Title: Georgette Heyer. 30 novels Author(s): Georgette Heyer Pages: 1 Publisher: Publication date: Language: English Format: HTML, RTF ISBN-10: ISBN-13: Description: List:
April Lady v2.0 (htm).rar
Arabella (v1) (htm, jpg).rar
Bath Tangle (v1) (htm, jpg).rar
Beauvallet v2.0 (htm).rar
Black Sheep (v2.0) (htm, jpg).rar
Charity Girl v2.0 (htm).rar
Cotillion.rar
Cotillion.rtf
Cousin Kate v1.html
Detection Unlimited.htm
Devil's Cub (v1.0).rar
False Colors (v2.0) (htm, jpg).rar
Faro's Daughter (v1.0) (htm, jpg).rar
Frederica (htm,jpg).rar
Friday's Child (v1.0).rar
Lady of Quality v2.0 (htm).rar
Pistols for Two - ss collection v2.0.htm
Regency Buck (v1) (htm, jpg).rar
Sprig Muslin v2.0.htm
Sylvester.htm
The Black Moth.htm
The Convenient Marriage(html) (v1.0).rar
The Corinthian v2.0 (htm).rar
The Grand Sophy v2 (htm).rar
The Grand Sophy.rtf
The Masqueraders_v2.rtf
The Nonesuch (v1.5) (htm).rar
The Quiet Gentleman v2.0.htm
The Toll-Gate.htm
These Old Shades.rtf
They Found Him Dead.txt
Venetia (htm).rar
Georgette Heyer (pronounced "hair") (16 August 1902-4 July 1974) was an English historical romance and detective fiction novelist. Her first novel, The Black Moth, began as a story spun to amuse her younger brother and was published in 1921, when Heyer was only nineteen. The success of her novel These Old Shades, released in the midst of a General Strike, solidified Heyer's opinion that publicity was not necessary to good sales. For the rest of her life, she refused to grant interviews.
In the 1930s, Heyer branched out from her Regency romances. The Conqueror, released in 1930, was her first historical novel. The following year she released her first thriller, Footsteps in the Dark. For the next decade, she released one historical romance and one thriller each year.
As Heyer's success grew, she had repeated problems with both the tax inspector and plagiarists. She refused to file a lawsuit against the alleged plagiarists, but tried multiple ways of minimizing her tax liability. A limited liability company to administer the rights to her novels was formed, but after Heyer was accused multiple times of taking an overly large salary from the company, she finally sold it, and the rights to the seventeen of her novels that the company owned, to Booker-McConnell.