A Minor Inconvenience by Sarah Granger Blog Tour, Guest Post, Excerpt, Review & Giveaway!

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Hi guys, today we have Sarah Granger with A Minor Inconvenience and a fantastic giveaway, there’s also a guest post and excerpt to enjoy and of course Tams review, so have a look around, enjoy our post and then click that Rafflecopter link <3 ~Pixie~

A Minor Inconvenience

Title: A Minor Inconvenience
Author: Sarah Granger
Publisher: Samhain Publishing, Ltd.
Release Date: 14th January, 2014
Genre: M/M Historical Romance

Sarah Granger's A Minor Inconvenience

Duty, honor, propriety…all fall in the face of love. 

Captain Hugh Fanshawe returned from the Peninsular War with a leg that no longer works properly, thanks to a French musket ball. Now his fight against Napoleon is reduced to quiet, lonely days compiling paperwork at Horse Guards headquarters.

His evenings are spent dutifully escorting his mother and sister to stifling social engagements, where his lameness renders him an object of pity and distaste. But his orderly, restricted life is thrown into sudden disarray with the arrival of Colonel Theo Lindsay.

Theo is everything Hugh is not-a man of physical perfection and easy yet distinguished address. Surprisingly to Hugh, Theo appears to be interested in making his acquaintance. Lindsay turns out to be a most convivial companion, and Hugh finds great pleasure in his company. Their friendship deepens when they become lovers.

In spite of himself, Hugh falls desperately in love. But when a French spy is suspected at Horse Guards, Hugh discovers nothing is as it seems.and the paper he shuffles from day to day could be the instrument of his lover’s death.

Warning: Contains gallant English officers in love, dastardly French spies, skintight pantaloons (sometimes on the floor) and gleaming tasselled Hessians.

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Praise for A Minor Inconvenience

“…this romance is one of the best period pieces I’ve ever read.” Rainbow Reviews

“Sense and Sensibility meets A Minor Inconvenience ~ I just loved the way this book read; like reading a gay Jane Austen.In the best tradition of a sweeping historical background, Sarah sets the scene for a great romance with all the trimmings and style of the regency era…. The story is intricate and beautifully written.” Sinfully Sexy Book Reviews  (A Minor Inconvenience was one of the site’s Hotpicks for January)

“The writing is beautiful, some of the wry, clever speeches laugh-out-loud funny, and throughout the whole there is such a sense of time and place that you forget that this mundane world of ours isn’t one of breeches and Almacks, Vauxhall gardens and opera dancers.” Anna Butler

“.the humor in this story is a treat!… I applaud the author for delivering a fresh, captivating plot and such wonderfully unique characters as Hugh and Theo. If you are fancying a highly entertaining historical story – you can’t go wrong here.” Live your life, buy the book 

“I loved this book..I think anyone who loves historical romance written in the style of its setting and who likes a plot based story will love it too.” Mrs Condit & Friends Read Books

Purchase Links:

Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Minor-Inconvenience-Sarah-Granger-ebook/dp/B00FSDBKJ4/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1397655814&sr=1-1

B&N: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/a-minor-inconvenience-sarah-granger/1117165789?ean=9781619217669

Kobo: http://store.kobobooks.com/en-US/ebook/a-minor-inconvenience

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18670544-a-minor-inconvenience

Sarah Granger's A Minor Inconvenience

Sarah Granger chats about Regency romance

I’ve been asked a few times what led me to write in the Regency genre, as my first novel was a contemporary. I suspect anyone who has studied a fine figure of a man dressed in buckskin breeches and topboots or skintight pantaloons with polished Hessian boots and a tight coat moulded over broad shoulders might not feel this is a question that needs answering. While that definitely goes a long way to explaining my enjoyment of the genre, it goes deeper than that. Honestly!

The clothes are definitely part of my love for the period – intricate and beautiful, although I can’t help but think most ladies and gentlemen must have spent a goodly proportion of their day dressing and undressing to ensure they were properly clothed for each occasion. That brings me to another of the things about this time that I love – the absolutely rigid codes about what was appropriate and inappropriate, in clothes, behaviour, food, and courtship. Formality and order reigned at all but the very highest and lowest levels of society. Marrying for love was only possible if the would-be spouse met all the criteria, providing so many possibilities for romantic conflict.

I also love the formality of manners, and the round of balls and other types of entertainment is fascinating and endlessly entertaining even while part of me is still appalled at the extravagance and wastefulness. I can’t help but shrink into myself when I think of being one of those wallflowers, waiting in desperate hope for a gentleman to ask me for a dance, all in the sight of my family and peers. It’s a special sort of torture that catapults me back to awkward teen years and I can only be thankful that standing around the edge of a room at a disco (yes, I’m showing my age) was neither so public nor affected my future in the same way.

Of course, writing a Regency where the romantic relationship is M/M offers a slightly different set of challenges and opportunities, but the things I love so much are still there – the clothes, the formal manners, and the strict social conventions that inevitably result in unresolved sexual tension. One of the additional challenges to an M/M romance in this setting is working out how the heroes can make known their interest in one another, let alone act upon it, in a society where such things were punished with awful brutality.

Having spent time reacquainting myself with the Regency period – I have loved Georgette Heyer’s novels for more years than I care to remember –  and remembering just what a delight it is, I’ve found I’d like to stay here a little longer. I’d love to hear what it is that attracts others to the genre.

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Excerpt

Hugh was so turned about by the time the next set of dances ended that he had lost sight entirely of Lindsay. He retreated to the edge of the room, seeking a wall to stand against, only to find a hand placed in the small of his back and Lindsay’s voice close against his ear. “Escaping already, Fanshawe? I cannot permit that. We must present a united front if we are to prevail.”

Smiling, he turned his head. Lindsay looked even more handsome than Hugh had remembered, the silver buttons on his uniform coat sparkling in the light and his grey eyes filled with warmth along with the lazy amusement they so often showed.

“Does your united front permit a strategic regrouping?” Hugh asked.

“Music to my ears, Fanshawe. What have you in mind?”

“I was thinking a glass of punch and perhaps some cool air in the hall.”

“With a tactical brain like that, I can’t think how you have not yet been gazetted as general.”

Procuring a glass of cold punch each, they escaped to the hall that ran the length of the house. It proved to be a busy thoroughfare, used by those seeking to move to the card room or the dressing room, or simply to take some cooler air. In unspoken agreement, they moved to the far end and the large window onto Grosvenor Square, where they would not be disturbed. As Hugh turned to speak to Lindsay, he spied a familiar and extremely unwelcome figure reaching the top of the stairs. Stanton was here, and although Hugh thought he cut a most peculiar character in his striped waistcoat, he was fairly sure Sophia would be less discriminating in her taste.

“Damn it,” he said, momentarily forgetting he was in company.

Lindsay followed his line of sight. “Ah,” he said. “I had the impression the other night that Stanton was dangling after your sister.”

“In a manner of speaking,” Hugh concurred grimly.

“I suspected as much. Perhaps what gave me the first clue was when he likened her eyes to the beauty of stars sparkling like bright diamonds in a sky of black velvet and her smile to the sunrise that graced the dew of Eden’s first dawn.”

Hugh turned a revolted eye upon him. “No,” he begged. “No, for God’s sake, even he would not be so—so—”

“Lost in the poetical throes of passionate romance?” Lindsay suggested.

“I was about to say making a cake of himself,” Hugh said. “But Sophia—I am sure that no matter how handsome she might think him, she would never hear such nonsense without succumbing to giggles.”

“It’s possible I exaggerated his words a little,” Lindsay confessed. “Perhaps he merely mentioned how prettily her eyes shone and that her smile could light the room.”

“Well, that’s bad enough,” Hugh said indignantly. “What sort of a fellow spouts such claptrap?”

“I take it you have never courted a lady,” Lindsay said. “At least, not successfully.”

Hugh choked on his punch. And then something, whether honesty or some inner demon, prompted him to answer. “No, I never have.”

Lindsay fastened his eyes on Hugh’s suddenly, and the look in them was such that Hugh found it difficult to breathe.

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About Sarah Granger

Sarah Granger is a sucker for a happy ending. She believes, however, that characters will only fully appreciate their happy ending if they’ve suffered along the way.

Sarah lives in the Cotswolds, an idyllic part of the English countryside with gently rolling hills, dry stone walls of golden stone and fields dotted with sheep. She has shamefully broken with local tradition by not having a rose growing around her front door. When she isn’t writing, Sarah enjoys walking in the countryside with her elderly black Labrador.

Social Links:

 Website | Goodreads  | Facebook

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Giveaway!

$15 Amazon Gift Card & a copy of The Unforgiving Minute

(Just click the link below)

Sarah Granger Rafflecopter giveaway!

(Ends 11th May 2014)

The Unforgiving Minute Review

Review

MinorInconvenience-A72lgTitle: A Minor Inconvenience

Author: Sarah Granger

Genre: Historical Romance

Length: Novel, 264 pages

ISBN: 978-1-61921-766-9 

Publisher: Samhain Publishing (January 14th 2014)

Heat Level: Mild

Heart Rating: ♥♥♥♥ 3.5 Hearts

Reviewer: Tams

Blurb:Duty, honor, propriety…all fall in the face of love.

Captain Hugh Fanshawe returned from the Peninsular War with a leg that no longer works properly, thanks to a French musket ball. Now his fight against Napoleon is reduced to quiet, lonely days compiling paperwork at Horse Guards headquarters.

His evenings are spent dutifully escorting his mother and sister to stifling social engagements, where his lameness renders him an object of pity and distaste. But his orderly, restricted life is thrown into sudden disarray with the arrival of Colonel Theo Lindsay.

Theo is everything Hugh is not—a man of physical perfection and easy yet distinguished address. Surprisingly to Hugh, Theo appears to be interested in making his acquaintance. Lindsay turns out to be a most convivial companion, and Hugh finds great pleasure in his company. Their friendship deepens when they become lovers.

In spite of himself, Hugh falls desperately in love. But when a French spy is suspected at Horse Guards, Hugh discovers nothing is as it seems…and the paper he shuffles from day to day could be the instrument of his lover’s death.

Product Warnings:
Contains gallant English officers in love, dastardly French spies, skintight pantaloons (sometimes on the floor) and gleaming tasseled Hessians.

Purchase Link: http://store.samhainpublishing.com/minor-inconvenience-p-73184.html

Review: If Jane Austen were to write a gay romance novel.

Hugh Fanshawe returned from the war with an injury that ends most days in agony. The former Captain now works as a paper pusher at the Horse Guards headquarters. He takes care of his mother and sister, but he’s essentially lonely and just going through the motions. His life is mundane but comfortable, that is until he meets Theo Lindsay. Colonial Lindsay is every bit the distinguished gentleman, and soon enough Hugh discovers that they share the same interest, each other.

Secrets abound throughout, whether it be Hugh and Theo and their hidden attraction, or the traitor that has blended into their lives. A sweet, gentle and romantic relationship between the two men quickly blossoms. But Theo is hiding a secret, a secret that could tear the budding twosome apart.

What I loved most about this book was the seemingly genuine style from the time period that has been woven throughout this story. The wording, the phrasing, the clothing and the mannerisms are exactly what I think of for the time. There was the constant underlying threat as well, the possibility of Hugh and Theo being discovered. Two men being together intimately at the time was frowned upon and could suffer severe consequences if discovered. And their influential positions only added to the urgency of keeping the romance secret.

The romance aspect thought was a bit lacking for me. While I appreciated the author staying true to the period piece she was writing, I wanted more details instead of hints and innuendos when Hugh and Theo were in the bedroom. Overall the story kept me intrigued and I was anxious to see how it all came together. I think fans of historical romance will be pleased with this one.

Sarah’s Official Tour Page:

http://authoressentials.virtualwritersinc.com/2014/03/a-minor-inconvenience-by-sarah-granger/

 

10 thoughts on “A Minor Inconvenience by Sarah Granger Blog Tour, Guest Post, Excerpt, Review & Giveaway!

  1. A Minor Inconvenience = Regency sexiness combined with humour. A must read for me. Can’t wait!

  2. Thanks so much for hosting me here today.

    I’ll be around all day if anyone has any questions or comments for me, whether about breeches or anything else!

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