Renee Roszel
Renée Rozsel is married. To a guy. An Engineer. When they were first married Renée asked her hubby how much he loved her, and he said, "50 board feet." Renée tells us she was in heaven. She assumed '50 board feet' was something akin to 50 light years you know, the length of time it would take a board to travel to the sun or something times 50. Okay, so Renée admits she's no math whiz. It took a lot of years before she found out 50 board feet actually meant 50 feet of board. She confronted her husband with this knowledge, demanding, "You mean, when we were first married, and you were at your most passionate, most adoring, that was all you could come up with You loved me 50 board feet?" But Renée admits it was her own fault. When she was dating, she specifically looked for a man who was good in math. She was so lousy at it, she had a horror of ever having to help children of her own with their arithmetic. So, once a man she dated let it slip that he couldn't multiply in his head, it was goodbye Sailor! If you want to know how Renée's 'looking-for-Mr.-Sliderule' worked out, well, by the time her children were fifth graders, they were better in math than either she or her husband. Besides that, they also spelled better. As it turned out, by marrying a smart man, Renée says she got an unexpected bonus! Smart kids! Who'da thought?
You may have already discovered one reason Renée loves writing romances. Yes, she can make up dialogue for the hero that bears no resemblance at all to 'I love you 50 board feet, darling.' Another reason Renée says she loves writing romances is because they're feel-good books. They help women find better, stronger paths in life. Renée says even she has become stronger due to writing spunky heroines. Once, when she was being belittled for what she wrote, she was preparing to be defensive, backing away flinching, when suddenly, in her mind, she screamed at herself, "Good grief, Renée, your heroine wouldn't be cringing and cowering like this!" So she stood up to the woman who was disparaging her, telling her what she really thought. Interestingly, instead of getting a scowling dressing-down, the disparager blinked, stuttered and disappeared into the crowd. Ah, power! The power of having the courage of our convictions. Renée firmly believes that's what romance novels help us find those of us who read them, as well as those of us who write them. So now you know who Renée is and why she loves what she does. Oh, one other thing Renee adds, "I love you 50 board feet...."
With over eight and a half million book sales worldwide, Renee Roszel has been writing for Mills & Boon and Silhouette since 1983. She has over 40 published novels to her credit. Renée's books have been published in foreign languages in far-flung countries ranging from Poland to New Zealand, Germany to Turkey, Japan to Brazil.