Carla Kelly

Carla Sue Kelly (born 1947) is an American writer in the Regency romance genre. She is the author of over forty books and short stories. Her books are what romance readers call "keepers," i.e. books they keep in their private collections, and accordingly they can be hard to find. Renowned for what she calls "dukeless" regencies, her stories often revolve around ordinary people solving their own problems. While many Regency romances feature soldiers returned from the Napoleonic Wars, several of Kelly's books include soldiers and sailors actively involved in the Peninsular campaign and in the naval blockade that prevented France from invading England, bringing this war to life in an unforgettable way. However, her regencies only reflect a part of her writing interests. She also has a strong interest in the American West, which is reflected in her earliest published works and in her non-fiction. Since 2011, Kelly, who has a Mormon background,[1] has written four historical romance novels that focus on the lives of young Mormon women: Borrowed Light, Enduring Light, My Loving Vigil Keeping, and Safe Passage.

Carla Kelly
BornCarla Sue Kelly
1947
United States
Occupation
Period1978–present
Genre
  • romance
  • historical fiction
  • history
Notable works
Notable awards
SpouseMartin Kelly
Website
www.carlakellyauthor.com

Biography

Born in 1947, Carla Sue Kelly calls herself a navy brat. The daughter of a Navy Officer, she grew up overseas or on one coast of the United States or the other. She graduated from Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah where she studied Latin American history. She completed a master's degree at the University of Louisiana-Monroe, in American history, with a focus on the Civil War and Indian Wars.

In her varied professional career Kelly has worked as a ranger/historian with the National Park Service at Fort Laramie National Historic Site, and a ranger at Fort Union Trading Post National Historic Site; a contract research historian for the State Historical Society of North Dakota and history instructor at university level. Kelly is a former staff features writer for the Valley City Times Record newspaper based in Valley City, North Dakota.

Kelly lives in Idaho Falls, Idaho. She is married to Martin Kelly, former Director of Theatre at Valley City State University, in Valley City, North Dakota, who is now retired. The couple has five grown children now located in various parts of America.

Literary influences

When interviewed by Lola Sparks in Purple Pens, Kelly identified the following writers as having influenced her:

In her author profile on the e-Harlequin site, Kelly says her three favorite fictional works have remained constant through the years, although their rankings tend to shift: War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy, The Lawrenceville Stories by Owen Johnson, and A Town Like Alice by Nevil Shute. Her favorite historical works are One Vast Winter Count, On the Border with Mackenzie, and Crossing the Line. Her favorite crime fiction authors are Michael Connelly, John Harvey, and Peter Robinson.

Writing career

Kelly began writing Regency Romances because of her interest in the Napoleonic Wars (1803-1815). A major theme in her books is how war touches the lives of ordinary people. In surviving the effects of war and in helping other survivors her characters find in themselves qualities of strength and purpose not previously evident. They are quiet achievers influencing the world on small, personal stages, making a difference in their own lives and others ultimately by acts of kindness rather than daring. Kelly goes against the norms of the genre by focusing her attention not on the glittering world of London society and the social elite, but on the other 99.9% of the population occupying England. Her stories are distinguished by authentic, well-researched detail and lightened by a ready sense of humour.

Kelly has also written an acclaimed series of short stories about the men, women and children of Fort Laramie during the Indian Wars era of American history. In 2003 her entire collection of Indian War stories was re-published in Here's to the Ladies: Stories from the Frontier Army. Two of these stories A Season for Heroes and Kathleen Flaherty's Long Winter were awarded Spur Awards from the Western Writers of America.

Awards

Bibliography

Benedict Nesbitt Series

  • Libby's London Merchant (1991)
  • One Good Turn (2001)

Channel Fleet Trilogy

  • Marrying the Captain (2009)
  • The Surgeon's Lady (2009)
  • Marrying the Royal Marine (2010)

Borrowed Light Series

  • Borrowed Light (2011)
  • Enduring Light (2012)

Spanish Brand Series

  • Double Cross (2013)
  • Marco and the Devil's Bargain (2014)
  • Paloma and the Horse Traders (2015)
  • The Star in the Meadow (2017)

Stand Alone Novels

  • Daughter of Fortune (1985)
  • Summer Campaign (1989)
  • Miss Chartley's Guided Tour (1989)
  • Marian's Christmas Wish (1989)
  • Mrs. McVinnie's London Season (1990)
  • Miss Grimsley's Oxford Career (1992)
  • Miss Billings Treads the Boards (1993)
  • Miss Whittier Makes a List (1994)
  • Mrs. Drew Plays Her Hand (1994)
  • Reforming Lord Ragsdale (1995)
  • The Lady's Companion (1996)
  • With This Ring (1997)
  • Miss Milton Speaks Her Mind (1998)
  • The Wedding Journey (2002)
  • Beau Crusoe (2007)
  • The Admiral's Penniless Bride (2010)
  • Coming Home for Christmas (2011)
  • Marriage of Mercy (2012)
  • My Loving Vigil Keeping (2012)
  • Her Hesitant Heart (2013)
  • Safe Passage (2013)
  • The Wedding Ring Quest (2014)
  • Softly Falling (2014)
  • Doing No Harm (2015)
  • Courting Carrie in Wonderland (2017)
  • The Unlikely Master Genius (2018)
  • One Step Enough (2018)

Short Stories

This list excludes articles written in her capacity of journalist or feature writer for various newspapers and magazines, primarily in North Dakota.

  • A Season for Heroes. FAR West Magazine, 1978
  • Kathleen Flaherty's Long Winter. FAR West Magazine, 1981
  • Something New in Wedding Bouquet. Signet, 1996
  • Make a Joyful Noise in A Regency Christmas Carol. Signet, 1997
  • The Christmas Ornament in A Regency Christmas. Signet, 1998
  • An Object of Charity in A Regency Christmas Present. Signet, 1999
  • The Background Man in The Grand Hotel. Signet, 2000
  • The Three Kings in The Regency Christmas II. Signet, 2000
  • The Buffalo Carcass on the Company Sink: Sanitation at a Frontier Army Fort. North Dakota History: Journal of the Northern Plains. Vol. 69, 2002
  • The Light Within in A Regency Valentine II. Signet, 2002
  • No Room at the Inn in The Regency Christmas IX. Signet, 2002
  • Here's to the Ladies: Stories of the Frontier Army. Texas Christian University Press, 2003
  • Let Nothing You Dismay in Regency Christmas Wishes. Signet, 2003
  • 'To Restore these Children': Fort Totten's Preventorium, 1935–1940. Northern Great Plains History Conference (2004: Bismarck, North Dakota)
  • A Hasty Marriage in Wedding Belles. Signet, 2004
  • On the Upper Missouri: The Journal of Rudolph Friedrich Kurz, 1851–1852. University of Oklahoma Press, 2005 (Editor)
  • An Object of Charity in A Homespun Regency Christmas. Signet, 2008 Note: re-issue of short story published originally in A Regency Christmas Present. Signet, 1999
  • "Christmas Promise" in "A Regency Christmas." Harlequin, October 2009
  • Carla Kelly's Christmas Collection (Cedar Fort, Inc., from Signet reprints), October 2013
  • In Love and War (Cedar Fort, Inc., from Signet reprints), November 2013
  • Season's Regency Greetings: Two Christmas Novellas, November 2014
  • All Regency Collection (A Timeless Romance Anthology Book 10, January 2015)
  • "Christmas Eve Proposal" in It Happened One Christmas (2015)
  • "Christmas Dance with the Rancher" in Western Christmas Proposals (2016)
  • For This We Are Soldiers: Tales of the Frontier Army (2016)
  • A Season of Love (2017)
  • "Captain Grey's Christmas Proposal" in Regency Christmas Wishes (2017)

Awards

  • Spur Award – Western Writers of America, Best Short Fiction – 1978, "A Season for Heroes," published in Here's to the Ladies: Stories of the Frontier Army, 2004, Texas Christian University Press.
  • Spur Award – Western Writers of America, Best Short Fiction – 1981, "Kathleen Flaherty’s Long Winter," published in Here's to the Ladies: Stories of the Frontier Army, 2004, Texas Christian University Press.
  • Career Achievement Award – Romantic Times, 1994-95
  • Rita Award – Romance Writers of America, Best Regency of the Year – 1995, Mrs. Drew Plays Her Hand
  • Rita Award – Romance Writers of America, Best Regency of the Year – 1997, The Lady's Companion
  • Whitney Award – LDStorymakers, Best Romance Fiction – 2011, Borrowed Light
  • Whitney Award – LDStorymakers, Best Historical Fiction – 2012, My Loving Vigil Keeping
  • Whitney Award Finalist – LDStorymakers, Best Historical Fiction – 2013, Safe Passage

References

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