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Lisa Kleypas reveals Hello Stranger cover and Daniel Craig inspiration. It’s time to say, “Hello, Stranger” to the cover of Lisa Kleypas’ latest novel. Watch Death To Smoochy Online Full Movie. Her upcoming release, titled Hello Stranger (naturally), is the fourth book in the Ravenels series, which began with 2.
Cold- Hearted Rake. The saga centers on the Ravenel family, an aristocratic dynasty that just inherited an earldom. Hello, Stranger follows the adventures of Garrett Gibson, the only female physician in Victorian England, as she is swept into suspense and intrigue when she is tempted by an affair with Ethan Ransom, a Ravenel bastard and mysterious former Scotland Yard detective with ties to a shadowy government organization. Avon. The Ravenels series marks Kleypas’ return to historical romance for the first time since 2. Kleypas has been a favorite of the sub- genre since her debut novel, 1. Where Passion Leads. Kleypas exclusively revealed the new cover to EW, and as you can see above, it’s a delectable hot pink and depicts Dr. Watch The River Why Putlocker.
Gibson in a decadent gown that marks quite a departure from her normal physician’s garb. In addition to sharing the frothy new cover, Kleypas sat down with EW to discuss the real- life historical inspirations for her characters, writing strong female heroines in the Trump era, and more. ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: We first met Garrett Gibson earlier in the Ravenels series — had you always planned for her to have her own story? LISA KLEYPAS: Her first appearance was in book 2 of the series, Marrying Winterborne, and she arrived on the scene to provide first aid for the wounded hero. Really, within the next chapter, she became so compelling and exciting for me that I knew that I had to give her her own story someday.
So I hadn’t planned when I created her as a minor character, but sometimes as an author a character just seems to leap out of your brain fully formed, and so when that happens, you shouldn’t ignore it. Where did your idea for a female physician/doctor come from? When I write these historical romance novels, I do an incredible amount of research just to get the flavor of the time period and to pick up all these details that give the story life. As I was reading about important people back in the late 1. England, the name Elizabeth Garrett Anderson came up. I was shocked to realize that she was the only female physician in England for 2. I had never even heard of her.
After she got into the British Medical Association through a loophole after completing all these studies at the Sorbonne in France, the British Medical Association changed their rules so that no more women could be admitted for another 2. And I could not stop thinking about her because what an incredible thing to be the only woman in an entire country for that long.
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So I based this character Garrett Gibson on her and, of course, used the name Garrett, because I loved the idea of using a slightly androgynous name for this really tremendously accomplished and brave woman. And that fits with the loopholes you mention because an androgynous name might escape notice. It’s heartbreaking and funny and amazing to read what these women went through to even get on the playing field. That’s something I’m trying to bring out in this series — because there are lots of wonderful historical romances that have a lot of scenes in the ballroom and ‘Can I get this wonderful man to marry me?’ but not as many where the woman is really the prize. She’s the one achieving and accomplishing things, and that to me is an exciting new twist to put on it. You read a lot of historical romance where if women have a profession, they’re a governess or a baker or something still highly associated with typical traits of femininity.
So I love that you’ve gone into a profession that a lot of people may not realize women could even hold in the Victorian era. This woman Elizabeth Garrett Anderson should be really well known. She does not deserve to fade into history. If you read a biography of her, she went on to become the first female mayor of any town in England.
There is just an extraordinary, driven woman. The more you read, the more you realize there were a lot of these women back in that time period, and they were all fighting and struggling to make something of themselves. If you look, you can find these amazing examples of women doing these things. That, to me, is really fun.
It gives historical romance a whole different feeling and flavor. And more things to talk about. Lisa Kleypas. Presumably a doctor would encounter some pretty gruesome things, especially in the Victorian era, which maybe romance readers aren’t accustomed to. Was that a challenge for you, and how did you find that balance?
It was a challenge. I’ve always considered myself really squeamish when it came to the sight of blood and operations and all that. Around this time in 1. Joseph Lister invented the catgut ligatures that basically just dissolve in the body.
In order to understand things like that, I’ve had to look at actual surgical pictures. I’m not putting every single gory detail in the novel, but I have to know so I can know how the character thinks, what’s in the back of her mind. So maybe 2. 0 percent of everything I research actually goes into the book, but the most fun part about being a novelist is that whatever character you’re writing about, you have to approach the scene from their viewpoint.
So I can be the heroine, the bad guy, the hero, and I have to know what their background is and what their experiences are — it’s like playacting. This book definitely seems to have a lot more of a mystery or thriller feel to it, given Ethan’s profession, and that’s something we don’t often get in historicals. What was it like diving into that? So fascinating. I actually have made Ethan part of this very small group of maybe eight handpicked men that are really the precursors to MI6 agents. Everything was being invented as they went along: crime fighting, detective techniques, fingerprinting. All these things were just being invented and the time period of this book is right before the Jack the Ripper case, when finally detective science really exploded because they were trying to find Jack the Ripper.
So making Ethan a man of action and making him a historical- romance James Bond has really been fun. Especially because I have a soft spot for Daniel Craig, so he’s good inspiration.
Romance has changed a lot over the years, but I feel like it’s become particularly pertinent in 2. Tessa Dare and Sarah Mac.