Is Jane Aiken Hodge related to Joan Aiken?
Dawn ,'Sleeper'
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
I don't think so, I've wondered that before.
They are sisters. [link] With a brother John! Three kids, two consonants!
Their father was Conrad Aiken! Wow.
A Death in Two Parts is a really fun book. She started it sometime in the 60s and got bogged down, then found it in her papers in the early 2000s and finished it. She didn't rewrite the whole thing, left the first part as the typical "rescued by the cop who falls in love with her" thing, but the second half is a lot more cynical. Her introduction to it is a great commentary on how romances have changed.
Jane Aiken Hodge wrote more gothic romances - spooky castles, governesses, etc. - as I recall. Mary Stewart wrote more romantic suspense, except for Nine Coaches Waiting. I'm really looking forward to this reread.
Three kids, two consonants!
Efficient!
Jane Aiken Hodge wrote more gothic romances - spooky castles, governesses, etc.
Women in nightgowns, fleeing ominous houses! One of my favorite genres! And I should check to see if any of her books are available digitally.
Yep - nightgowns and ominous houses. I think several of Jane Aiken Hodge's books are available in Kindle. A bunch of the titles on Amazon sound familiar, but I can't remember which were gothic-y and which were more romantic suspense.
The Mary Stewart that was gothic-y was "Nine Coaches Waiting". I remember it fondly but not in detail. My favorites were "Ivy Tree", "This Rough Magic", and "Madam Will You Talk". But they were all good.
My favorite is Airs Above the Ground