Little nobody violet winspear biography book
Violet Winspear
British writer
Violet Winspear | |
---|---|
Born | ()28 April London, England |
Died | (aged6061) |
Pen name | Violet Winspear |
Occupation | Novelist |
Nationality | British |
Period | – |
Genre | Romance |
Violet Winspear (28 April – January ) was a British writer of 70 romance novels in Mills & Boon from to
In , she became a launch author for the new Mills & Boon-Harlequin Presents line of category romance novels.
Presents line books were more sexually explicit than the previous line, Romance, under which Winspear had been published. She was chosen to be a launch author because she, along with Anne Mather and Anne Hampson were the most popular and prolific British authors of Mills and Boon.[1]
In , Winspear commented that she wrote her leading males as if they were 'capable of rape'.
Violet winspear pdf This is a May December romance and Gard St Clair is the classic cold hearted Winspear hero who tricks Ynis into becoming his fiancee after she loses her memory when he turned her from the house on a cold miserable night. I could see how, with no memory, she was constructing an identity for herself and testing it out on almost everyone she met. Stephanos Saga [ edit ]. The little nobody Edit.This comment caused uproar and led to her receiving hate mail.[2]
Biography
Violet Winspear was born on 28 April in London, England. She worked in a factory since , when in she sold her first romance novels to Mills & Boon. In , she became a full-time writer.[3] She wrote from her home in the South East England, an area which she never left, but she researched her far-flung settings at the local library.
She said: "The real aim of romance is to provide escape and entertainment", but when in she commented: "I get my heroes so that they're lean and hard muscled and mocking and sardonic and tough and tigerish and single, of course. Oh and they've got to be rich and then I make it that they're only cynical and smooth on the surface.
But underneath they're well, you know, sort of lost and lonely. In need of love but, when roused, capable of breathtaking passion and potency.
Little nobody violet winspear biography book free The hero is just as shocked as the rest of us that this has a happy ending! Instead she was waited on hand and foot by the worthless hero and managed to scare off the wimpy waif. Yet she is strong, feisty and I couldn't help but admire her. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources.Most of my heroes, well all of them really, are like that. They frighten but fascinate. They must be the sort of men who are capable of rape: men it's dangerous to be alone in the room with". The comment that they were "capable of rape" caused uproar and lead to her receiving hate mail.
Little nobody violet winspear biography book pdf In , Winspear commented that she wrote her leading males as if they were 'capable of rape'. Read None Edit. A romantic will always stay romantic. This section needs additional citations for verification.She never married, and had no children, but she inspired her nephew Jonathan to write.
Death
Violet Winspear died at January after a long battle with cancer.
Book notes
Winspear's novels take the readers around the world. Even though many of her storylines are uninspiring, she excels at boldly using the written words to vividly bring to life the surroundings of her plots.
For example, The Palace of the Peacocks (). Many established Harlequin novelists such as Robyn Donald and Kay Thorpe, employ sexual antagonism in developing conflict in their stories. These devices are popular with modern readers. For instance, Robyn Donald creates leaping sexual awareness between men and women.
Little nobody violet winspear biography book I just couldn't.. Gard St. She was just plain dumb, and made us reader wonder if the hero sucked if he ever liked her in the first place. For instance, Robyn Donald creates leaping sexual awareness between men and women.Since men are quick to acknowledge this vital force, Robyn casts them into the role of hunter and as women label it as a weakness to despise and overcome, she makes them the prey. This is the adversarial set up that drives her plots forward. Employing the same motif of sexual antagonism, critics say that Winspear, contrasts her hero and heroine in such extremes that the heroine lacks awareness of her own sexuality against the hero who is fully aware of his.
This lends her stories an acute imbalance in character development where the heroine is left bemused with an alpha male hero who exerts overwhelming control over every situation.
Bibliography
Single novels
- Lucifer's Angel ()
- Wife Without Kisses ()
- Strange Waif ()
- House of Strangers ()
- Beloved Tyrant ()
- Love's Prisoner ()
- Cap Flamingo ()
- Bride's Dilemma ()
- Desert Doctor ()
- Tower of the Captive ()
- Viking Stranger ()
- Tender Is the Tyrant ()
- Beloved Castaway ()
- Court of the Veils ()
- Blue Jasmine ()
- Palace of the Peacocks ()
- Unwilling Bride ()
- Dangerous Delight ()
- Pilgrim's Castle ()
- Chateau of St.
Avrell ()
- Cazalet Bride ()
- Castle of the Seven Lilacs ()
- Bride of Lucifer ()
- Dear Puritan ()
- Black Douglas ()
- Raintree Valley ()
- Little Nobody ()
- Silver Slave ()
- Rapture of the Desert ()
- Devil in a Silver Room ()
- Kisses and the Wine ()
- Forbidden Rapture ()
- Glass Castle ()
- Noble Savage ()
- Palace of the Pomegranate ()
- Girl at Goldenhawk ()
- Dearest Demon ()
- Devil's Darling ()
- Satan Took a Bride ()
- Darling Infidel ()
- Sin of Cynara ()
- Burning Sands ()
- The Sun Tower ()
- Love Battle ()
- Passionate Sinner ()
- Time of the Temptress ()
- Love in a Stranger's Arms ()
- Loved and the Feared ()
- Valdez Marriage ()
- Awakening of Alice ()
- Desire Has No Mercy ()
- Sheik's Captive ()
- A Girl Possessed ()
- Love's Agony ()
- Man She Married ()
- By Love Bewitched ()
- Brides Lace ()
- Secret Fire ()
- House of Storms ()
- Sun Lord's Woman ()
- Syn of Cynara ()
- The Honeymoon ()
- A Silken Barbarity ()
- Primavera em Veneza ()
Stephanos Saga
- The Honey Is Bitter ()
- Dragon Bay ()
- The Pagan Island ()
Romanos Saga
- Tawny Sands ()
- No Man of Her Own ()
Mavrakis Saga
- The Child of Judas ()
- Love is the honey ()
Anthologies
- The Fifth Anthology of 3 Harlequin Romances by Violet Winspear ()
- The Sixth Anthology of 3 Harlequin Romances by Violet Winspear ()
Graphic novels
- Blue Jasmine (Art by Masae Hashimoto)
- Passionate Sinner (Art by Yoko Hanabusa)
- Lucifer's Angel (Art by Yoko Hanabusa)
- Desert Doctor (Art by Naomi Hibiki)
- Dragon Bay (Art by Rin Ogata)
- Love is the Honey (Art by Amii Hayasaka)
- The Child of Judas (Art by Misao Hoshiai)
- The Burning Sands (Art by Misao Hoshiai)
- Time of the Tempress (Art by Misao Hoshiai)
- Pilgrim's Castle (Art by Misuzu Sasaki)
- Sun Loard's Woman (Art by Rinko Nagami)
- A Silken Barbarity (Art by Kaishi Sakuya)
Musicals
In , Takarazuka Snow Troupe staged Blue Jasmine.
- Director / Playwright: Ken Ako
- Composer / Arranger: Takio Terada, Kenji Yoshizaki
- Kasim ben Hussayn: Rei Asami
- Lorna Morel: Kurara Haruka
- Rodney: Michi Taira
References
- ^Hemmungs Wirten, Eva (), "Global Infatuation: Explorations in Transnational Publishing and Texts.
The Case of Harlequin Enterprises and Sweden"(PDF), Section for Sociology of Literature at the Department of Literature, Number 38, Uppsala University, ISBN, retrieved 25 October
- ^"BBC - (none) - Arts and Drama - A Hundred Years of Mills and Boon". .
- ^Henderson, Lesley; Kirkpatrick, D.
L. (), Twentieth-century romance and historical writers, St. James Press, p.