HARLEQUIN SUPERROMANCE
Celebrates its 20>th Anniversary
Two decades of bringing you the very best in romance reading.
To recognize this important milestone, weâve invited six very special authorsâwhose names youâre sure to recognizeâto tell us how they feel about Superromance. Each title this month has a foreword by one of these authors.
New York Times bestselling author Jennifer Blake says that Superromance novels âpresent a broad spectrum of romance stories from the heart-pounding to the heartwarming.â She talks about the booksâ âinnovative plot lines and fresh new voicesââqualities that definitely appear in the work of Brenda Novak.
Snow Baby is Brendaâs second book for Superromance. Sheâs achieving a reputation for realistic and moving stories with a strong focus on family relationships.
Publishers Weekly has described her writing as âenergeticâ and her characters as âappealing.â
Her peers also acknowledge her talent. The well-known writer Merline Lovelace calls Brendaâs books âmust-reads.â Vicki Hinze (author of Acts of Honor) says this about Brendaâs stories: âReal people. Real problems. Complex and genuine. Brenda Novak shoots straight for the heartâand captures it!â
Dear Reader,
As an author, the question I get asked most often is âWhere do you get the ideas for your stories?â Sometimes itâs a specific location that inspires me, or an unusual event. Sometimes itâs something as remote as a friendâs retelling of an experience that happened to another friendâs sisterâs auntâs neighbor! Well, this story strikes a little closer to home for me. It was inspired by my own sister. She and Chantel, the heroine, have many things in common. They are both tallâalmost six feetâconsider themselves âugly ducklingsâ (although the rest of the world sees a swan) and battle the unique insecurities that come with towering over most other women and turning heads everywhere they go.
Take that kind of character and put her in a story where she and her sister are in love with the same man, and you have the backdrop for Snow Baby. To keep from destroying relationships that mean a great deal to them, Chantel and Stacy Miller and Dillon Broderick all wrestle with their individual needs and desires. But only when each is ready to sacrifice his or her happiness for the other two do they establish the kind of bond that transcends the selfish and the ordinary and becomes something truly special.
And itâs all because of an unexpected snow babyâ¦
I hope you enjoy my latest Superromance. Iâd certainly love to hear from you. You can write to me at P.O. Box 3781, Citrus Heights, CA 95611. Or simply log on to my Web site at www.brendanovak.com to leave me an e-mail, check out my book signings or learn about my upcoming releases.
Best wishes!
Brenda Novak
Snow Baby
Foreword by Jennifer Blake
Brenda Novak
For my sister, Debra Cundick, a beautiful
child, a beautiful adult, the inspiration behind this book.
Sometimes in life we meet people who encourage us, who
teach us that we are worthy of our dreams, who set an example for us of courage and determination in the face of formidable challenges. I married one of those peopleâ and that is something for which I will always be grateful.
FOREWORD BY JENNIFER BLAKE
Romance novels serve different purposes for different people. Depending on the category or type, they provide fantasy adventure for those in need of escape from everyday tensions, trust in a future filled with love and joy for readers who have not yet found these things, a sense of home and family for women who have either lost theirs or never had any, remembrance of intimacy for those whose memories may have dimmed, and moreâso much more. These so-called simple stories reaffirm the magic of living and loving. They illustrate that women can survive and prosper and find their heartsâ desires. They provide a promise that women and men can share a close relationship and the implicit pledge of a wonderful future. They give people a life goal that, even when it seems least attainable, still causes the senses to quicken and the world to seem good and bright.
Some would say that romance novels create unrealistic expectations, that a real personal relationship can never live up to the fantasies presented. What a shortsighted view! Those who hold it fail to see that in striving for the Holy Grail of a perfect love, men and women may overcome incredible odds to discover tolerance and acceptance of each otherâs foibles and find rich moments of laughter, passion and devotion. They can become better lovers solely from the attempt. All great endeavors begin with a fantasy. If you never dream of climbing the highest mountain, then youâll never reach the heights. If you never dream of a fine romance, then you will surely never feel the magic.
In my own experience, however, romance authors seldom write their stories with the idea of creating romantic expectations. They write for the pleasure of the words flowing through their brains, for the joy of creating their own special worlds and inviting readers into them. They write to show others with a romantic frame of mind the charming, funny or exciting stories that they create to entertain themselves and to share the romantic joy they feel inside. If they can entertain readers while doing these things, then thatâs more than enough.