway?”, a wonderful Publisher’s Weekly article about the ‘new’ Regency romances that are being published, novels that are changing the way we, as readers and writers, see the stories, the characters, and the history of the period itself.

PW article.jpg

The article by Betsy O’Donovan, a journalism professor at Western Washington University, includes discussion and quotes from such great authors as Anna Harrington, Jo Goodman, Vanessa Riley, Christina Courtenay, Evie Dunmore, and Betina Krahn. Fair Use guidelines preclude us from republishing the article here, but we thought we’d include a few of lines of our input to entice you into going and reading the entire piece.

Excerpted from

Blame Jane: Romance Novels 2019–2020

What’s so great about Regency romances anyway?

by Betsy O’Donovan, Publisher’s Weekly, 11 November 2019

Defending the Crown

“Readers are infatuated with the Regency; let’s give them something more,” says Nikoo McGoldrick, the storytelling half of the married duo behind the pseudonym May McGoldrick (Highland Sword, St. Martin’s, Mar. 2020). “As writers, you take a popular period like Regency, lure the readers in, and then do what Charles Dickens did: you show them life.”

[….]

Rethinking What’s Regency

Jim and Nikoo McGoldrick believe there’s much more to say about the dramatic events that shaped the Regency era. These issues may have been discussed at Almack’s and other social clubs, but they’ve generally been avoided in the genre.

“You have revolutionary forces at work and colonialism is running rampant, and it’s driving governmental actions,” Jim McGoldrick says. “People are fighting in the streets. The industrial revolution is in full gear. Rape and pillage is the order of the day.”

Though ballrooms provide a glittering backdrop, many Regency authors are acknowledging that the people dancing there were ruled by a mad king and a licentious prince, were confronting a politically active middle class that vehemently opposed the concentration of wealth and privilege, and were just beginning to see the cracks in their empire.

“In our Regency,” McGoldrick says of this new wave of romances, “we love Jane Austen, but Pemberly is in danger of being burned to the ground.”

 Read the entire article at Publisher’s Weekly.

Interview with Romance Junkies

Welcome to Romance Junkies, Nikoo and Jim McGoldrick! As a fan of your May McGoldrick Royal Highlander series, I’m thrilled to introduce you to our readers.

May: Thank you so much for this opportunity. And we’re so thankful for all the support for our stories that you’ve sent our way over the years.  

Romance Junkies: First, can you tell us about your current release and any upcoming projects a Romance Junkie will be interested in?

May: Highland Jewel, our second book in the Royal Highlander Series, is a September 24th release. And the next, Highland Sword, is scheduled for publication March 31, 2020.

In Highland Jewel, The Radical War of 1820 has extended into the Highlands. Maisie Murray and her family have found shelter at Dalmigavie Castle, the heart of the rising in the north. The dangers of their past have followed them, but they are committed to Scotland’s fight for freedom. A messenger brings the promise of an important ally to their cause, but only Maisie recognizes that falsehood and betrayal have also arrived at their door.

Six months earlier, Maisie was the picture of docility, quiet and compliant in the eyes of her family. To her activist friends, however, she was a fearless crusader for women’s rights. In the wake of the Peterloo Massacre, Maisie and a friend founded the Edinburgh Female Reform Society, and she carried the banner for universal suffrage. Caught up in the wave of her enthusiasm, Maisie never expected to fall in love with the brother of her friend and fellow reformer, the man who saved her life during one of their protests.

Niall Campbell, a hero of the wars and a decorated officer of the Royal Highland Regiment, is battle weary and searching for stability in his life. A fierce warrior by training and a poet at heart, Niall walks away from the shining career that lies ahead of him, to the dismay of his superiors.

Niall is frustrated by his inability to curtail his sister’s involvement in the women’s reform movement. A widow with two children, she is determined to ignore the dangers of her radical positions. In saving his sister when a protest turns violent, he meets Maisie. Their relationship begins as one of experience versus idealism, of scars versus hope. Soon, however, he finds in Maisie the heart he longs for.

When Niall’s sister is arrested and disappears, he quickly realizes his life is not his own, for the British authorities have a mission for him to accomplish in exchange for his sister’s freedom.

Overnight, Maisie loses Niall, her friend, and her home. In the wake of the riots that sweep through the cities of Scotland, her own sister Isabella is branded a traitor to the Crown, and the family must flee to the Highlands. They take shelter at Dalmigavie Castle, under the protection of the charismatic Cinaed Mackintosh.

Here in the heart of the Highlands, Maisie runs into Niall again. He carries a message of hope…but has a terrible task to complete.

Maisie and Niall’s future rests on their ability to overcome the forces that divide them, or—for the future of Scotland—she must stop the man who owns her heart.

Highland Sword is the conclusion to the Royal Highlander series. In this novel the reader meets Morrigan Drummond.

Independent and fiery, Morrigan lost everything when her father was killed while caring for Scots wounded by English dragoons during a day of protests in Edinburgh. After fleeing to the Highlands, she discovered her gift. Training with Mackintosh fighters at Dalmigavie Castle, Morrigan can now shoot a pistol and handle a dagger better than any man. She is ready to use her deadly skills on the enemies of her nation. And she wants revenge on Sir Rupert Burney, the English spymaster who ordered the attack on peaceful people and the death of her father.

Aidan Grant is a Highland lawyer, at odds with the Crown for his fearless stands against the government on issues of representation, slavery, and the violent Highland Clearances. Quick-witted and popular with the Scottish people, he is a nemesis in the eyes of the repressive Crown forces seeking to crush reform across the land.

These two meet, and the battle of wills begins. She wants war; he wants peace. She is after revenge; he is after justice. She is ready to spill blood; he believes too much has already been shed. Neither one will surrender their ideals, but neither can ignore their attraction for the other.

Highland Sword is an emotional ride, but we feel reasonably confident everyone will be satisfied with how everything wraps up at the end. That being said, there is still one more very cool historical event connected to our series that may just need to be explored in another book. We’ll see.

In between writing the historical, we’re also writing a contemporary suspense novel. Stay tuned for more about that one.

RJ: I just have to know how you write together so seamlessly. Do you each write a character's point-of-view, then combine them? Does one research while the other writes? How do you split the efforts to get to the final product?

May: We both write everything. We’ve tried many methods over our twenty-five year career. But each book has its own life to consider. As you know, Jim has a PhD and I’m an engineer, but that doesn’t stop either of us from delving into the other’s areas of expertise. It’s the same when we’re writing a historical or a contemporary suspense thriller under our Jan Coffey name. We wear many hats and do it all.

Also, we each have our own writing space and habits. We still occasionally sit side-by-side as we try to wrestle a difficult plot point to the ground, but we mostly work separately on whatever scene is next. Then we swap and revise each other’s work. It takes about three times longer, but we both have to be happy with it before we move on. As far as brainstorming plots and characters, we walk and talk and walk and talk and walk and talk. And then walk some more. One of us (Nikoo) needs to move to think creatively.

Years ago Heinemann Publishers asked us to write a book about our process. Marriage of Minds: Collaborative Fiction Writing explains some of our evolving process, as well as how a dozen other writing teams manage it and remain friends (with some casualties mixed in, unfortunately).

RJ: Maisie and Niall are strong characters. Did you base them on real people, or did they come to life on their own?

May: Maisie was modeled after a reform activist named Mary Fildes, who was on the speakers’ platform at the ‘Peterloo Massacre’ in Manchester, England, a few months before our story starts. In real life, she was actually run through by a sabre wielded by a soldier who was part of the militia who attacked the peaceful, unarmed citizens who had gathered to protest the government’s actions. Mary survived and went on to lead the movement for women’s suffrage until her death decades later.

Niall’s character is based on many Scottish officers who were useful to the British Empire during the years of the Napoleonic War and after. Many never returned to the Highlands because the Crown was afraid of allowing them back in Scotland at a time when discontent and the threat of rebellion was on the rise.

RJ: I found Maisie's political involvement fascinating, which made her an unusual heroine in my reading experience. Do either of you have political knowledge that helped form her passion for it?

May: Yes. Yes. Both of us love politics, and we’re fascinated with history. We believe that human nature doesn’t change, and we also believe there’s so much to learn from the past. It goes with that old saying, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”

RJ: When you’re envisioning a series, do you plot it in advance, or let the first book determine future books as you’re writing?

May: We plot heavily because it is the two of us working together. Even though we like to brag that each of us reads the other’s mind, that goes only so far. Also, plotting is another carryover from writing so many suspense novels.

RJ: Do you see your spouse’s qualities in your characters? Do either of you see yourself in them? Does anyone else influence your characters?

May: Actual history heavily influences us. But also, we have a good understanding of what we’re about, what our core beliefs are, and what the message is that we want to infuse into our novels. After nearly fifty books, we recognize that we have consistent themes. So yes, we definitely see parts of each of us in every novel we write.  

RJ: What do you hope readers will find when they settle in with one of your books?

May: Entertainment. Memorable characters. People who you’d like to become friends with and follow through their lives. Snippets of history to engage your mind.    

RJ: What is the funniest or strangest thing that has happened to you while researching a book?

May: Our fiction have a strange tendency of being prophetic. That has happened a number of times with our Jan Coffey novels, in particular.

One of our YA novels for Harper Collins (Jan Coffey’s Tropical Kiss) was set in Aruba and featured an American student who was abducted at one point in the novel. Not long after Tropical Kiss was published, an American girl named Natalie Holloway went missing. Our story turns out happier.

The premise of our Jan Coffey novel Five in a Row became the topic of a New York Times article “Can a Virus Hitch a Ride on your Car?”. The journalist even used experts we talked to in researching the novel. In our story, a cyber-terrorist is taking control of people’s cars. Now, we’re not saying Elon Musk is that guy, but those Tesla vehicles ARE self-driving!

We can go on and describe a dozen other instances. Very strange, indeed.

RJ: If I came to your house and went through all your closets, what would I find that would surprise me?

May: Nikoo’s closet is in complete disarray while Jim’s clothes are neatly sorted by type and color and texture and whatever. 😊  And that includes our desks and everything Jim gets his hands on in the house, from the garage to the drawers (his drawers) to the dishes to the dog’s toys, all neatly organized and categorized…and it’s all alphabetical, if he can manage it. Even the dishwasher can only be loaded by him. So I let him. 😉

RJ: You've decided to throw a dinner party.  What will you serve and will it be an intimate affair or a wild one that the neighbors will be talking about next year?

May: Our house is a gathering place for friends all the time. And the parties are lively and frequent and a lot of fun. We like to cook so the menu is always changing, and we have lots of fun with it. We have to admit that Southern California weather is MADE for outdoor grilling!

RJ: What animal best describes the personality of May McGoldrick and why?

May: Nikoo’s spirit animal is the snake. I often play the role of a guide and emotional healer. The spirit of the snake represents positive, spiritual transformation. I am the sought-out friend when advice is needed. The snake facilitates life events to go smoothly – a connector of dots who reveals the big picture.

Jim’s spirit animal is the whale. Jim has a strong inner voice, and always follows his own truth. Because he’s so in touch with reality, he’s self-aware and doesn’t get involved in drama. He has strong bonds and emotional ties with those he loves.

Interviewing Each Other (for FreshFiction)

We’re very, very happy that FreshFiction has invited us to interview each other.

We’re Nikoo and Jim McGoldrick, and you might know us by our writing names, May McGoldrick and Jan Coffey.

After forty years of marriage, twenty-five years of writing together, and fifty books, we’ve had plenty of opportunities to answer interviewers’ questions—and we even wrote a how-to book on collaboration—but to get personal like this is something totally different. In this interview, we hope to take you behind the closed doors and give you a glimpse of our relationship…because that’s the magic that makes the journey possible.

Nikoo: Let’s start easy. Coffee or tea?

Jim: Too simple…and not too magical. Coffee and cappuccino in the morning, tea in the afternoon. And that’s the same with you, too.

Nikoo: What movie or series have we watched more than ten times?

Jim: Love, Actually. Casablanca. Pride and Prejudice (the BBC series). Persuasion. Jane Eyre (every version). Little Dorrit. The Guard. Waking Ned Devine. Notting Hill. Emma. It Happened One Night

Jim: What’s our go-to movie every Christmas?

Nikoo: Love, Actually.

Jim: Do you remember how we met?

Nikoo: How can I forget? I was walking along the beach in Stonington, Connecticut. In the distance I spotted you trying to shove an old wooden boat off the beach. I rolled my sleeves and walked over and threw the boat over my shoulder and carried it to the parking lot. Our first meeting.

Jim: Of course, that’s a lie. Years ago, we were invited as guests on the Jane Pauley Show. That’s when I announced on national TV that that you were a mail-order bride that I got through PersianWife.com.

Nikoo: You did do that, liar. But there was no Internet when we first met, so thankfully most of the audience got the joke and laughed. This brings us to a good question. What do we usually argue about?

Jim: The location of staircase in a castle that burned to the ground back in the 1700s.

Nikoo: That was a doozy, but we also argue about names and their spellings. Jim likes to use good old-fashioned names for our characters. Names like Thomas, George, Lawrence, Mary—which, by the way, are the names of his siblings. He couldn’t have handled it if his parents named him Nikoo as a child. I, on the other hand, love the challenge of people asking, “How do you pronounce Cinaed?” Cinaed is the hero of Highland Crown, and he comes back again in Highland Jewel and Highland Sword

Jim: My turn…what’s the best gift I ever gave you?

Nikoo: I’ll never forget it. A Vespa. A large, beautiful, red two-person Vespa. I had to get a motorcycle license to drive it.

Jim: Now that’s a story to share… Nikoo broke land-speed records driving around and weaving through the cones in the parking lot of the DMV. The trooper’s mouth hung open when she came skidding to a stop exactly where she needed to. It was a thing of beauty.

Nikoo: I have to talk about weddings. Not about our wedding (singular) but our weddings (plural). A sweet tradition at weddings now is to ask all the married couples to come to the dance floor and then the DJ does a countdown, eliminating couples by the number of years married. Well, in recent years and on a few occasions, we’ve been the last couple standing, the longest married couple. And they always ask us to give a word of advice to the newlyweds. I really don’t believe there are any shortcuts or sure-fire, winning strategies for a great marriage. You can’t condense a lifetime of work into one sentence, but…

Jim: Respect your partner.

Nikoo: So true. That’s most important.

Jim: All relationships have their ups and downs, good and bad days, pleasures and frustrations. And it’s easy to be generous when life is going smoothly. But when we’re upset, it’s easy to lay the blame on your partner, to abuse them emotionally and verbally. This extends to public ridicule, too—disrespecting each other, no matter how innocent or humorously intended.

Nikoo: Among our family and friends, Jim is known as ‘perfect’, and I am ‘flawless.’ Mission accomplished…even if the sound of gagging follows us around. We love it.

Jim: But that’s not all of it. We’re individuals. Some of us have high self-esteem, some don’t. It’s our job to be a bright mirror for our partner, reflecting all the beauty and talent that we see in them. But to do this, we have to talk to each other. And I’m not talking about talking story or plot, but asking about the person’s feelings, and also voicing what might be bothering us. Cappuccino time, or tea-time, or glass of wine time are perfect for this.

Nikoo: So true, especially since we collaborate. It’s so important to know why all of a sudden, one of us is feeling insecure after a certain event or a comment that struck us the wrong way. We’re both good listeners. We ask questions to clarify things.

Jim: Talking about everything, if there are arguments that follow. It's okay to be passionate in a disagreement, but we never sleep on it. We never sleep on an unsettled disagreement. Unresolved arguments grow roots and branches, and the fruit is poison.

Nikoo: My grandmother used to say the person who wants a rose must respect the thorn. The notion of changing our partner into the person we want them to be has never worked for us. Change must come from within. Of course, we’re both probably too stubborn to be changed by someone else, anyway.

Jim: Do I have any flaws?

Nikoo: Jim has to check the traffic report before going to the convenience store a block away.

Jim: Nikoo spreads her clothes on the chair, on top of the dressers, anywhere there is an inch of space.

Nikoo: And Jim has everything in the house, from the closets (his closet) to the dishes, to the dog’s toys, neatly organized and categorized by size, color, texture…and he’s anal about it.

Jim: And…and…she takes her seatbelt off as soon as we turn onto our street, which starts the car beeping immediately. And the first time we painted the outside of our house, Nikoo painted right over the caterpillars. But who wants to live with someone who is absolutely perfect, anyway? Or flawless?

Nikoo: Despite all this complaining, we love spending time together. Before we started writing together, there was rowing, quilting, baseball, golf, chess, tennis, skiing, backgammon, restoring an old sailboat (the one I carried on my back up from the beach), and renovating houses.

Jim: And there’s a dark side to this. I burned the chess game in the fireplace because Nikoo was winning all the time.

Nikoo: And when we play golf, I get hungry after the third hole and keep complaining about it. And I learned to row on the Charles River in Boston when I was four months pregnant with our firstborn…because that was when (and apparently the only time) they were offering lessons. And Jim’s quilting stitches are much better than mine, but I won’t admit it.

Jim: We’re both die-hard Red Sox fans—this is NOT a flaw—but in 1986 we ate chicken on every game day (because their third-baseman Wade Boggs was superstitious about it), and we used our October mortgage payment to buy playoff tickets at Fenway Park. Incidentally, we’re happy to say that this past decade has been much kinder to us (not with regard to the mortgage payments, but as Sox fans).

Nikoo: We are not just friends. We believe our friendship is the foundation of our marriage, but there’s more. Physical contact, intimacy, passion are also key parts of it. It’s important to cultivate romance.

Romance also means dating (married people need it, too), but dating doesn’t have to have a large price tag associated with it. An afternoon hike. An ice-cream cone. A drive to the beach. Okay, Jim even thinks our weekly trip to Costco is romantic. 😊  But we have fun with that, too.

Jim: When was the last time I laughed so hard that I cried?

Nikoo: Rats, rats, rats. Yesterday, when we were talking about a character not believing another character, I used the example of if I said there were rats in our attic. There aren’t, by the way, but Jim would rather not believe it, anyway. Whatever…the way it came out got us both laughing so hard we were crying.

Nikoo: Here’s a question for you. What would constitute a perfect day for you?

Jim: Every day with you is perfect.

Nikoo: Stop. Do you hear that? That is the sound of a thousand laptops slamming shut. 

Jim: I’m pretty sure I heard an ‘awww’ out there somewhere…before the slams.

 

Q & A with Keira Soleore of Frolic

Q&A for Frolic

 Keira Soleore: Welcome to Frolic! It is wonderful to have a chance for a quick chat with you about your two newest books in the Royal Highlander series.

 May McGoldrick: Thank you so much, Keira, for this opportunity. We’re a big fan of Frolic Media and of you personally, since (like you) we’re both engineer (Nikoo) and medievalist (Jim). We’re, like, clones!

 Keira: Before we get to the books, Nikoo and Jim, readers have been curious how your writing partnership came about. How do you brainstorm characters and plots? How do you divide up who writes what?

 May: To answer these questions, we’ll have to set up a week-long conference, a writing and/or relationship retreat (which would actually be really fun!). What we’ve been able to accomplish (40 years together, 25 years of writing/publishing, 50 books) involves a long, long, long and complicated journey. One thing we can tell you, we were both hesitant to start down that road, as neither of us had any idea about the rules. But we knew we had a lot at stake. To give you a short glimpse of that time twenty-five years ago, Jim was a college professor teaching Chaucer and Shakespeare and other things, and Nikoo was an engineer in a Fortune 500 company. And on top of that, we had a marriage and two small children who demanded every hour of our non-work hours. 

The trigger to do it, however, was our love of writing and reading, as well as Nikoo’s desire to stop working 60+ hours a week away from the family. We both had always wanted to be writers, and we’d tried individually but hadn’t succeeded, financially anyway. So, sitting side-by-side one winter night, we drafted a short story for a magazine contest.

 Our combined talent, hard work, and luck paid off. The universe aligned itself for us. That short story was followed by the idea of a novel based on Jim’s PhD dissertation. In less than a week, we had an agent. In six months, a multi-book contract with Penguin.

How we work together and why it works was a mystery to us until Heinemann Publishers asked us to write a book about it a decade later. Marriage of Minds: Collaborative Fiction Writing, explains some of our changing process, as well as how a dozen other writing teams manage it and remain friends (with some casualties mixed in). In our case, we’ve remained happily married.

We still occasionally sit side-by-side as we try to wrestle a difficult plot point to the ground,  but we mostly work separately on whatever scene is next. Then we swap and revise each other’s work. It takes about three times longer, but we both have to be happy with it before we move on. As far as brainstorming plots and characters, we walk and talk and walk and talk and walk and talk. And then walk some more. One of us (Nikoo) needs to move to think creatively.

 Keira: You have now written many books together as May McGoldrick and Jan Coffey. What was your impetus behind the Royal Highlander series? How was your writing partnership part of the story behind the series?

 May: We’re both fascinated with history. We believe that human nature doesn’t change, and we also believe there’s so much to learn from the past. It goes with that old saying, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” When we were researching and writing Romancing the Scot, the first book in our Pennington Family Series, we came across references to the fears that the aristocrats in England had about losing power. After the Napoleonic Wars were over, people wanted a fair wage and a say in government. Parliament and the Crown would not allow it, but those same leaders were afraid that all those highly trained, discontented soldiers would rise up, a revolution would take place, and aristocrats’ blood would flow in the streets, as it had done in France just a few decades before. So the British government enacted law after law aimed at crushing and silencing all opposition. They took away the civil rights of the people in the name of ‘security’ and ‘the national interest’. What followed was the Radical War of 1820, and the events are eerily similar to things happening today. Pretty scary stuff, and we thought the turmoil of 1820 would be an awesome moment for our heroines and heroes to find themselves and each other.

 Keira: In your own words, could you tell the readers about Highland Crown and Highland Jewel?

  May:  Isabella Drummond is the protagonist in Highland Crown. She is a physician who was educated in Germany. Her ‘marriage of convenience’ husband had been one of the radical reformers in Edinburgh before he was killed. So at the beginning of the story, Isabella has escaped into the Highlands with her younger sister and the daughter of her late husband. They are being hunted by English soldiers and Scottish rebels alike. 

When a shipwreck occurs off the northern coast, Isabella saves the life of Cinaed Mackintosh, a fierce soul who is aiding the clans’ continuing resistance to English domination. Sparks fly between them, but Cinaed harbors dangerous secrets, as well.   

In Highland Jewel, The Radical War of 1820 has extended into the Highlands. Maisie Murray and her family have found shelter at Dalmigavie Castle, the heart of the rising in the north. The dangers of their past have followed them, but they are committed to Scotland’s fight for freedom. A messenger brings the promise of an important ally to their cause, but only Maisie recognizes that falsehood and betrayal has also arrived at their door.

Six months earlier, Maisie was the picture of docility, quiet and compliant in the eyes of her family. To her activist friends, however, she was a fearless crusader for women’s rights. In the wake of the Peterloo Massacre, Maisie and a friend founded the Edinburgh Female Reform Society, and she carried the banner for universal suffrage. Caught up in the wave of her enthusiasm, Maisie never expected to fall in love with the man who saved her life during one of their protests, the brother of her friend and fellow reformer.

Niall Campbell, a hero of the wars and a decorated officer of the Royal Highland Regiment, is battle weary and searching for stability in his life. A fierce warrior by training and a poet at heart, Niall walks away from the shining career that lies ahead of him, to the dismay of his superiors.

Niall is frustrated by his inability to curtail his sister’s involvement in the women’s reform movement. A widow with two children, she is determined to ignore the dangers of her radical positions. In saving his sister when a protest turns violent, he meets Maisie. Their relationship begins as one of experience versus idealism, of scars versus hope. Soon, however, he finds in Maisie the heart he longs for.

When Niall’s sister is arrested and disappears, he quickly realizes his life is not his own, for the British authorities have a mission for him to accomplish in exchange for his sister’s freedom.

Overnight, Maisie loses Niall, her friend, and her home. In the wake of the riots that sweep through the cities of Scotland, her own sister Isabella is branded a traitor to the Crown, and the family must flee to the Highlands. They take shelter at Dalmigavie Castle, under the protection of the charismatic Cinaed Mackintosh.

Here in the heart of the Highlands, Maisie runs into Niall again. He has a new name and carries a message of hope. But Niall has a task to complete.

Maisie and Niall’s future rests on their ability to overcome the forces that divide them, or—for the future of Scotland—she must stop the man who owns her heart.

Keira: In both your stories, your protagonists meet in highly charged situations when the plot is fully in motion and the stories continue moving fast from there. Is this your usual storytelling style or is this how the series is playing out?

May: We love throwing our readers into the middle of action. We might have developed this style by writing thrillers and suspense. Carrying it into historical novels came naturally.

Keira: Your heroines are courageous, enterprising, passionate women. Isabella is a doctor and Maisie fights for women's suffrage. What led you to choosing these professions for your protagonists? What was your inspiration behind them?

May: These two characters were really modeled in some ways by real women from history, and then we threw obstacles in their way that were almost impossible to overcome. Dorothea Erxleben was our inspiration for Isabella. She was a university-trained physician who lived in Germany about seventy years before our story takes place. Maisie was modeled after a reform activist named Mary Fildes, who was on the speakers’ platform at the ‘Peterloo Massacre’ in Manchester, England, a few months before our story starts. In real life, she was actually run through by a sabre wielded by a soldier who was part of the militia who attacked the peaceful, unarmed citizens who had gathered to protest the government’s actions. Mary survived and went on to lead the movement for women’s suffrage until her death decades later.

Keira: When readers think of the Regency, they think of pretty gowns and balls, not the rawness of these stories. On some level, these lives and the events that unfold have a distinct medieval feel to them. Was Scotland that far different from England in those times?

May: We’re glad you mention that. If readers are looking for pretty gowns and polite courting rituals, our stories might not be for them. We have real people engaged in real struggles of life and death. Our characters, in these novels, find love that is deep and lasting, but it’s not love that is based on a clever bon mot or a shapely leg. As far as Scotland being different from England, we believe that many widely held views of history are skewed and inaccurate. Most of us have a perception of the time period that is based on what we’ve read in novels or seen in films. And many of those stories have been colored by the way some people in our society want to see the world. The reality of the Regency period—in Scotland and in England—has a great deal in common with our own era. It was a period of change and struggle and exploitation—the Radical War of 1820 took place in England and Scotland during the Regency Period. But, like the 21st century, it was also a time of romance and family and philosophy and science and, well, fashion.

Keira: I was pleased to see Niall address how the British Empire was for the financial benefit of the nobility and wealthy financiers (and the government higher-ups). Having him show what the East India Company did in Asia felt like not only had you done your research but also understood the ethos behind their actions. What made you choose this as a reason for Niall's change of allegiance?

May: In Highland Jewel, Niall has seen first-hand the way the British military were being used to promote business interests, such as those of the East India Company. Niall is a war-scarred veteran of the Napoleonic War, and he realizes that Scottish regiments are now being shipped out to Ireland and India and Australia and New Zealand and South Africa to conquer lands for a growing empire that would be exploited for their natural resources. But he also sees that the policy is being used to keep trained Scottish soldiers out of their homeland. In the Highlands, poor farm families were being violently evicted, workers in the growing industrialized cities are being exploited, and the middle class is being denied a voice in government. Deep down, Niall wants life in Scotland to be better, and joining the opposition is the only way to create change. Luckily, he meets Maisie, and that makes his journey all the more exciting and, ultimately, satisfying.

Keira: The mystery of Cinaed's past is superbly done, and I liked how it spans the two books. Are there story threads that were started in the first book that were then continued in the second? Do you have seeds planted in the first book that will then grow across the entire series?

May: Thanks, Cinaed and Isabella’s story is just too big to fit into one book. As we hinted at earlier, this is the Royal Highlander series. We’ll see more of Cinaed’s mother (who was scorned and nearly erased from history by the Prince Regent and his minions), as well as more of the efforts of the British Crown to crush Cinaed and the Scottish resistance. And we’ve got a lot more romance and adventure in store for all of our characters.

Keira: How many books have you planned for the Royal Highlander series? Whose story is next? Would you please share a teaser with Frolic's readers?

May: Right now, we’re planning on finishing up after three books, but you never can tell. Here is a little more about the story than readers will read on the back cover of Highland Sword, the third book in the series:

Three extraordinary women escaped to the Highlands of Scotland at a tumultuous moment in time. Hunted by the British authorities, each of them had to find her identity and her place in history. In this conclusion to the Royal Highlander series, the reader meets Morrigan Drummond.

Independent and fiery, Morrigan lost everything when her father was killed while caring for Scots wounded by English dragoons during a day of protests in Edinburgh. After fleeing to the Highlands, she discovered her gift. Training with Mackintosh fighters at Dalmigavie Castle, Morrigan can now shoot a pistol and handle a dagger better than any man. She is ready to use her deadly skills on the enemies of her nation. And she wants revenge on Sir Rupert Burney, the English spymaster who ordered the attack on peaceful people and the death of her father.

Aidan Grant is a Highland lawyer, at odds with the Crown for his fearless stands against the government on issues of representation, slavery, and the violent Highland Clearances. Quick-witted and popular with the Scottish people, he is a nemesis in the eyes of the repressive Crown forces seeking to crush reform across the land.

These two meet and the battle of wills begins. She wants war; he wants peace. She is after revenge; he is after justice. She is ready to spill blood; he believes too much has already been shed. Neither one will surrender their ideals, but neither can ignore their attraction for the other.

Highland Sword is an emotional ride, but we feel reasonably confident everyone will be satisfied with how everything wraps up at the end. That being said, there is still one more very cool historical event connected to our series that may just need to be explored in another book. We’ll see.

Keira: Could you tell us one thing about you that might surprise readers.

May: We’ve both been married three times…to each other!

Keira: Thank you for visiting Frolic. It's been a pleasure chatting with you.

May: We’re delighted that you asked us, Keira. We love living in the world of fiction, and writing for our readers gives us more joy than we can express. So thanks for the opportunity to reach out. We’d love hearing from everyone.

Interview with San Diego Voyager...Trailblazer!

Today we’d like to introduce you to May McGoldrick a.k.a. Nikoo Kafi McGoldrick.

Thanks for sharing your story with us, May. So, let’s start at the beginning and we can move on from there.

As you may know, I’m an immigrant. I came to the US on the eve of Iranian revolution in 1978. After my departure, the doors closed behind me.

I was a seventeen-year-old with big dreams of someday becoming a writer, but I also had a sense of reality. I knew I had to pay my own bills. I’d have to carve my own path. I’d have to fight and scratch to survive. I had no family here to host me. No one to welcome me into their affectionate arms. No soft place to land if I failed.

So, I tucked away my dreams of writing and went to engineering school. Yes, I was very good at sciences. And one thing my parents had instilled me from a young age was self-esteem. There was nothing I couldn’t do.

Six years later… yes, it took me six years… I was working for a Fortune 500 company. First, I had to become proficient in the language and change majors a couple of times before settling on Mechanical Engineering.

What followed was marriage to the love of my life and the birth of two wonderful sons. That was when the dream of being a novelist came about again.

It was the spring of 1994, long before moving to sunny Southern California.

My husband and I and our two boys were paying our dues in the sub-zero climates of New England. For the tenth time in a month, ice and snow had coated our trees, our street, our walks, and even our windows. It was the stormiest winter in our marriage, both inside and out. Our sensitivity to one another—and our search for ourselves—had developed to a critical point as we continued to deal with high-profile jobs, our marriage, and our children.

So, here we were, snowbound and feeling…what? Some might have called it midlife crisis–but in our thirties? We knew we needed a change. We needed something more.

Well, those standing outside our life and looking in, thought we needed matching lobotomies. After all, from their vantage point, we had successful careers, a solid marriage, and a growing family. Change is bad, we could hear them say. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.

But even if it ‘weren’t broke,’ the wheels were definitely starting to wobble.

A lot of us have experienced the feeling. That nagging regret that you’ve never really pursued your dream. That panicky rush when you wake up thinking that you’ve missed something and that you might just be too late to find it. It’s the Hemingway Syndrome. That feeling you get in an airport that life is too short. If I just get on that plane, we think, in a few hours I could be in Paris, Nairobi, Key West, Tahiti, San Diego. Then I could take those photographs, paint those canvasses, write that novel…

The snow was still falling. The ice was coating everything.

Our feelings seemed to be calling us back to those years of childhood and adolescence, those times when we wondered what it is that we want to be when we grew up!

For as long as either of us could remember, we both wanted to be writers!

A few years prior to that winter, Jim had given up a successful career path as a manager in a shipyard. He wanted to pursue his dream of going back to school and getting his Ph.D. in English. He’d done that. I, on the other hand, had been tied into a career in engineering and then management. As a woman advancing successfully in a primarily male profession, I had a lot at stake. At the same time, being a storyteller at heart, I viewed writing as my true calling—as a dream that I would never be allowed to pursue. After all, as far as the world around me was concerned, I was the one with an analytical mind. What talent in the arts could I possibly possess?
But then, this was the snowiest winter of our marriage. Ice was everywhere, and even the firmest ground had become slippery and treacherous.

Another ice storm. Another day off. An ad in a writer’s magazine for a fiction contest. Two people sit downside by side at a computer keyboard. An afternoon of working and reworking some ideas for a short story. As it happened, it turned out pretty well. The ice began to melt.

A month later, we were talking to an agent about a novel we’d started writing. That was the first of forty-nine published novels… so far.

Great, so let’s dig a little deeper into the story – has it been an easy path overall and if not, what were the challenges you’ve had to overcome?

Smooth? Hardly.

A life in the arts and in writing means following a road filled with ruts and potholes so deep they can swallow you up.

To begin with, writing a story that others find worthy of reading is difficult. Getting published is nearly impossible. Then, when you think your writing career is rolling, everything implodes. Your editor leaves the company. The publisher closes down an imprint. Another publishing house swallows up your publisher.

How do I get over the disappointments that go with our chosen path? Jim and I live by these words…We write for the love of writing, just as we read for the love of reading. We say writing is our passion, the career is incidental.

Also, to succeed, I truly believe a writer has to continually work at her craft. Publication is a train stop and not the end of the line. Hard work plays a huge part in success. I can proudly say that I’ve spent more time in front of a computer than Bill Gates.

And I’ve made a living at it. Not as much as Bill Gates, though.  Not yet.

Please tell us about May McGoldrick Books.

As I said earlier, I’ve been writing novels for the past twenty-five years. Working with my husband and partner, I’ve written (as May McGoldrick) historical fiction, historical romance, young adult fiction, and nonfiction. As Jan Coffey, we’ve also written political and military suspense, romantic suspense, mystery, and contemporary young adult fiction. I’m a USA Today Bestselling Author, and I’ve made the NY Times Extended Bestseller list. My novels have been translated into dozens of languages and published worldwide.

What sets me apart from a lot of other successful writers is that I came to this country when I was seventeen. I learned the language, got an education, and now I’m writing novels in my second language. The other thing that is a little different is that I write with my husband, and both of us have lived to talk about it.

Are there any apps, books, podcasts or other resources that you’ve benefited from using?

I’m a voracious reader, so it would be difficult to pick out any one book or podcast or blog specifically. But I would say is that I’m a true believer in the power of journaling during difficult times.

Julia Cameron’s book, The Artist’s Way, has provided a morning ritual for me every time life becomes difficult. I have volumes on my shelf from the times I was going through everything from cancer and depression to publishers failing to renew contracts. Writing during difficult times, however, is a reminder to me that in my heart and soul, I’m always a writer. This is what I love to do.

Words make me happy, and putting them on the page is one thing that I can control, even if the rest of my world is spinning off its axis. I can go on and on about the positive effects of journaling. Of course, not everyone can do it or wants to do it. My writing partner thinks of it as torture.

Five Kick-Ass Women from History: FreshFiction Blog

When we set out to write the Royal Highlander series (Highland Crown, Highland Jewel, Highland Sword), our goal was to weave the lives of three extraordinary women into the fabric of a revolutionary, but largely forgotten series of historical events called the Radical War of 1820.

From that mindset, the characters of Isabella, a university-trained physician; Maisie, an early activist for suffrage; and Morrigan, a militant revolutionary, formed in our imagination. Our research directed us to real historical figures of the Georgian and Regency Era who served as models for our heroines. Women like Dorothea Erxleben, physician; Mary Fildes, political activist and an early suffragette; ‘William’ Brown (birth name unknown), an African woman serving in the Royal Navy); and María Antonia Santos Plata, a rebel guerrilla leader in South America.

Since Highland Crown deals with a neglected chapter in Scotland’s struggle against the English Crown, we thought we’d cast a little light on five real life kick-ass heroines from the recent and distant past. These are rebellious and radical women who would never be talked about, if some people had their way. 

1.      Abigail Adams (1744-1818). Her husband might have been the second president of the United States, but she was a radical and a patriot from the earliest days of the Revolutionary War. With battles raging in the Boston area where she lived, Adams learned that the American soldiers were running low on ammunition. Gathering together all the silver and iron in her home, she had it melted down into bullets for the troops. She was also one of the first women to fight for women’s suffrage, famously telling her husband while he was off helping create the Constitution that it was a mistake to “put such unlimited power into the hands of [men]. Remember all men would be tyrants if they could.” And she believed in acting according to one’s principles; she wouldn’t step foot in the house of a slaveholder nor entertain one at her own table.

2.      Shirley Chisholm (1924-2005). In 1968, this fierce Brooklynite was the first African-American woman elected to Congress. Over the next fifteen years, she introduced over fifty pieces of legislation, fighting hard for gender and racial equality and serving as a champion throughout her life to improve conditions and opportunities for the poor. In 1972, Chisholm sought the Democratic nomination for President. When she was prevented from taking part in televised debates, she was not about to be bullied or ignored. She took legal action. When she was asked how she wanted to be remembered, ‘Fighting Shirley’ said, “I want to be remembered as a woman…who dared to be a catalyst of change.”      

3.      Nusaybah Bint Ka'ab (7th century) was a woman who would give any historical hero a run for their money. Nusaybah was one of the first people to convert to Islam. Born in Medina, she fought in seven battles against the warring neighbors, carrying a sword and bow and sustaining a dozen wounds, including the loss of one hand. But that didn’t stop her. In one battle, she distinguished herself as a fierce and tireless fighter, defending the Prophet (pbuh) himself against attacking warriors. She was tremendously revered by the community for her toughness as well as her goodness.

4.      Zitkála-Šá (1876–1938), which translates from Lakota into English as ‘Red Bird’, was a Dakota Sioux woman who fought her entire life against a white majority culture that was systematically trying to stamp out Native American identities. She battled racism and corruption in government and industry across the country, founding the National Council of American Indians to lobby for justice and equal rights. She wrote dozens of influential essays and pamphlets to expose American corporations that were using coercive business practices that included robbery and even murder to defraud tribes of their rights to leasing fees for development of their oil-rich land in Oklahoma. Her brilliance and tireless activism would lead to Congress passing the Indian Reorganization Act in 1934. And in her ongoing campaign to enlighten Americans, she was among the first to publish traditional Native American stories for a widespread white readership. In those stories, she used fictionalized autobiographical material to take issue with what she saw as the evils of assimilation aimed at erasing her history and way of life. Multi-talented, accomplished, and tenacious, she was truly a kick-ass hero.

5.      Bella Abzug (1920-1998) was an unrelenting feminist and civil rights advocate who served in the US House of Representatives during the 1970s. Fierce and outspoken,  this daughter of immigrants fought anyone who believed women should remain on the political sidelines. During her years in Congress, Abzug introduced legislation demanding the withdrawal of American forces from Vietnam. She demanded an investigation into the competence of J. Edgar Hoover, the all-powerful director of the FBI. She was the first to call for the impeachment of Richard Nixon. She even fought her own party’s complicity in the political deal-making traditionally carried on in secret and passed legislation that has come to be known as the ‘sunshine law’, requiring that the business of government be carried out in the open. Abzug also introduced groundbreaking legislation aimed at increasing the rights of all citizens, including the gay and lesbian community. Unable to fault her on ethical grounds, her critics were reduced to attacking her strong personality. She didn’t care. Her fight was for the American people. Bella Abzug was the kick-ass predecessor of all the newly elected women tearing it up in Congress today. 

 Of course, there are thousands upon thousands more. Maybe we should write a book about them? Or three!

Interview with Austine at NovelKnight

Why don’t you tell us a bit about what inspired Highland Crown?

We’re dyed-in-the-wool storytellers and historians. In our reading we’re always looking for historical persons and settings and events that are a little different. Years ago, we ran across information about the Radical War of 1820, a forgotten piece of history. After the long war against Napoleonic France, the people of Scotland and England suffered with terrible economic hardship. Wages fell and prices rose. Dissatisfaction in the middle and lower classes was sharpened by the widespread desire for political reform. People wanted a voice in government. In Scotland this took on a nationalist feeling, similar to 1745, when the Jacobites and Bonnie Prince Charlie promised to end the parliamentary union with England. The government became very nervous, and the Crown authorities became brutally repressive.

This was how the idea of Highland Crown, the first book in the Royal Highlander series, came about.

Our novel delves into actual history that most readers might not be aware of. That doesn’t stop the story from providing a solid historical romance experience, however.


Introduce us to your main character!

Isabella Drummond, inspired by an actual female physician, Dorothea Erxleben (1715-1762), is a trained physician who’s been recently widowed. So many people think that women in history accepted a limited role in education and professions and society. The more we research, the more we find women who struck out boldly against social constraints to develop a place for themselves.

Cinaed Mackintosh is a ship’s captain with a mysterious past. He is a classic reluctant hero, charismatic and smart and courageous. Jim says the man is totally based on himself.

In our story, Isabella and Cinaed are thrown together in the middle of Scotland’s ‘Radical War’. Theirs is a relationship tested in fire by the ongoing social unrest. We believe that struggle makes their story timeless.

Walk us through a day in the life of May McGoldrick.

You probably know that May McGoldrick is actually two people. We are Nikoo & Jim, a married writing team who have produced fifty works of historical romance, suspense thrillers, YA, and how-to books.

A year ago, we moved from Northwest Connecticut to Southern California, but we somehow managed to keep to our East Coast schedule.

· 5:00 am – we get coffee and go to work.

· 8:00 am – our hundred-pound dog sits on Nikoo’s lap, so it’s time to feed him and go for a walk.

· 8-9 am – eat, walk the dog, answer emails.

· 10-3:00 – write, write, write

· After – go for a walk at the beach, stare at the sunset over the Pacific (while Nikoo tries to talk Jim out of trying to learn to surf).

· Many of our evenings are spent brainstorming over the scenes for the next day. And we’re huge readers.

Lots of aspiring authors out there. Any advice for them?

We write for the love of writing, just as we read for the love of reading. We say that writing is our passion; the career is incidental. Here’s our advice for all writers new to the business and old timers: read and write and write and read. You can’t be a good writer unless you’re a voracious reader.

I know asking someone’s all-time favorite book is a loaded question so what’s your current favorite read?

We both just finished Where the Crawdads Sing, and we have to say that Delia Owens moved to the very top of our favorite authors’ list.

Alright, the ultimate question: why should we read your book?

We constantly wonder “what if?” As individuals, we constantly ask ourselves, if I had only done this differently, how would things in my life or in the world have changed? Our theory is that you have to know the past to do better in future.

Highland Crown’s story focuses on exciting events and upheaval during the late Regency period in England and Scotland and Ireland which are tremendously relevant to us and our reader today. We believe that knowing what happened then helps us understand what is going on in our society today. Add to that a strong and fascinating female protagonist, a gorgeous hero, and lots of swoon-worthy scenes, and you have some good reasons to read our novel.

Any Outlander fans out there? How about Poldark? If the answer is yes, you’ll enjoy Highland Crown and the whole series.

Fun Stuff!

Describe yourself in 3 words.

Nikoo: visionary, storyteller, passionate

Jim: adventurer, funny, kind

What is your Hogwarts house?

We are definitely Gryffindors. “Do what is right.”

Your characters are sent into the Hunger Games. Who wins?

Cinaed and Isabella both win. They each have strengths, but they could never hurt each other.

A famous movie producer wants to make your books into movies and they want you to cast your characters. Which actors/actresses make the cut?

Isabella – Lilly Allen, Claire Foy

Cinaed – Kit Harrington, Aidan Turner

Coffee or tea?

Nikoo and Jim – coffee before 12:00 noon, then tea, tea, tea

Best ice cream flavor ever?

Nikoo – anything with chocolate

Jim – chocolate chip

Your theme song/personal anthem?

Nikoo – Dancing Queen (Abba)

Jim – Under Pressure (David Bowie and Queen)

Favorite quote?

Nikoo – “Where there is love, there is life.” Mahatma Ghandi

Jim – “No act of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wasted.” Aesop

What is one piece of advice you would tell everyone?

Give more than you want to receive.


Q & A with Joana V. of Romancing Romances about Highland Crown

Hi May McGoldrick, and welcome to my blog, Romancing Romances. Thank you for doing this Q&A to let my readers know a bit more about you and your books.

 Romancing Romances: For those that are reading your name for the first time today, what is the main thing you’d like them to know?

May McGoldrick is actually two people. We are Nikoo & Jim, a husband and wife writing team of fifty works of historical romance, suspense thrillers, YA, and how-to books. We’re lovers and friends and collaborators and readers and writers and teachers. We love what we do, but the road getting here had a few bumps and lots of sharp twists and turns. But we look back at all those moments as necessary. They’ve inspired us to be better people and more accomplished writers.

And, as you might have already guessed, we are definitely ‘the glass is always way more than half-full’ types of people. 😊  😊

RR: If a reader is new to your books, which one would you suggest them to read first?

MM: Definitely the most recent one. Right now, that would be Highland Crown, the first book in our Scottish Royal Highlander series.

RR: You write historical romances. Is this your favorite genre to read as well? Or do you prefer to read something different? What are some of your favorite authors?

MM: We also write romantic suspense, suspense thrillers, young adult, and self-help. But we read across all genres, all types of books, classics and new releases, fiction and research materials. We are readers first and writers second. And as readers, we can never walk away from a good book.

When it comes to favorites, the list is too long to mention. But Charles Dickens has a special place in our heart because of the way he portrayed his characters.

We both just finished Where the Crawdads Sing, and we have to say that Delia Owens moved to the very top of our favorite author’s list.

RR: Does your everyday life influence your writing? What inspires you to write?

MM: We write for the love of writing, just as we read for the love of reading. We say that writing is our passion; the career is incidental.

Jim has a PhD in sixteenth century British Lit, and Nikoo, despite her engineering degree, is a true storyteller at heart. Everyday life definitely influences our writing. No author lives in a vacuum. We know from our study of history that human nature and the nature of political systems never change. There is nothing new about the present political climate, and experiencing (through stories) other periods in history—including the ones we write about—helps us understand the conflicts we’re facing today. We’re constantly amazed at how history repeats itself.

RR: Do you see yourself in any of your characters? Have you ever created a character based on someone you know?

MM: All of our characters are, in some way, drawn from ourselves or our values or from people we have crossed paths with. As writers, we’re sponges, constantly watching, taking mental notes, storing impressions away for later to use. I (Nikoo) remember being a juror for six weeks in a trial and the judge telling me afterwards, “Send me the book when you’re done with it.” Jim says all of the strapping Highland heroes are totally based on him. 😊 

RR: Where do you get your ideas? Do you work with an outline/plot or do you prefer to just see where an idea leads you? Do you use any images to base characters/scenarios/objects on?

MM: Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. We’ve tried it all. And each story has a life of its own. Each one has a process that is unique to that story. Thrillers lend themselves to more extensive, detailed outlines. When writing historically based fiction, actual dates and real people requires that we stay somewhat true to a time line, so that makes us outline, as well. I’m big on hanging pictures of leading men like Chris Hemsworth above my desk. Jim is a good sport, but he does use the photo as a dartboard.  

RR: Congratulations on your new book, Highland Crown. Please tell me a bit about it.

This novel delves into actual history that most readers might not be aware of. That doesn’t stop the story from providing a solid historical romance experience, however. It’s 1820 and Regency period England and Scotland are in turmoil. Isabella Drummond is a trained physician who’s been recently widowed, and Cinaed Mackintosh is a ship’s captain with a mysterious past. In our story, Isabella and Cinaed are thrown together in the middle of Scotland’s ‘Radical War’. Theirs is a relationship tested in fire by the ongoing social unrest. We believe that struggle makes their story timeless. Early reviewers are loving the novel, and more than one said it, “Gave me all the Outlander feels.” We can live with high praise like that.

RR: What will make us fall in love with the Cinaed Mackintosh? And what’s your favorite characteristic about Isabella Drummond?

MM: Cinaed is loyal, tough, and tenacious. He’s a reluctant hero with a dark past. He’s a Highlander who leads by example, knows his own mind, and will act ruthlessly when the situation calls for it.

Isabella has fierce willingness to fight for her beliefs. She is intelligent, logical, and tough.

RR: Do you have a favorite quote from Highland Crown?

MM: Cinaed is looking at a crowd of Highland men, women, and children and thinking, “They were fearless. With a gang of armed men, he had freed two so-called enemies of the Crown, but these people—born with the same Highland blood that flowed through his body—had come here with nothing but empty hands and raised voices. They'd come to this protest, crying out for reform, for freedom, for justice, armed only with a free, clear conscience...and their courage.”

 RR: What comes next? I know Highland Crown is the first book of the Royal Highlander Series, and that you already have the second book planned to come out later this year. Will this series be a duology? What are your next projects?

MM: We initially planned this series as a three-book project. But the entire series is already stretching to four…and possibly more.

The sequel, Highland Jewel, is scheduled to be released by St. Martin’s Press on September 24th, 2019. In that novel readers will get to know Maisie, Isabella’s younger sister, an early suffragist and one of the founders of the Edinburgh Female Reform Society. In her story, we’ll be thrown into the protests and battles of the Radical War.

In Highland Jewel the reader also gets introduced to Niall Campbell, an officer in the 42nd Royal Highland Regiment. He has spent his life serving the Crown. Battle-weary and searching for peace, he can’t help but step in when his sister’s activism risks her life—and leads him to Maisie. These two are immediately at odds. We don’t want to give too much away, but things will get wild for Maisie and her family in Edinburgh as the government bears down on reformers in Scotland, and more will be revealed about Cinaed Mackintosh and his past, as well.

By sheer coincidence, the film Peterloo is being released this month, and it depicts the slaughter of unarmed, peacefully protesting citizens by British government troops in Manchester at the same time our series takes place. Newspapers that were courageous enough to stand against the government and report on the violence called it the ‘Peterloo Massacre’. Over a dozen men, women, and children were killed by the King’s Dragoon Guards, and 600-800 more were injured. One of the women speaking on the platform was Mary Fildes, the founder of the Manchester Female Reform Society. Highland Jewel starts in the days following this actual historical event. 

We’re in the middle of writing the third book in the series, Highland Sword, which is Morrigan’s story. She is a firebrand who is ready to throw herself body and soul into the Radical War. Morrigan is a woman ready to raise both sword and pistol, and fight beside the Highlanders. But in the process, she meets Aidan Grant, a lawyer and a reformer who espouses a different method for achieving change. She wants war; he wants peace. She wants revenge; he wants justice. She is ready to spill blood; he believes too much has already been shed. Neither one will surrender their ideals, but neither can ignore the attraction for the other.

RR: Thank you so much for joining me in the Q&A, and I look forward to talking to you again!

Interview Chat with Jenny Q of Historical Editorial about Highland Crown

Jenny Q: This time period is a bit of an unusual setting for historical romance, but I greatly appreciated having a light shed on Scotland's "Radical War." Can you tell us what inspired you to weave a romance through this tumultuous yet underrepresented era in history?

 May McGoldrick: The setting of Highland Crown is still the Regency Era, but we’re giving our readers a slightly different view of it. We are historians and romantics. We believe that there is much to be learned from the past, from our achievements and our mistakes. In all of our work, we try to shed light on periods and events that we feel are relevant to our present time. As writers, we also believe that we have a responsibility to entertain but also to interest our readers in the political climate of a certain time period and place…and to pursue the truth of what was happening at the time.

 ‘Underrepresented’ is a great term for this historical era, but ‘hidden’ may be closer to the truth. The one who holds the pen writes the history, and in this case it was English doing the writing. Scotland’s Radical War of 1820 has many ‘forgotten’ revolutionaries and heroes.

We also believe that history repeats itself, and the events and upheaval during the late Regency period in England and Scotland and Ireland are tremendously relevant to us and our readers. Vast differences in living conditions between the rich and the poor. Governmental power being used to benefit the wealthy few. Citizen’s rights being taken away under false premises. Entrapment tactics being used against people who want reform, decent lives, and a voice in government. People being ousted from their homes in the name of ‘improvement’. Refugee populations soaring.

We also believe that the human spirit is indomitable, however. Love and compassion will always find a way to exist in the midst of struggle and suffering. That’s probably why we started writing historical romance to begin with.

So, to answer the question, we loved putting Isabella and Cinaed in the middle of Scotland’s Radical War. Theirs is a relationship tested by the social upheaval and the fires of their world. And we believe that struggle makes their story timeless. 

 JQ: Highland Crown starts with a prologue from Sir Walter Scott and each chapter opens with a quote from one of his works. Can you tell us a bit about his influence on this story?

MM: We loved including Sir Walter Scott in our story. His influence on real history has been almost completely forgotten. The image that most of us have in our heads of the Highlands—wild, romantic, savagely noble—is his invention. Before the popular acclaim of Scott’s poems and novels, Highlanders were not largely respected in Scotland or England. They were seen by most as uneducated, uncouth barbarians. Scott created a romantic vision of the Highland people that was embraced by all Scots as their own national identity. At the same time he turned a blind eye to the Highland Clearances, where thousands and thousands of people were pushed violently from their homes and became refugees.

Sir Walter Scott’s poetic vision of the Highlands made him a lot of money, and his success was used by the Crown for its own purposes. We’re going to get into that in depth during this series…and it’ll be exciting.

JQ: In the story, Isabella mentions a physician named Dorothea Erxleben. Was she your inspiration for Isabella's character? Did Cinaed's character draw inspiration from a historical figure?

MM: Dorothea Erxleben was definitely an inspiration for Isabella. She was granted a medical degree seventy years before our story. So many people think that women in history accepted a limited role in education and professions and society. The more we research, the more we find women who struck boldly against social constraints. Once again, let us not forget that history was largely written by men. We love putting these heroines in our novels.

Cinaed is a classic reluctant hero, charismatic and smart and courageous. Jim says the man is totally based on himself.

JQ: Can you give us any hints of what's to come in Highland Jewel and Highland Sword?

MM: We’ve finished Highland Jewel, and it’s scheduled to be released by St. Martin’s Press on September 24th, 2019. In that novel readers will get to know Maisie, Isabella’s younger sister, an early suffragist and one of the founders of the Edinburgh Female Reform Society. In her story, we’ll be thrown into the protests and battles of the Radical War.

The film Peterloo is being released this month, coincidentally, and it depicts the slaughter of unarmed, peacefully protesting citizens by British government troops in Manchester at this time. Newspapers that were courageous enough to stand against the government and report on the violence called it ‘Peterloo Massacre’. Over a dozen men, women, and children were killed by the King’s Dragoon Guards, and 800 more were injured. One of the women speaking on the platform was Mary Fildes, the founder of the Manchester Female Reform Society. Highland Jewel starts in the days following this actual historical event.

In Highland Jewel the reader also gets introduced to Niall Campbell, an officer in the 42nd Royal Highland Regiment. He has spent his life serving the Crown. Battle-weary and searching for peace, he can’t help but step in when his sister’s activism risks her life—and leads him to Maisie. These two are immediately at odds, and we don’t want to give too much away, but things will get wild for Maisie and her family in Edinburgh as the government bears down on reformers in Scotland, and more will be revealed about Cinaed Mackintosh and his past, as well.

 We’re in the middle of writing the third book in the series, Highland Sword, which is Morrigan’s story. She is a firebrand who is ready to throw herself body and soul into the Radical War.

 She is a woman ready to raise sword and gun and fight beside the Highlanders, but in doing so, she meets Aidan Grant, a lawyer and a reformer who espouses a different method of achieving change. She wants war; he wants peace. She wants revenge; he wants justice. She is ready to spill blood; he believes too much has already been shed. Neither one will surrender their ideals, but neither can ignore the attraction for the other.

JQ: And lastly, though this may be a silly question, can you please tell me how to pronounce Cinaed's name? LOL!

MM:  Kin-eee…! Saskia Maarleveld and Raphael Corkhill asked the same question as they were recording the audio of Highland Crown for Macmillan Audio. 😊

 

The Fussy Librarian Q&A with May McGoldrick

Posted on 02/20/2019 at 10:53 AM by Sadye Scott-Hainchek at The Fussy Librarian

Now this is news you’ll like to hear even more than we like sharing it: The secret to success, for the people behind author May McGoldrick, is ice cream.

(We’ll pause for a moment so you can shriek in excitement.)

And now to explain and make a long story short.

Though they both considered themselves storytellers at heart, Nikoo and Jim McGoldrick started out their careers working in engineering and education, respectively.

The day Jim told Nikoo he’d like to enter a national writing contest, she was encouraging but honest: his submission needed work.

Together, they revised it into what was ultimately a prize-winner, but before they’d even received that external confirmation, they knew they wanted to continue this creative partnership.

Since then, they’ve jointly written over forty novels and two works of nonfiction under the pseudonyms May McGoldrick and Jan Coffey.

But what about the ice cream?

Nikoo and Jim, like all writers, have certainly received rejections and bad reviews (along with the acceptance, sales, and praise).

They’ve decided to process them by first swearing, then going out for ice cream.

Jim goes for soft-serve twist; Nikoo tries new flavors; and their dog, Marlo, partakes as well.

Together, they answered a few more questions about their remarkable long and award-filled career.

SADYE: So what else has contributed to your professional longevity?

MAY: We have a mantra that defines our life: persevere.

To survive as writers, no matter where we are in our careers, we need to keep writing. ...

One thing that has contributed to our longevity is that over the years we’ve developed a toolbox or a first-aid kit of strategies that pertain to a writing and living career.

We’ll just mention a few here:

We write for the love of writing, just as we read for the love of reading. We say that writing is our passion; the career is incidental.

Sicknesses, tragedies, days when creativity is the furthest thing from our mind, we still write.

We all have those real-life things that bang us around. They’re mostly unavoidable, and you often never see them coming.

I (Nikoo) am a true believer in the power of journaling during those times.

Julia Cameron’s The Artist’s Way has provided a morning ritual for me every time life becomes unbearable.

I have volumes on my shelf from the times I was going through everything from cancer and depression to publishers failing to renew contracts.

Writing during difficult times, however, is a reminder to me that in my heart and soul, I’m always a writer. This is what I love to do.

Words make me happy, and putting them on the page is one thing that I can control, even if the rest of my world is spinning off its axis.

I can go on and on about the therapeutic effect of journaling. Of course, not everyone can do it or wants to do it. Jim thinks of it as torture.

We learned early in our career that there’s nothing worse than trying to work with someone who is not enthused about you or what you do.

For writers, this includes agents, editors, assistants, publicists, and even critique partners. A lukewarm reaction is like a disease; it impairs motivation and drive.

Thank God, we like each other. And thank God, we like each other’s work.

The writing business is cyclical. Publishing houses and editors need changes.

Our answer is to always be ready with a backup plan. A new proposal. Write in a different genre. Self-publish.

SADYE: What is the most rewarding moment or theme of your writing career?

MAY: We’ve had many of those moments; one that stands out was about three years ago.

May McGoldrick and historical romance started our publishing career. A decade into it, we changed over to Jan Coffey suspense/thrillers for another decade.

Then Jan needed a break, so we decided we wanted to try our hand at historicals again.

We came up with a proposal for a trilogy of novels loosely based on Shakespeare plays (our Scottish Relic trilogy) — Highland romance with a touch of magic.

Our agent sent it off, and she soon called back saying that an acquiring editor at St. Martin’s Press reached out to her, having experienced a “fan-girl” moment.

The editor had read our novel Tess and the Highlander (a prequel to this trilogy) when she was a teenager and had kept it on her “keeper” shelf ever since.

Soon after, St. Martin’s Press launched May McGoldrick’s career again.

One other really rewarding moment that comes to mind was in Scotland.

Touring Stirling Castle, a friend and fellow traveler, visiting the place for the first time, turned to us and said, “I’ve been here before…because of your books.”

SADYE: What is the biggest challenge in writing with your spouse?

MAY: Challenge? None. There are absolutely no challenges in writing with a partner.

However, we did write about our process in Marriage of Minds: Collaborative Fiction Writing at a publisher’s request.

So there might be a few challenges:

Jim eating chocolate chip cookies nonstop and never gaining weight.

Nikoo blasting music while she writes.

Nikoo hanging Chris Hemsworth’s photo above her desk as “research.”

Jim doing too much unimportant historical research.

Nikoo chucking ninety percent of Jim’s research in the draft stages of the book, reminding him that there was actually no Jack and Rose on the Titanic, and that nobody cares if a bee hive belongs in the northwest corner of the garden versus the northeast corner.

Jim merrily chopping off too many heads in the scene.

Nikoo being too attached to the character’s heads.

Jim thinking story is about action.

Nikoo lying awake at night worrying about how the character feels.

SADYE: Do you have a favorite genre to write in?

MAY: We love writing historical romance, of course.

From our knowledge of history (Jim has a PhD in sixteenth-century British lit), we know that human nature and the nature of political systems never change.

So we use our stories to comment on what is going on in the world now.

We also love writing contemporary suspense and techno-thrillers (Nikoo has an engineering degree) because there’s nothing like getting immersed in a page-turning story.

SADYE: What do you find most rewarding or interesting about all the public events you do?

MAY: Meeting readers and getting feedback is the best. We’re constantly learning.

Plus, Nikoo gets to share horror stories about our writing process in front of an audience. And Jim gets to wear his kilt.

Question and Answer Chat with Madeline Hunter for USA Today HEA Blog

Question and Answer Session with Madeline Hunter for her article in the USAToday Happy Ever After Blog.

Q – May McGoldrick’s newest book title and release date:

Romancing the Scot, November 14, 2017

Q – Short description of the story and setting:

Grace Ware is an enemy to the English crown. Her father was an Irish military commander in Napoleon’s defeated army and her mother, an exiled Scottish Jacobite. When Grace took shelter in a warehouse, running from her father’s murderers through the harbor alleyways of Antwerp, she never anticipated bad luck to deposit her at the Scottish Borders home of Hugh Pennington, Viscount Greysteil, Lord Justice of the Courts, a grieving widower and hero of the wars against the French.

Q – Why do you think more readers and authors are being drawn to Scottish-based historicals? Do you think the filmed series of Outlander has anything to do with it, and if so how much?

Outlander has been a phenomenal success as a Scottish-based historical in its literary form and later as a series production. The superb television adaptation has successfully drawn legions of non-readers to the history and the Scottish setting.

That said, Scottish history has always had a tremendous hold on our collective imagination. Scotland stands as a beacon of resistance against outside invaders, and its history is permeated with romantic and tragic heroes. Few people in western cultures are unfamiliar with the stories of Robert the Bruce, the Wallace, Mary Queen of Scots, Bonnie Prince Charlie, Flora MacDonald, Rob Roy. Even Shakespeare drew on Scottish legend for his greatest tragic hero, Macbeth. The image of the Highlander battling against overwhelming odds, battered but never truly conquered, appeals to all of us.

As authors and scholars, we too were drawn to Scotland and its heroes. When Jim wrote his doctoral dissertation on the court of the great Stewart king, James IV, we instinctively felt the drama and romance of the time and the place. That court’s poet, William Dunbar, became a character in our first novel, The Thistle and the Rose, and we placed our heroine in the middle of the chaos that followed the Scots’ devastating loss at Flodden Field, where King James, nearly all of the Scottish nobility, and twenty thousand Scots were wiped out by English cannon in a single afternoon. The future of the nation lay in the hands of our heroine in that novel.

Since that first book, we’ve written a score of tales set in Scotland, weaving connected stories of families and generations of heroes. Our newest series, featuring the Pennington family, continues that tradition.

Q – Does the setting become a character in your books? How big a role does it play? Do you ever set your novels in Scottish cities like Edinburgh, or do you prefer to use rural areas like the Highlands?

Our stories have taken place deep in the Highlands, in the Western Isles, on the Isle of Skye, in Aberdeen and Glasgow and Stirling, and in the Borders, and Scotland plays an integral role in our characters’ stories. For us, the place and the time are essential elements in the creation of the personalities of our heroines and our heroes. Setting provides more than the background brush strokes for our tales. It creates the tone that complements the plot.

For a ‘Beauty and the Beast’ story like Taming the Highlander (a 2017 RITA Award Finalist), a mist-enshrouded castle on a cliff overlooking the sea creates the perfect setting for a wounded earl and a woman who could see into the deepest recesses of his soul. In a novel like Romancing the Scot, the Borders is a place that complements the journey of a hero who is both English and Scot, and whose loyalties are tested when the woman he falls in love with is an enemy to the crown.

Q – What makes a Scottish hero different from an English one? What do you think are reader expectations on the main characters?

Heroes share many qualities, regardless of where they are from. But the Scottish hero is distinct from the English hero in his or her connection to the earth and to the clan. Traditionally, the Scot and the Highlander are always the underdog: tenacious, loyal, undaunted even when badly outnumbered by better-equipped foes, romantically stoic in the face of death.

Without exception, our main characters are very human: flawed, fearful, scarred, and sometimes jaded by the lessons of life. But within all of them, a spark of nobility exists that drives them to greatness they often didn’t know existed within them, to acts of courage and nobility and selflessness. In our stories it is love that nurtures and stirs that spark into a flame.

Q – Do the tensions between Scotland and England ever play a role in your novels? How?

We love to use the conflict between Scotland and England in our novels. The first nine stories we wrote deal with this directly, using real and fictionalized warriors and noblemen from both sides in our tales. Heart of Gold begins at the Field of Cloth of Gold summit and tournament where a Scottish warrior bests the English king’s champion and falls in love with the Boleyn sister the Tudor king lusts after. Our novel The Intended even takes place in the court of Henry VIII, where the laird of Dunvegan Castle is being held prisoner while a Highland heroine fights to save him. In our Scottish Relic Trilogy, a rogue English commander who prides himself on his reputation as the ‘Scourge of Scotland’ is wreaking havoc even to the Highlands in search of a stone reputed to wield great power.  

Q – Do you see any changes underway in readers’ preferences either for time periods or types of stories?

Change is constant. Predictions are dangerous.

Readers are different than they were just a few decades ago. Our world is more chaotic. Our lives speed along pell-mell. And when we want to shut it out for even a few moments of leisure, so many things pull at us and demand our attention. A thousand television channels. Movies at our fingertips. Games of every kind to play on our phones. Social media that connects us with family and friends and celebrities in ways that were never possible before.  

For those who still understand the joy of reading, the types of stories that appeal to us will continue to evolve, but we believe readers will be increasingly drawn to stories that have a lightning fast pace, that are visually compelling, and that feature characters who seem real to us. Characters we can love and hate and identify with. Characters who reveal the inner truths of the human condition…our emotions, our failures, our hopes, our fears, and our indomitable spirit.   

 

Click here To Read the entire article "Romance Unlaced: Readers harvest a rich crop of Scottish historicals this Fall."

RePost of Vitally Important Information that Readers and Writers Need to Know about May McGoldrick

Do you have any philosophies or epiphanies on writing or reading you’d like to share with readers or new writers?

Tough question. We’re constantly learning and relearning important elements of storytelling and the writing craft, so perhaps that’s the philosophy that has guided us. Stay humble about what you do, or the process will humble you. Stay open and receptive to critical guidance. Believe that your efforts and your vision and your love for what you are doing all have value.

And try to limit your chocolate chip cookie intake during all periods of extensive reading and writing.

Do you have a favorite snack while writing

Tea, dates, and cashews for Nikoo. Water, carrots and celery sticks for Jim (This is a total lie. He eats cookies and chocolate and graham crackers nonstop!)

What is your superpower?

Nikoo’s superpower is that she can read minds. For example, she knows that Jim is thinking of going to the kitchen for some cookies.

Jim’s superpower is that he can also read minds. For example, he knows that Nikoo knows he is about to go for cookies, and therefore is thinking about golf.

What is your spirit animal?

Nikoo’s spirit animal is the snake. At least, that’s what the online test we took told us. The description works: “You often play the role of a guide and emotional healer. The spirit of the snake represents positive, spiritual transformation. You are the sought-out friend when advice is needed. The snake facilitates life events to go smoothly – a connector of dots who reveals the big picture.”

Jim’s spirit animal is the whale. The test answer description seems pretty good: “Your spirit animal is the whale because you have a strong inner voice, and always follow your own truth. Because you are so in touch with reality, you are self-aware and don’t get involved in drama. You have strong bonds and emotional ties with those you love. (He’s unhappy, though, because he thinks his ‘whale’ characterization is actually a comment on his eating habits. He loves taking online tests, though!)

What color is your aura?

Nikoo is blue, blue, blue to the bone.

Jim says he is silverish (interesting that the word keeps auto-correcting to ‘silverfish’, which is a “small, wingless insect in the order Zygentoma,” according to Wikipedia. He is rethinking his spirit animal right now.

Writers' Resources (courtesy of BookBub)

We wanted to pass along this fantastic article, "48+ Publishing Resources You Should Know About," by Diana Urban of BookBub.

This article has publishing information about everything:

  • Book Development & Editing Services
  • Cover Design Services

  • Book Distribution Services

  • Website Building Tools

  • Graphic Design Tools

  • Book Marketing Agencies

  • Online Courses

  • Writer Communities

  • Publishing Industry News

  • Publishing Blogs

Whether you're an aspiring writer, or a hardened vet, check out this article. It has just about everything for everyone.  

 

Letter from Alexander Macpherson to Kenna Mackay

(from Much Ado about Highlanders)

Dear Kenna—

What man could possibly love a woman who runs away from her husband on their wedding night and hides behind the cloistered walls of a priory? A woman who ties up an old nun like a trussed chicken, takes her clothes, and climbs down a tower wall to escape him? A woman who leaps from a high cliff into a pool of water the size of a kerchief? A woman who brandishes a sharp-edged dirk and threatens to make him her wife? A woman who then nearly drowns this husband in a racing river? What man could possibly love her?

True, our marriage was arranged, a contract, no love match. And yet I still couldn’t let you go when you were doing all you could to prove you were the most contentious woman in Scotland.

And now, six months later, the moon that casts its glowing light on your sleeping face and the sun that rises with your smile both yield, without challenge, to the supremacy of your beauty.

You stood by me as our enemies hunted us and fortune deserted us. You fought like a warrior, risking your own life in the face of menacing dangers. You shed tears over my wounds and nurtured me when I bled like a wounded boar and would have died. You loved me, healed me, saved me.

One day a poet will write that the course of true love never did run smooth.

What man could possibly love you, Kenna Mackay?

Your man. Your Highlander.

Your Alexander.

 

 

Sex, Love, and Second Chances for the Eternal in Shakespeare

When Shakespeare’s friends and partners got together to assemble his plays for the first time, his great rival Ben Jonson wrote, “He was not of an age, but for all time.” High praise, to be sure, but maybe this was the original book quote, put on that First Folio simply to sell a few more copies.

No, no, let’s put that cynicism behind us. Four hundred years have passed since William Shakespeare penned his last play, and his language, imagery, plots, and (most important) characters are as alive today as they were when the plays were originally staged. Shakespeare’s plays have definitely survived the test of time. But why is that?

For us, those plays touch on timeless themes such as love, friendship, vengeance, honor, shame, and politics. They delve into human and social issues that have remained essentially unchanged over the years. This is the bottom line: the playwright’s work is still thriving today because of his characters. Whether we live in 1616 or 2016, as human beings we are the same. When we look at Shakespeare’s plays today, we recognize ourselves in his characters. They transcend time. Indeed, the man had an uncanny grasp of human psychology long before the term existed.

This guy from that little market town in England had such an amazing understanding of human desires and fears, aspirations and flaws that the people who populate his plays are alive for us today.

For the purpose of this post, let’s focus on his women. Shakespeare refused to place them on the sidelines, cheering on their men. In his stories, women play critical and often central roles. Whether we look at brilliant Beatrice in Much Ado about Nothing, indomitable Viola in Twelfth Night, infamous Lady Macbeth, stormy Kate in Taming of the Shrew, or wise and challenging Portia in Merchant of Venice (among so many others), these women LIVE. They have a voice.  The scholar Sidney Homan said Shakespeare’s characters have souls; they have lives that existed before the curtain opens and after the stage lights dim. So true about those women.

And where would we be without sex? In all of Shakespeare’s work—in his comedies and in his histories and even in his tragedies—sexuality drives and motivates his characters. When the French send a basket of tennis balls to the young King Henry V, the sexual taunt is not misunderstood, and he responds that his ‘balls’ will knock down the walls of French castles. When Lady Macbeth wants to spur her husband to act on his ambition, even to the point of murdering his king and kinsman, she knows which buttons to push regarding his manhood.

We have a debt to pay to Shakespeare. From our first novel to this one, we’ve always tried to make our characters come alive on the page and in the imaginations of our readers. When we began our new Scottish Relic Trilogy, we wanted to pay tribute to the Bard’s understanding of the human spirit. So, drawing very loosely on the great romantic comedy, Much Ado about Nothing, we created characters who reflected (in some way), Beatrice and Benedick.

In Shakespeare’s play, Beatrice wants to be respected and loved for her intelligence, her passion, and her independent spirit and demands equality in a society that scoffs at such a notion. What she needs is to overcome the fears that are tied to her self-confidence. Benedick wants the freedom of the bachelor life. What he needs is the love of a woman who matches his own wit and passion. The conflicts that arise as the two of them struggle toward an understanding of their true needs is what makes their story—what makes them—timeless and real.

And we set out to do much the same when we created Kenna and Alexander in our new novel Much Ado about Highlanders. There is a history between them that exists before the reader lays eyes on the first page. They were married but separated because Kenna, like Beatrice, wants and demands equality in their marriage. Once an unexpected kidnapping occurs, their battle of wits begins and rages until passion and love seals their marriage.  

As Kenna came alive for us, Beatrice’s desires became more and more relevant. Even after the passage of centuries, she shines as a role model. She is wise, witty, and wounded. She is fiercely devoted and a courageous risk-taker. More than any other character in Shakespeare’s plays, she defines his dramatic genius. As her story develops, Beatrice comes to realize she wants not just more, she wants it all. As a woman, she lacks power in her male-dominated Elizabethan society and struggles against it. And so does Kenna in her sixteenth century Scottish Highlands. And why shouldn’t they have it? Why shouldn’t we all have it?

Women feel the same wants and needs that Beatrice and Kenna feel, and continue to struggle today. What’s fascinating is that Shakespeare felt it and understood the value of that struggle. This is even evident in the fact that so many of his great heroines dress as young men to overcome the obstacles that fate and society lay before them. He weaves our sexuality (and our shared humanity) into every play.

In his Much Ado, Shakespeare introduced Benedict; in ours, we brought to life Alexander Macpherson. A witty know-it-all, he is a confident alpha male who is striving to bring some order back to his chaotic life and marriage. As our story opens, he simply doesn’t know how to make that happen. Tracy, a reviewer on GoodReads, writes, “What ensues is a fast-paced, steamy, delightful story of true love conquering all, along with a lot of action, adventure, a bit of paranormal/magic and some truly cringe worthy villains.” And Alexander is a man who needs Kenna MacKay.

As dreamers, we aspire to be remembered 400 years from now. As hardworking writers, we can only apply ourselves (as Shakespeare did) to making characters who capture the heart of our human experience.