
It’s probably no secret that I like an usual hero. The hero in the recent release of The Madness of Lord Ian Mackenzie, features a hero with Asperger’s Syndrome, which is considered to be high-functioning autism. (I never state this in the book, but the syndrome wasn’t given a name until the mid-20th century, and the story is set in 1881).
Traits include the inability to make eye contact, trouble with nonverbal cues and subtext, obsession with detail (but missing the “big picture”), and others. Not everyone who has AS exhibits the same traits, and the syndrome tends to present differently in men than women.
Why did I decide to write Ian the way I did? The number one reason was: I thought he’d be interesting. I like to write about interesting people, places, times, problems. I’m not supposed to; I’m supposed to write romance to the “rules,” but I’ve never been one to follow the rules.
The book is a romance, of course, with a HEA ending, and it’s about Beth teaching Ian that he really can love (and already does), despite his problems relating to other people.
Ian Mackenzie isn’t the only unusual hero I’ve written. If you’re an Allyson James fan (me in disguise), you might have read the Tales of the Shareem books I wrote for EC. Futuristics about men created in a genetics factory, bred for one purpose and one purpose only—to pleasure women. Now they’re outlawed, the factory shut down, and women come to them in secret for sensuality that is forbidden in their society.
When I started writing the series, I thought, “What am I doing? No one will want to read about these guys because they’re not powerful, rich, in-charge men. They’re little better than slaves with no rights and no money.” But the characters had grabbed me, and I wanted to write about them. Result: The Shareem is my most popular EC series, and copies have continually sold since early 2005. (Fans: I’m just submitted TOTS: Calder.)
I’m also working on a new paranormal called Pride Mates. It’s a shape shifter romance, but I decided to forgo the ultra-rich, ultra-powerful males story. Instead, my Shifters are outcasts, shunted by human society into enclaves, forced to wear collars that suppress their violent tendencies. The hero is Liam, who is the liaison between the humans and the Shifters, and Kim Fraser, a defense attorney put into the position of defending a Shifter accused of murder. When worlds collide… That’s coming up in Feb. 2010.
Over to you blog readers: Who are some of your favorite unusual romance heroes? Not necessarily disabled heroes—just different from the norm. Or whoever? What about heroines? Any standouts? Or—why don’t you like them?
Jennifer Ashley
http://www.jennifersromances.com
Jennifer will give away winner's choice of a book from her backlist (under any name: Jennifer Ashley; Allyson James; Ashley Gardner). Answer Jennifer's question and don't forget your email addy to be entered.


Excerpt
Chapter One
London, 1881
“I find that a Ming bowl is like a woman’s breast,” Sir Lyndon Mather said to Ian Mackenzie, who held the bowl in question between his fingertips. “The swelling curve, the creamy pallor. Don’t you agree?”
Ian couldn’t think of a woman who would be flattered to have her breast compared to a bowl, so he didn’t bother to nod.
The delicate vessel was from the early Ming period, the porcelain barely flushed with green, the sides so thin Ian could see light through them. Three gray-green dragons chased one another across the outside, and four chrysanthemums seemed to float across the bottom.
The little vessel might just cup a small rounded breast, but that was as far as Ian was willing to go.
“One thousand guineas,” he said.
Mather’s smile turned sickly. “Now, my lord, I thought we were friends.”
Ian wondered where Mather had got that idea. “The bowl is worth one thousand guineas.” He fingered the slightly chipped rim, the base worn from centuries of handling.
Mather looked taken aback, blue eyes glittering in his overly handsome face.
“I paid fifteen hundred for it. Explain yourself.”
There was nothing to explain. Ian’s rapidly calculating mind had taken in every asset and flaw in ten seconds flat. If Mather couldn’t tell the value of his pieces, he had no business collecting porcelain. There were at least five fakes in the glass case on the other side of Mather’s collection room, and Ian wagered Mather had no idea.
Ian put his nose to the glaze, liking the clean scent that had survived the heavy cigar smoke of Mather’s house. The bowl was genuine, it was beautiful, and he wanted it.
“At least give me what I paid for it,” Mather said in a panicked voice. “The man told me I had it at a bargain.”
“One thousand guineas,” Ian repeated.
“Damn it, man, I’m getting married.”
Ian recalled the announcement in the Times——verbatim, because he recalled everything verbatim: Sir Lyndon Mather of St. Aubrey’s, Suffolk, announces his betrothal to Mrs. Thomas Ackerley, a widow. The wedding to be held on the twenty-seventh of June of this year in St. Aubrey’s at ten o’clock in the morning.
“My felicitations,” Ian said.
“I wish to buy my beloved a gift with what I get for the bowl.”
Ian kept his gaze on the vessel. “Why not give her the bowl itself?”
Mather’s hearty laugh filled the room. “My dear fellow, women don’t know the first thing about porcelain. She’ll want a carriage and a matched team and a string of servants to carry all the fripperies she buys. I’ll give her that. She’s a fine-looking woman, daughter of some froggie aristo, for all she’s long in the tooth and a widow.”
Ian didn’t answer. He touched the tip of his tongue to the bowl, reflecting that it was far better than ten carriages with matched teams. Any woman who didn’t see the poetry in it was a fool.
Mather wrinkled his nose as Ian tasted the bowl, but Ian had learned to test the genuineness of the glaze that way. Mather wouldn’t be able to tell a genuine glaze if someone painted him with it.
“She’s got a bloody fortune of her own,” Mather went on, “inherited from that Barrington woman, a rich old lady who didn’t keep her opinions to herself. Mrs. Ackerley, her quiet companion, copped the lot.”
Then why is she marrying you? Ian turned the bowl over in his hands as he speculated, but if Mrs. Ackerley wanted to make her bed with Lyndon Mather, she could lie in it. Of course, she might find the bed a little crowded. Mather kept a secret house for his mistress and several other women to cater to his needs, which he loved to boast about to Ian’s brothers. I’m as decadent as you lot, he was trying to say. But in Ian’s opinion, Mather understood pleasures of the flesh about as well as he understood Ming porcelain.
“Bet you’re surprised a dedicated bachelor like myself is for the chop, eh?” Mather went on. “If you’re wondering whether I’m giving up my bit of the other, the answer is no. You are welcome to come ’round and join in anytime, you know. I’ve extended the invitation to you, and your brothers as well.”
Ian had met Mather’s ladies, vacant-eyed women willing to put up with Mather’s proclivities for the money he gave them.
Mather reached for a cigar. “I say, we’re at Covent Garden Opera tonight. Come meet my fiancée. I’d like your opinion. Everyone knows you have as exquisite taste in females as you do in porcelain.” He chuckled.
Ian didn’t answer. He had to rescue the bowl from this philistine. “One thousand guineas.”
“You’re a hard man, Mackenzie.”
“One thousand guineas, and I’ll see you at the opera.”
“Oh, very well, though you’re ruining me.”
He’d ruined himself. “Your widow has a fortune. You’ll recover.”
Mather laughed, his handsome face lighting. Ian had seen women of every age blush or flutter fans when Mather smiled. Mather was the master of the double life.
“True, and she’s lovely to boot. I’m a lucky man.”
Mather rang for his butler and Ian’s valet, Curry. Curry produced a wooden box lined with straw, into which Ian carefully placed the dragon bowl.
Ian hated to cover up such beauty. He touched it one last time, his gaze fixed on it until Curry broke his concentration by placing the lid on the box.
He looked up to find that Mather had ordered the butler to pour brandy. Ian accepted a glass and sat down in front of the bankbook Curry had placed on Mather’s desk for him.
Ian set aside the brandy and dipped his pen in the ink. He bent down to write and caught sight of the droplet of black ink hanging on the nib in a perfect, round sphere.
He stared at the droplet, something inside him singing at the perfection of the ball of ink, the glistening viscosity that held it suspended from the nib. The sphere was perfect, shining, a wonder.
He wished he could savor its perfection forever, but he knew that in a second it would fall from the pen and be lost. If his brother Mac could paint something this exquisite, this beautiful, Ian would treasure it.
He had no idea how long he’d sat there studying the droplet of ink until he heard Mather say, “Damnation, he really is mad, isn’t he?”
The droplet fell down, down, down to splash on the page, gone to its death in a splatter of black ink.
“I’ll write it out for you, then, m’lord?”
Ian looked into the homely face of his manservant, a young Cockney who’d spent his boyhood pickpocketing his way across London.
Ian nodded and relinquished the pen. Curry turned the bankbook toward him and wrote the draft in careful capitals. He dipped the pen again and handed it back to Ian, holding the nib down so Ian wouldn’t see the ink.
Ian signed his name painstakingly, feeling the weight of Mather’s stare.
“Does he do that often?” Mather asked as Ian rose, leaving Curry to blot the paper.
Curry’s cheekbones stained red. “No ’arm done, sir.”
Ian lifted his glass and swiftly drank down the brandy, then took up the box. “I will see you at the opera.”
He didn’t shake hands on his way out. Mather frowned, but gave Ian a nod. Lord Ian Mackenzie, brother to the Duke of Kilmorgan, socially outranked him, and Mather was acutely aware of social rank.
Once in his carriage, Ian set the box beside him. He could feel the bowl inside, round and perfect, filling a niche in himself.
“I know it ain’t me place to say,” Curry said from the opposite seat as the carriage jerked forward into the rainy streets. “But the man’s a right bastard. Not fit for you to wipe your boots on. Why even have truck with him?”
Ian caressed the box. “I wanted this piece.”
“You do have a way of getting what you want, no mistake, m’lord. Are we really meeting him at the opera?”
“I’ll sit in Hart’s box.” Ian flicked his gaze over Curry’s baby-innocent face and focused safely on the carriage’s velvet wall. “Find out everything you can about a Mrs. Ackerley, a widow now betrothed to Sir Lyndon Mather. Tell me about it tonight.”
“Oh, aye? Why are we so interested in the right bastard’s fiancée?”
Ian ran his fingertips lightly over the box again. “I want to know if she’s exquisite porcelain or a fake.”
Curry winked. “Right ye are, guv. I’ll see what I can dig up.”
33 comments:
I'm actually becoming pretty fond of a guy named Ian...I do like unusual heroes.
Margay
Great excerpt! Argh. Now I have to find the book! :)
Hero - Miles Vorkosigan (though I suppose the Vorkosigan Saga doesn't all fall within the Romance category, I think some of it could)
Heroine - Sookie Stackhouse
I enjoy reading unusual characters. It makes things more interesting and I like to see how those characters deal with or overcome their problems.
un_pissenlit (at) hotmail (dot) com
Hey Jennifer! :) Saw you last night in Writerspace!!
I have tons of fav "unusual heroes"...I really liked Sebastian from "Devil in Winter" by Lisa Kleypas (owner of a gambling club)...Edward de Raaf from "Raven Prince" by Elizabeth Hoyt (disfigured from the a childhood illness), Gabriel Fairchild from "Yours Til Dawn" by Teresa Medeiros (blind)...
Those are just some of them I can name off the top of my head.
Excited about Ian though!! :D
rachie2004 AT yahoo.com
I heard so many great things about The Madness of Lord Ian MacKenzie that I went out and bought it. Can't wait to read it.
I love the Tales of the Shareem. At least the two that I have!
I really don't pay mutch attention to the heroines so off hand I can't think of any unusual ones. At least none except for the paranormals. Maybe Johanna Lindsey's Lady Katherine St. John in Secret Fire. She was described as plain and angular. I think she was even called a wren. Love that book though and she's one of the few heroines I paid attention to.
Hero's are a different matter! There's Stefan from Johanna Lindsey's Once a Princess. He had scars on his face from being attacked by wolves.
Jacques in Christine Feehan's Dark Desire was a complete mess in the beginning of the book.
Hum, I can't think of any of the top of my head. I can't think that i have only read about really "normal" people.
I really need to spread my reading. Cos I enjoy a bit of different
Unusual romance hero? Hmmm ... I quite like Luke Dillon the faery assassin from Maggie Stiefvater's Lament because he is way sexy, and is complex in the sense that he has to struggle with fulfilling his duty and being true to himself.
Oops ... forgot my email addy : lesly7ch(at)yahoo(dot)com
Mornin' all. Thanks for dropping by. I'm always interested in what everyone's reading (because I'm a big reader--I love reading things that someone who wasn't me wrote, LOL).
I too am a Miles V. fan; also Sookie.
A romance hero that always stood out for me was MJ Putney's hero from The Rake (he was a recovering alcoholic), and also her book, Shattered Rainbows (hero had asthma and heroine was married to someone else--I loved that book).
I'll be popping back throughout the day, so if you have any questions about the Ian book (or anything else), let me know, and I'll answer.
This is the last stop on my blog "tour", so I'm ready to party!!! (even if it's 7 am for me...)
I'm late, sorry, Jennifer, we had tornadoes and electrical problems.
I'm so glad to see a new story. I've enjoyed many of your stories over the years.
Unusual characters, hmmm...Zarek from Dance with The Devil, comes to mind. Very anti-hero and not particularly likable, but still you were on his side.
I think it takes great skill by an author who can take a flawed and complicate hero, and engage the readers sympathy and loyalty for that character. Especially to build a story around someone not particularly likable on the surface.
Looking forward to reading your newest book and really looking forward to Pride Mates.
Ooh, I really liked that excerpt!
I haven't read all that many books that involve unusual heroes, and I'd like to start. I can't think of a single one I've read. And I know I'd like to.
I know one thing for sure: I am going to reserve this book from the library so I can eagerly read the rest.
I think Scout could be considered a heroine in To Kill a Mockingbird. :)
quelleheure4[at]gmail{dot}com
Jennifer, I have a copy of "Sir Ian" just waiting for me to sit down and start reading it!
My favorite "unusual hero" is still Peter from Anne Stuart's "Cold as Ice". I love him. ;-)
-S
So many fantastic "unusual" heroes have already been named, it is hard to think of others. Death Angel by Linda Howard has an unusual hero and heroine. I would not normally consider a hired assassin and the mistress to a drug lord a great couple, but it seemed to work in that book.
I have Ian's book sitting on my bookshelf just waiting to be read. I cannot wait to read it.
beamer339 (at) hotmail.com
Thanks for the giveaway!
I just read a Georgette Heyer romance, The Convenient Marriage, with the heroine named Horatia, or Horry for short! Isn't that a wonderful nickname! LOL
But she was loveable as she stuttered her way through the book, and she was also quite immature.
(Scarlet O'Hara is also a favorite)
marieburton2004 at yahoo dot com
The more I read about this book, the more I feel I must buy it...and soon! I like the unusual type of hero/heroine because it is more like realy life...who in real life is perfect? IMHO, even in fiction, anyone who is written to be 'perfect' is beyond believable.
kkhaas
Hi Jennifer! I have mentioned these unusual heroes I liked: Sydnam Butler the disfigured hero in Mary Balogh's Simply Love; Sir William of Miraval the blind knight from Christina Dodd's Candle in the Window; and Reginald Davenport the alcoholic hero in Mary Jo Putney's The Rake. Also Meg is a liakable blind heroine in What a Scoundrel Wants by Carrie Lofty.
mesreads[at]gmail[dot]com
This book is high up on my TBR pile, and I can hardly wait to dive in~
Laura Kinsale's heroes have a bit of the unusual about them, and I loved the shell-shocked hero of Suzanne Enoch's England's Perfect Hero. Ah, clearly I am a sucker for troubled men... in fiction anyway!
Speaking of Asperger's and fascinating books, I also highly recommend The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time by Mark Haddon. Not a romance, but a terrific novel.
The hero of Putney's The Rake is one of my favs, too. Unusual heroines? Modean (spelling?) Moon wrote a lovely book about a woman who'd had a stroke and aphasia. I don't recall the name of the book, but it smacked me!
Jennifer, we have a family member who's been diagnosed with Asperger's, so this book is on my BUY list! Good thing I'll be at B&N tonight!
Light,
Nancy Haddock
nancy@nancyhaddock.com
Hi again: Scout, yes, an unsual heroine :-). I also liked Zerek.
I just now (just now), turned in another manuscript, so I'm a little giddy. Whew!!
I can't remember ever reading about a very unusual hero or heroine. I can't wait to read Ian's story.
janie1215 AT excite.com
Hi Jennifer,
I am reading Ian's book right now and it is a fantastic story.
Years ago I read an historical romance by Catherine Anderson called Annie's Song and the heroine was deaf and mute but no one had realized this and she was thought to be mentally challenged. This was a great story since Annie went from being almost wild to an accomplished young woman during the story.
mce1011[at]aol[dot]com
I love unusual heros or heros with flaws. I don't want a perfect hero in my books because nothing in life is perfect. Jennifer you write my type of books because I love historicals!
lead[at]hotsheet[dot]com
I cannot remember an unusual h/h.
I am looking forward to reading about Ian.
There are so many strong and confident alpha heroes that I think unusual heros are refreshing and interesting. As someone mentioned, when handled well, the flawed and clomplicated characters have so much emotional depth.
Admiral Branden Kel-Paten from "Games of Command" by Linnea Sinclais comes to mind.
It's not because he's a bioborg (part cyborg), but everyone (including the heroine) believes he has no emotion because he's a "machine". But he has been loving the heroine from afar because he thinks he can't be loved and he's afraid of her rejection.
I love this strong but shy and vulnerable man.
Unusual heroines?
Hmm, I think Sherry Thomas's heroines are very different.
Just came back to read what others wrote and realized I forgot to include my email with my post. Here it is -
lynda98662 at yahoo dot com
I'm sorry I forgot to add my e-mail address.
vida_cotidiana01 (at) yahoo (dot) co (dot) jp
Alright, most folks have already mentioned some of my favorites. Nonetheless, here's another interesting couple, shelved in fantasy; Fawn & Dag. He lost a hand to blight wolves and she's half his age.
They're from the Sharing Knife series by Bujold. The first book is their meeting and the start of their romance.
As a gamer/sci fi fantasy geek, I go to conventions. There are a lot of people who might qualify as Aspergers in that crowd. It's nice to see one as the hero in a romance. sewicked@gmail.com
I'm having trouble thinking of an unusual hero. I am fond of Ranger from Janet Evanovich's series if that's ok to name him. He's not very unusual though.
I've heard so many great things about your new book and can't wait to read it!
booklover 07202 at yahoo dot com
Thanks everyone for stopping by yesterday and today! This was the last stop on my "blog tour," and it was fun!!
Jennifer
I would love this book The Madness of Sir Ian MacKenzie.
I love the Malory series by Johanna Lindsay, especially James Mallory.
gaby317nyc AT gmail DOT com
I forgot my email addy!
jaam121388 at yahoo dot com
This book is hot and I wanted! My fingers are crossed.
Here is the link to my blog where I'm sharing the news: http://bittenbybooks.ning.com/profiles/blogs/pamela-palmers-desire-untamed
magalysparanormalfiction (at) gmai (dot) com
I know I'm going to adore Ian. There are so few characters with Asperger's out there that finding one who's well-written feels like finding a bag of diamonds on my doorstep.
I don't know about heroes, but my favourite unusual heroine is Annique Villiers. She has a unique blend of strength and vulnerability that makes her seem so incredibly real, and with her skillset she's anything but usual.
So many romance novels feel the same that finding one with unusual characters is like Christmas coming early.
anony.mouse(at)live.ca
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