![]() I think it's because I love to write three-dimensional heroes who can't be easily pigeonholed. Of course even when I write a true card-carrying Alpha male Bad Boy, they all eventually end up carrying around kittens in their pockets. It's that risk that makes her reward all the greater. If the hero isn't dangerous to the heroine on some kind of emotional level, then I don't usually find him that compelling. For me it's ultimately about danger and power. Ash's flaws are what make him interesting and infinitely more challenging as both a hero. ![]() I love writing about bad boys because I think perfect characters are boring. When Clarinda (who also happens to be engaged to his older brother) is kidnapped and sold to a sultan's harem, Ash is given what may be his last chance to play the hero. ![]() ![]() He's been roaming the world for ten years but he's never been able to forget Clarinda Cardew, the only girl he ever regretted leaving behind. Captain Tightpants) from Firefly tossed in. The hero of my new historical romance, legendary adventurer Ashton Burke, is one of those delicious bad boy heroes-part Indiana Jones and part Rick O'Connell from The Mummy with a generous dollop of Captain Malcolm Reynolds (a.k.a. There's only one thing that gives me more pleasure than finishing a book and that's getting to share that book with my dear readers. ![]()
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