Rebecca Brandewyne
Author of Swan Road
About the Author
Image credit: public domain
Series
Works by Rebecca Brandewyne
New Year's Resolution: HUSBAND [anthology] (The Ice Dancers / Kissing Frosty / Husband for Hire) (1997) 28 copies
℗Il ℗fiore dell'estasi 1 copy
Moonstruck 1 copy
Wiem, że jesteś Lwem 1 copy
Devil’s Keep 1 copy
Associated Works
A Spring Bouquet (Castles in the Sand/ The Marrying Kind/ Hasten Down the Wind/ Forbidden Affections) (1996) — Contributor — 110 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Cox, Mary Rebecca Wadsworth Brandewyne
- Birthdate
- 1955-03-04
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Wichita State University (BA, Journaliism | MA, Communications)
- Organizations
- Novelists, Inc.
Romance Writers of America
Mensa - Awards and honors
- RT Career Acheivement Award (1991)
Romantic Times Hall of Fame - Relationships
- Brandewyne, John (exhusband)
Cox, John (husband) - Short biography
- Mary Rebecca Wadsworth was born on March 4, 1955 in Knoxville, Tennessee, where she lived and then, later, Chattanooga for the first few years of her life. After that, the family moved to Kansas, where she grew up, spending the summers in her grandparents' home in Alabama. She has two sisters, Mimi and Nancy, and two brothers, Thomas and Daniel. Her mother, Beverly, remarried with Verne, and she won a step-sister, Chrissy. Rebecca married very young with John Brandewyne, and they had a son, Shane, who was born, appropriately enough, on St. Valentine's Day.
Excellent student, she graduated cum laude with departmental honors from Wichita State University, earning a B.A. in journalism, minors in history and music, and an M.A. in communications. She obtained among several other distinguished instructors, three Pulitzer Prize-winning journalists, one of the foremost authorities in the field of interpersonal communication and two Victor Murdock Scholarship. Rebecca taught interpersonal communication at the University level before becoming a published writer.
She sold her first novel some months after her twenty-third birthday, making her, at that time, the youngest romance author in America, a record that stood for ten years before finally being broken. To date, Rebecca has written over thirty consecutive bestselling titles, including novels and novellas on the following lists: New York Times, Publishers Weekly, USA Today, Los Angeles Times, Magazine & Bookseller, Ingram, B. Dalton, and Waldenbooks, among many others.
Rebecca lives in the U.S. Midwest with her son, Shane and her second husband, Englishman John Cox. - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Knoxville, Tennessee, USA
- Places of residence
- Chattanooga, Tennessee, USA
Wichita, Kansas, USA
Alabama, USA - Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
This was just awful. I always loved and adored Rebecca Brandewyne but this was almost unbelievably bad and it made me really sad.
There are long, involved detours on the LifeHammer's functions, the protocol for rabies shots, the utility of subtitles for the deaf in movies, transmission and shifting in a Mini, the danger of leaving a sleeping woman in a car in the heat, wild hair color preferences of young folk and some of the most contorted and stiltedly unrealistic dialogue I have ever show more read. And none of it has anything to do with the plot.
I felt like she might have been sitting in front of the TV flipping channels and writing dialogue about whatever she saw on screen. ("Hey that QVC LifeHammer is cool." "Animal Planet has the best rabies documentaries!")
As to the plot, pretty much nothing happens. The grandma dies. Granddaughter goes to her childhood home, meets a dude she thinks is a wolf. He is not. They fool around one time. Her father shows up as a burn victim cum peeping tom. This is not explored. A 'simple but beautiful diamond engagement ring' is bestowed (we are told, in a sentence that is mainly about probate court proceedings.) A car salesman wants to buy the farm, and then a person who is not even a minor character tries to kill her, but is prevented by the wolf who is not the man.
If one were perhaps ignorant of the futility of using a LifeHammer on the windshield of a car, or had been avoiding rabies shots, unaware they are no longer painful shots in the stomach, or even unable top find your instruction manual for your Mini Cooper S, this book could help you. Otherwise, it's not worth your time. show less
There are long, involved detours on the LifeHammer's functions, the protocol for rabies shots, the utility of subtitles for the deaf in movies, transmission and shifting in a Mini, the danger of leaving a sleeping woman in a car in the heat, wild hair color preferences of young folk and some of the most contorted and stiltedly unrealistic dialogue I have ever show more read. And none of it has anything to do with the plot.
I felt like she might have been sitting in front of the TV flipping channels and writing dialogue about whatever she saw on screen. ("Hey that QVC LifeHammer is cool." "Animal Planet has the best rabies documentaries!")
As to the plot, pretty much nothing happens.
If one were perhaps ignorant of the futility of using a LifeHammer on the windshield of a car, or had been avoiding rabies shots, unaware they are no longer painful shots in the stomach, or even unable top find your instruction manual for your Mini Cooper S, this book could help you. Otherwise, it's not worth your time. show less
I first read this when I was thirteen and absolutely loved it; my best friend and I took turns reading the same worn copy over and over again. It was somewhat silly, but it managed to appeal to the slightly infantile taste of a romantic teenager. Upon rereading it now, it's obvious that it's quite a bit more than just silly - in fact, it's downright preposterous. Despite the romance-hogwash, however, all the mad and convoluted melodrama is strangely appealing and I can still remember why it show more was so mesmerizing. Plot? It's the standard - young beautiful noble woman meets dark mysterious troubled stranger and falls in love against her wishes and mayhem ensues (quite a few times) and it all ends happily ever after. Recommended? Not really, not unless you're under thirteen and in the mood for some serious bosom-heaving in the Wild West. show less
They called her the crimson witch, Genevieva Saint-Georges, former belle of Paris until the French Revolution sent her fleeing into her new life of piracy. She was only matched by the man they called the black Mephisto, notorious spy, master of disguise and black-masked bandit of the seas. They lived a dangerous masquerade -- and loved with a passion no mask could hide.
This novel is an example of Historical Romance done properly. It offers a bit of everything. A mystery that only resolves at the end of the book, conflict, travel, star-crossed lovers (yes lovers.. there are more than one set in this) and so on. Admittedly it is a bodice-ripper and while the basic historical framework is intact the author mentions in her note that she changed what she needed and wanted to to fit the story. The thing is the story is so engrossing you really don't notice. The show more key here is that the story is driven by the romantic context - not the reason for it. You also never get the feeling that the author is following a formula [Hai Harlequin!] and thinks.. oh six pages have gone by *insert sex scene, romantic whatever, ad nauseam*. The encounters in this novel make sense to the storyline and the plot.
Karia's review is one of the better ones shown below and part of the reason I am not being more detailed. The only thing she didn't mention is regarding the pairs of lovers - we have the "anti-star-crossed lovers" in the form of Ian and .. ok I forgot her name. But their relationship while [a form of] love is seriously twisted, unlike the other sets in this novel. It offers an interesting counter-point in perspective.
I'll review [b:Green Darkness|1076795|Green Darkness|Anya Seton|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1203105034s/1076795.jpg|3222827] by [a:Anya Seton|18930|Anya Seton|https://d.gr-assets.com/authors/1224813438p2/18930.jpg] one of these days to show the difference between a Historical Romance / Bodice Ripper and a Historical Fiction Romance. Both [b:Green Darkness|1076795|Green Darkness|Anya Seton|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1203105034s/1076795.jpg|3222827] and this book are excellent and deserve high praise.
This was written as a counterpoint to my review of [b:The Traitor's Wife|6047149|The Traitor's Wife A Novel of the Reign of Edward II|Susan Higginbotham|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1388720058s/6047149.jpg|6572228] by [a:Susan Higginbotham|260080|Susan Higginbotham|https://d.gr-assets.com/authors/1232260330p2/260080.jpg].
(June 2011) show less
Karia's review is one of the better ones shown below and part of the reason I am not being more detailed. The only thing she didn't mention is regarding the pairs of lovers - we have the "anti-star-crossed lovers" in the form of Ian and .. ok I forgot her name. But their relationship while [a form of] love is seriously twisted, unlike the other sets in this novel. It offers an interesting counter-point in perspective.
I'll review [b:Green Darkness|1076795|Green Darkness|Anya Seton|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1203105034s/1076795.jpg|3222827] by [a:Anya Seton|18930|Anya Seton|https://d.gr-assets.com/authors/1224813438p2/18930.jpg] one of these days to show the difference between a Historical Romance / Bodice Ripper and a Historical Fiction Romance. Both [b:Green Darkness|1076795|Green Darkness|Anya Seton|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1203105034s/1076795.jpg|3222827] and this book are excellent and deserve high praise.
This was written as a counterpoint to my review of [b:The Traitor's Wife|6047149|The Traitor's Wife A Novel of the Reign of Edward II|Susan Higginbotham|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1388720058s/6047149.jpg|6572228] by [a:Susan Higginbotham|260080|Susan Higginbotham|https://d.gr-assets.com/authors/1232260330p2/260080.jpg].
(June 2011) show less
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