An online zine editor just sent me a query which I thought might be of interest to the public:
Q: Do you consider Swordspoint et al Regency novels?
A: Not at all. Regency novels (particularly Georgette Heyer's) were certainly an influence on me, but the novels' setting is meant to be a heady mix of Elizabethan, 17c and 18c as well as "Regency" periods (with a little Damon Runyon & Dickens & of course the glorious Whatnot thrown in).
Q: Do you consider Swordspoint et al Regency novels?
A: Not at all. Regency novels (particularly Georgette Heyer's) were certainly an influence on me, but the novels' setting is meant to be a heady mix of Elizabethan, 17c and 18c as well as "Regency" periods (with a little Damon Runyon & Dickens & of course the glorious Whatnot thrown in).
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Date: 2006-07-20 02:45 pm (UTC)But the Riverside stories I've read (I haven't read the newest one yet) give more of a sense that their world is bigger than the story. With the Heyer books I'm convinced that the imagined world stops at the edges of the story, whereas when reading Swordspoint I'm sure that the imagined world goes off in all directions past the edges of the story.
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Date: 2006-09-28 10:11 pm (UTC)