-
Join 475 other subscribers
-
Rosalie Ash, romance author, alter-ego of RA Fox, crime writer
Rosalie Ash is a member of the Society of Authors and the Romantic Novelists Association. In the 1990s, she wrote 21 successful contemporary romance novels, published worldwide by Harlequin Mills and Boon and translated into many languages. After an unexpected change of circumstances in 1999, she decided to drag herself out of her romantic bubble and back into the world of work. Now, after a long break, she has started writing again. Her THREE SISTERS TRILOGY, set in Warwickshire and Northumberland and featuring the hectic love lives of Victoria, Jessica and Megan Francis, is now complete. Her DCI Gabriel Flynn crime series, under the pseudonym RA Fox, is an exciting new work in progress.
Blogs I Follow
- Darlene Foster's Blog
- Author Katie Davis | Writerpreneur | Brain Burps About Books
- Bucket List Publications
- Life Unbound
- sketching, psychotherapy and beyond
- Kristen Lamb
- 30 Day Books
- Australian Romance Readers Association
- Harlequin Junkie Blog!
- Heroes and Heartbreakers: Partial Feed
- Romantic Novelists' Association Blog
- Write it Forward
- A Newbie's Guide to Publishing
- LIZ FIELDING
- Sue’s Website
- The Bliss Project
- nikkimooreauthor.wordpress.com/
- Free Kindle Books and Tips
-
Recent Posts
Archives
Categories
Meta
Writing Reborn
- Writing for the Romance Market, by Rosalie Ash (2)
- “Writing for the Romance Market” by Rosalie Ash
- Love and Quilting!
- More on the wedding in Tuscany
- Wedding in Tuscany!
- Writing, Work and Wine with… Rosalie Ash
- Ways to Create Multi-Dimensional Characters–Tip #1
- Spring (and bronchitis) in Daphne du Maurier Country
- WRITING AND PSYCHOTHERAPY – FREE OFFER!
- Love and All That Stuff by Lucy Felthouse
- Follow Writing Reborn on WordPress.com
Category Archives: writing romance
“Writing for the Romance Market” by Rosalie Ash
In 1992, as a recently published Mills & Boon author, I was invited to submit an article to the Writer’s Handbook on writing for the romance market. Now much older (but not necessarily wiser), I am still a romantic suspense … Continue reading
Posted in Crime fiction, Romantic Fiction, Romantic Suspense, Uncategorized, writing romance
Tagged change of direction, credibility, crime genre, flexibility, getting published, handling rejection, Harlequin, how to write novels, how to write romance, Mills and Boon, new writers, perseverence, rejection, rejection letters, romance, romance market, romantic fiction, Rosalie Ash, writing romance
Leave a comment