Official Bio
In her writing, romance author Dina Keratsis integrates her belief that true love is not a fairy tale in her writing and pistachio ice cream is the potential cure for most of life's slights.
Her first novel, Charlesgate, about the old Boston hotel by the same name, “offers up a tale one needs to read curled up in front of the fire with a throw over your toes,” according to NovelSpot Reviews. Lighthouse Literary Reviews called its spin-off, Kicking Sideways, “a story that shouldn’t be missed.”
Her third book, Cake, A Fairy Tale, is a romantic fantasy about a girl who would be queen and arrives a virtual bookstore near you in May 2007. Look for it at Wings ePress.
A graduate of Wheaton College and Boston University, Dina lives in the Boston area with her husband, son, and two intrepid Pointers, Logan and Stella.
Real Bio
(or Why I Write Romances)
There’s no getting away from fate.
Just ask George Emerson from A
Room With a View.
My fate was pretty much sealed when the blood of two houses intermingled.
What happens after a romance novel ends? Just ask my parents. After thirty-eight
years of marriage, they still look at each other with gooey eyes.
Aside from inheriting the romance gene, the folks
passed on their mutual love of books and in my teens, I discovered
Twain, Forster, Bronte, Eliot, Dickens, and Hurston. Nurture with a
steady diet of Nana’s romance
novels and a teenage penchant for unrequited love and you’ve got
the makings of a future romance novelist.
Then I went to college, a feminist college no
less, and one that was newly jolted by the invasion of men into its
virgin ranks. And in the eminent Professor Shaw’s literature
course, I learned all about my beloved George Eliot’s poor opinion
of lady novelists. I also learned that Ms. Eliot understood the power
of love.
George Eliot proves through her characters that
a person is exalted or ruined depending on who one chooses to love.
More importantly, she shows the necessity of self-awareness and straight
truth before one even ventures to love. Most importantly, she shows
that the only reason to marry is true love – not status, wealth,
vanity, loneliness, or infatuation.
All a romance novel does is focus on this one noble theme.
Are they fantasy? Of course. Escapism? No doubt.
But behind every fairy tale, we all know, is fact. Do Eliot’s Daniel Deronda and McNaught’s
Matt Farrell exist in real life?
Damn straight they do.
A woman shouldn’t settle for anything less.
And it’s my fate to prove it. Hope you enjoy.
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