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Romance Thursdays

Author Interview: Martha Waters | Romance Thursdays

Author Interview: Martha Waters | Romance Thursdays

Dec 10, 2020

 

This week on Romance Thursdays I had the lovely privilege of interviewing Martha Waters. I’m so excited to share this interview with you all. If you haven’t checked out the rest of my interviews in this series be sure to and see what other romance authors have to say. 

Romance Thursdays is a feature that spotlights romance authors to highlight how amazing the romance writing community is. Each week I’m will be interviewing a different romance author from across subgenres as well as both traditionally and self-published. I want to share their experience writing romance and why they love it so much. While also focusing on their writing and books. 

Martha Waters is the author of two regency rom-coms, To Have and to Hoax which was published earlier this year and To Love and to Loathe, which is set to be released in April 2021. Now let’s get into this interview. 

Hi Martha, and welcome to Angel Reads. For those that haven’t read anything by you yet. Tell us a little about yourself and your books?

I’m a children’s librarian and Anglophile who writes romantic comedies set in Regency England. My first novel, To Have and to Hoax, came out this past spring, and a companion book, To Love and to Loathe, comes out on April 6, 2021. They’re both silly, hijinks-filled rom-coms featuring a big cast of meddling friends, lots of banter, and — of course — plenty of kissing. My first book is a lovers-to-enemies-to-lovers story about an estranged married couple, and the companion is about their best friends and a friends (frenemies?) with benefits type arrangement.

Why did you start writing romance novels? Is there anything in particular that drew you to it over other genres?

I always wanted to write but for the longest time, I thought I wanted to write fantasy for kids and teens. I’m not ruling out doing that eventually, but once I started reading romance novels while I was in graduate school, I got really hooked on the genre and realized that romance was full of my favorite thing to write: people sitting around talking to each other. I just love interpersonal relationships between characters, which is what romance is all about. To Have and to Hoax is the first romance I ever attempted, after a few years post-college of trying and failing to get a YA book published, and I just instantly knew once I started writing it that it was the right fit for me.

Both of your books are historical rom-coms. What is your favourite thing about combining historical romance and romantic comedy? Why did you decide to do that? 

I really like all the tropes and societal rules of Regency romances — and I’m just generally obsessed with all things England — but I wanted to write something that felt really fresh and young and modern and appeal to readers my age. I kind of just wrote the book I wanted to read, to be honest, and this is the result — I think it’s the best of both worlds.

What is your favourite thing about romance as a genre? Why do you like reading and writing it?

I love all the tropes! It’s so fun to see a trope you’ve seen done over and over again executed in a really clever, original way by a great author. The predictability of some of the beats in a romance novel — the mid-book coming together, the third act breakup, the happily ever after — is really comforting to me as a reader.

What are some of your favourite tropes that you like reading and writing in the romance genre?

I love enemies-to-lovers (which both of my books kind of are, but also kind of aren’t, if that makes sense). I also really love marriage in trouble stories (which my first book definitely is), marriage of convenience (I want to write one of these!), and fake dating.

Who are some of your favourite romance authors? Who inspired you to write?

Julia Quinn is the reason I started reading and writing romance, and I’m inspired by a lot of other historical authors in addition to her, including Loretta Chase, Eloisa James, Cat Sebastian, and Tessa Dare. In the contemporary space, I love Lucy Parker, Sonali Dev, Kate Clayborn, Jasmine Guillory, and Sally Thorne.

What are some of the ways that you think we can start overcoming the stigma of romance novels?  

I think we’ve made good progress in this regard in the past few years. And I hate to say it, but I think the popularity of illustrated covers has helped in some ways, in that it’s lured new readers to the genre and once they’re here we can get them hooked on other romances with more traditionally “romancey” looking covers. I have so many friends who read romance now who didn’t read the genre even three or four years ago, so that gives me a lot of hope. I also think we need to continue to diversify as a genre and make it less of a straight, white space so that it feels like something relevant to the modern world, which will attract even more readers, and the more readers we have, the less of a stigma there will be!

Do you currently have any books in the works? Is there anything that you are looking forward to writing, but haven’t started yet? 

I’m working on something right now that I, unfortunately, can’t talk about because it’s not yet announced, or even under contract! But once I can (hopefully) share more about it, I will. I also have an idea for a fantasy rom-com I want to try writing, if I can find some time in between other projects — hopefully soon!

Thank you so much for coming by Angel Reads. It was lovely having you here. And I can’t wait to read more of your books!

Thank you so much for inviting me!

***

I hope that you a lovely time getting to know Martha Waters. I know that I can’t wait to read her books now. 

If there is an author that you would like to see featured here, please do let me know. And I will try my best. If you are a romance author and would like to be apart of Romance Thursdays, don’t hesitate to message me. 

Have you read any Martha Waters books before? What did you think of them? Are you excited for more Romance Thursday posts? Let’s Chat! 

 

About The Author 

Martha Waters is the author of To Have and to Hoax and To Love and to Loathe. She was born and raised in sunny South Florida and is a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She works as a children’s librarian in North Carolina and spends much of her free time travelling.

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Author Interview: Hannah Murray | Romance Thursdays

Author Interview: Hannah Murray | Romance Thursdays

Nov 26, 2020

This week on Romance Thursdays, I interview Hannah Murray. You can also check out last weeks interview with Rilzy Adams as we talk about writing standalone romances, her favourite authors and more. 

Romance Thursdays is a feature that spotlights romance authors to highlight how amazing the romance writing community is. Each week I’m will be interviewing a different romance author from across subgenres as well as both traditionally and self-published. I want to share their experience writing romance and why they love it so much. While also focusing on their writing and books. 

This week I had a lovely time interviewing Hannah Murray. Hannah is the author of the Jane and Lacey duology, Honey and the Hitman, Their Perfect Fit and more. You can check out Hannah’s backlist now. 

Hi Hannah, and welcome to Angel Reads. For those that haven’t read anything by you yet. Tell us a little about yourself and your books?

Hi, Angel – and hello readers! I’m so happy to be here.

Okay, a little about myself. Well, I’m an American author of mostly contemporary romances. I live in the Pacific Northwest with my family, which includes a husband, a kid, a dog, and a best friend. I love pizza and candy, I bake when I’m bored, and I will do just about anything to avoid doing the dishes. 

Why did you start writing romance novels? Is there anything in particular that drew you to it over other genres?

I’ve been a romance reader for YEARS—I think I was 12 (maybe even younger) the first time I picked up a category romance—and I just fell in love with the genre. I did a lot of creative writing in school, lots of different kinds of stories, but none of them really held my interest. Then, when I was 16, I spent a year in Brazil as an exchange student, and I just didn’t have access to books the way I did at home. I tried reading a romance in Portuguese, but while I was conversationally fluent, I could only read about every third word. With nothing to fill the space books normally took up, I started daydreaming about all the stories I wished to read. I drafted my first romance on the aeroplane home from Brazil, and while that book went nowhere, it planted the seed.

You normally write more on the side of contemporary romance, but you have dabbled into the paranormal side. Why do you like writing contemporary romances? Is there any other romance sub-genres that you would like to try? 

 Contemporaries just seem to be my sweet spot. It’s what I most love to read, and it seems to be where my talents lie. When I wrote my one and only paranormal, a vampire story called Tooth and Nailed, I was so uncomfortable, and not in a good, stretching-my-writing-muscles kind of way. It’s a much darker book than I usually write, with far less humour, and while I think it’s a good book, it just didn’t feel like me. I’m glad I did it because I absolutely think there’s value in pushing outside your comfort zone, but I probably won’t go that far again. I do have some ideas for stories with paranormal elements, though, so never say never.

 I also write BDSM romance, but that also falls under contemporary, as do the LGBTQ+ and polyamorous romances I’m also writing now. I’d love to be able to write historical romance, but I have zero patience for the research. It would be the worst historical ever, but I have GREAT ideas.

What is your favourite thing about romance as a genre? Why do you like reading and writing it?

My absolute favourite thing about romance is the guaranteed Happily Ever After. I love that. I want that. And I don’t want to read, or write, a book without it. There’s so much uncertainty in the world right now, and so much pain, and when I sit down to read I want to forget about that for a few hours. While I do enjoy non-fiction—the messier the better!—for fiction, I’m a romance only girl. I need that happily ever after joy. 

What are some of your favourite tropes that you like reading and writing in the romance genre?

I love the Brother’s Best Friend trope, and Teach Me Sex—those are probably my top two. Friends to Lovers, Only One Bed, Fake Relationships, Second Chance Romance…the list goes on. One that I’m not especially keen on is Enemies to Lovers because it can really give me anxiety if the hostility is too heavy or the thing that made them enemies is too big—I just can’t seem to settle into believing a person can love someone who purposely ruined their family business, or killed their brother, or something else equally awful. But I also find myself writing an Enemies to Lovers at the moment, so maybe that’s growing on me a bit. 

Who are some of your favourite romance authors? Who inspired you to write?

So many! I cut my teeth on Nora Roberts, of course, and my historical go-to back in the way back was Julie Garwood—I still have all those old paperbacks, and I re-read them a lot. Right now I’m obsessed with Talia Hibbert and Naima Simone, and Julie Kriss is also a personal fav. For hysterical, laugh out loud funny romances I adore Pippa Grant, and whenever I want to feel like my heart is being ripped out of my chest I go for Sarah MacLean. And there are so many more—I could fill pages with my favourite reads.

As for who inspired me, that’s impossible to pinpoint. I think every romance I ever read has inspired me in some way. I just wanted to be a part of this wonderful, amazing world.

What are some of the ways that you think we can start overcoming the stigma of romance novels?  

Wow, that’s a tough one. That stigma is so pervasive, and it can feel so heavy. I think social media has gone a long way in a very short time at minimizing some of that. Romance Twitter especially can be fantastic. There are so many smart readers and writers talking about the genre there every day, and doing so unapologetically. When someone says romance novels aren’t ‘real books’ or are somehow valueless, there is a veritable tsunami of people willing to call bullshit. Romance writers are smart, and so are romance readers, and as time goes on we’re less and less willing to accept someone shaking a finger in our faces over it. I believe one of the best ways to dispel the shame is to stop hiding our love of the genre, and while everyone has to do what feels right for themselves and their situation, more and more people are able to write and read romance proudly. It’s lovely to see.

Do you currently have any books in the works? Is there anything that you are looking forward to writing, but haven’t started yet? Is there something different that you want to try writing?

I do! I have a short novel coming from Totally Bound called Santa Daddy. It’s part of their Naughty or Nice holiday collection and is the first of five planned books in my Perfect Taboo series. They’re all BDSM romances, and each will explore a different taboo kink. That’ll be available via the Totally Bound website Amazon, and other e-retailers on December 15. And of course, you can find information and links to all of my books on my website. 

I have so many other stories in the works, it’s not even funny. My To Be Written list has at least a dozen things on it. Mostly contemporary, but I do have a couple of wild cards. I recently dug up a manuscript that I wrote years ago about a reluctant witch, and I have some ideas on how to revamp that. I’m looking at co-writing a time travel romance with a friend of mine as well. It will feature contemporary characters (my strength) stuck in the past (her strength). It’ll have two romances, one an MF and the other an MM, each with their own HEA. I don’t know when we’ll get to it, but we’re having a lot of fun plotting it out, and I think it’s going to be hilarious. So definitely new and interesting stuff on the way. 

Thank you so much for coming by Angel Reads. It was lovely having you here. And I can’t wait to read more of your books!

Thank you for having me – happy reading, everyone!

***

And that is it for this weeks interview. Did you enjoy getting to know Hannah Murray more? I had a blast with this interview. 

If there is an author that you would like to see featured here, please do let me know and I will try my best. If you are a romance author and would like to be apart of Romance Thursdays, don’t hesitate to message me. 

Have you read any books from Hannah Murray before? Are you excited for more Romance Thursday posts? Let’s Chat! 

About the Author

Hannah has been reading romance novels since she was young enough to have to hide them from her mother. She lives in the Pacific Northwest with her husband—former Special Forces and an OR nurse who writes sci-fi fantasy and acts as In-House Expert on matters pertaining to weapons, tactics, the military, medical conditions and How Dudes Think—and their daughter, who takes after her father.

Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Goodreads | Website 

Author Interview: Rilzy Adams | Romance Thursdays

Author Interview: Rilzy Adams | Romance Thursdays

Nov 19, 2020

This week on Romance Thursdays, I interview Rilzy Adams. You can also check out last weeks interview with K.E Osborn, where we talk about writing MC romances and more. 

Romance Thursdays is a feature that spotlights romance authors to highlight how amazing the romance writing community is. Each week I’m will be interviewing a different romance author from across subgenres as well as both traditionally and self-published. I want to share their experience writing romance and why they love it so much. While also focusing on their writing and books. 

Rilzy Adams is the author of the Falling Like A Johnson series, Birthday Shot, Go Deep and many more black romances. Let’s get into this interview. 

Hello Rilzy, and welcome to Angel Reads. For those that haven’t read anything by you yet. Tell us a little about yourself and your books?

Heya! I am a thirty-year-old attorney ridiculously obsessed with coffee, sushi, prosecco and love. My books cover a huge range, from fun, sexy, low angst ‘Go Deep’ and ‘Birthday Shot’ to more winding roads to love such as in ‘The Gift’, which explores finding love after the death of a spouse and ‘Yours Always’ which dealt with a couple trying to hold it together after their marriage is hit by a deep tragedy. I think the important thing is, regardless of how it is presented that love with all its beauty and, at times, chaos is at the forefront!

Why did you start writing romance novels? Is there anything in particular that drew you to it over other genres?

I started off writing epic fantasy and then I guess low fantasy but I started to realize that whenever I wanted to dig into a book and get lost that I always ended up picking up a romance novel. And I loved daydreaming about love. I think it is so important to write what you can’t stop reading and or thinking about it and so it was a natural transition. 

 

You write a range of contemporary romances from series to standalones. Is there one that you prefer to write more? Why do you like switching between the two? 

I think I like series more than standalones because you get to check back in with couples you have grown to love to see how things are progressing and also explore characters who might not have had the stage in a previous book but have interesting stories to tell. I write stories as they come to me and as much as I love series sometimes the story meant to be told takes the form of a standalone.   

What is your favourite thing about romance as a genre? Why do you like reading and writing it?

I think love is just the most simple but yet most complicated thing in the world and there is so much beauty and hope in that even though sometimes the path to love and experiences with love can be painful. I love exploring that through reading and writing.

There are many subgenres in romance. Is there something new that you would like to try and write? Is there a subgenre that you love to read, but don’t think you would write something in that subgenre? 

The answer to both of these questions is the same. I know at first blush it doesn’t make sense but hear me out :). I love the idea of writing a paranormal romance. Also, I love reading paranormal romances but I swear every time I have a plot that I think would be a good fit and I sit down to write, it just doesn’t work. So it might be that I don’t ever end up writing something in that sub-genre but definitely not for lack of trying. 

What are some of your favourite tropes that you like reading and writing in the romance genre?

I love writing friends to lovers and enemies to lovers. I love reading enemies to lovers, fake relationships and forced proximity. 

Who are some of your favourite romance authors? Who has inspired you to write?

I think hands down Christina C Jones and Nicole Falls are two of my favourites. I also like Brenda Jackson and I went through a period of time being obsessed with Eric Jerome Dickey. And I pre-order anything Katrina Jackson writes even without reading the synopsis, title or anything. I think I have also probably read almost everything in Nora Roberts’ catalogue – maybe not the most recent stuff – but between the ages of fifteen and maybe twenty I tore through her books. 

What are some of the ways that you think we can start overcoming the stigma of romance novels?  

I think I could rant about this forever. I honestly don’t get where the stigma comes from. Well, I mean… I know. It is definitely rooted in sexism and the thought that anything that deals with emotions like love is feminine and therefore frivolous whereas genres with believed masculine energies are lauded. Love is such a universal experience – at some point in everyone’s lives, they have longed for it, chased it, run from it, fallen into it, rose up in it, embraced it, tried their damndest to figure it out. It is the most relatable thing there is. And that is even before we consider that although romance novels tell a love story there are often so many other facets of life covered: dealing with loss, self-love, social issues etc.

When I was growing up I was told that romance novels were not ‘serious’ but I was never told that when I was dug into a fantasy novel. I think the only way to overcome the stigma is to continue challenging it. In these circumstance reading and writing romance novels proudly is in itself an act of rebellion against the idiotic stigmas. 

Thank you so much for coming by Angel Reads. It was lovely having you here. And I can’t wait to read more of your books!

I’m so excited to start picking up Rilzy Adams books, I already have a few waiting on my Kindle. I hope that you enjoy this interview and will check out Rilzy Adams books up as well.

If there is an author that you would like to see featured here, please do let me know and I will try my best. If you are a romance author and would like to be apart of Romance Thursdays, don’t hesitate to message me. 

Have you read any books from Rilzy Adams before? Are you excited for more Romance Thursday posts? Let’s Chat! 

About the Author

I’m a twenty-something lawyer by day and an author of contemporary romance by night.

Although I love love, I flirt with urban fantasy and thrillers because,  well, sometimes we need a few witches and gore to spice things up!  I live in the Caribbean and am addicted to coffee, sushi, Prosecco and sunshine.

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Well February wasn’t the best reading month. I onl Well February wasn’t the best reading month. I only ended up reading 3 books in. 3 pretty fun books but one of my slowest readings months in a while. 

And I’m going to be honest here it’s because I’ve been constantly reading Heated Rivalry fanfics. 🤷‍♀️ I’m having the best time though. 

How was your reading in February? Any 5  star reads? 

🏷️ 
#romancebooks #bookstagram  #angelreads #spicybooks #februarywrapup
January was a really solid reading month. I read s January was a really solid reading month. I read some books that had been on my tbr for some time, reread a few things that peaked my interest. I also started a few new series. And just had a good time!

I just had a really good start to the year. While February is a little slow so far I’m looking forward to what I can pick up.

What did you read in January? Any 5-star reads? Let’s chat! 

🏷️ 
#romancebooks #bookstagram  #angelreads #spicybooks #januarywrapup
Can you believe that it’s already February? I know Can you believe that it’s already February? I know I can’t. But that means it’s a new month with more releases coming out! And that makes me excited. Some fantastic titles releasing this month and I cannot wait to read them. 📚

A couple of these are on my TBR already and some have just caught my eye and that makes me super excited to pick them up. 🖤

What are you looking forward to reading this month? Let’s chat! ✨

🏷️ 
#romancebooks #bookstagram  #angelreads #spicybooks #Februaryreleases2026
2026 is going to be big for new releases and let m 2026 is going to be big for new releases and let me tell you my tbr is already full of books, and I cannot wait to add more. 📚

So I thought I would share just some of the books that I’ve already added to my radar for this year. 

So many sequels coming out in 2026 to some of my favs from 2025 and that makes me even more excited. 

What are you looking forward to reading in 2026?

🏷️ 
#romancebooks #bookstagram #angelreads #spicybooks #2026releases
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