MH: Tell us something about your career's trajectory. MH: If you were not a romance writer, what genre might you be writing? SJ: I like the secret behind his masterpiece, I like that the heroine's hobby is collecting slang terms for her dictionary, and I love Jeremy and Yvette together. MH: What are some of your favorite elements of this book? It's truly tragic, the kind of thing that will make any woman hurt for him.Īlso, he's an artist consumed by his work, and who doesn't like a brooding artist who spends his days bantering with the heroine and his nights trying not to lust after her while she poses for his masterpiece in her scandalous attire? On the surface he seems like a big ol' rake who doesn't care about anything, but that's because he's hiding a terrible loss from his past that he's avoiding coming to grips with. MH: Why will readers fall in love with the hero? As their practical bargain leads to passion and then to an unveiling of their darkest secrets, they discover that lessons in the art of sinning can sometimes lead to love. The rebellious young heiress agrees to be his subject only if he grants her a potentially scandalous favor. SJ: American artist Jeremy Keane finds inspiration for his next masterpiece when he meets Lady Yvette Barlow at a London wedding. Despite the hectic preparations for the RWA conference this week, I managed to get a few minutes with Sabrina Jeffries, whose new book, The Art of Sinning, was released yesterday (July 21).
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