Ann Redmont

“I declare after all there is no enjoyment like reading! How much sooner one tires of any thing than of a book! — When I have a house of my own, I shall be miserable if I have not an excellent library.”
― Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice

Latest Posts


  • 🌿 Love Without Words in the Regency Era

    On glances, restraint, and the language beneath conversation There is a curious assumption in modern storytelling that love must be loudly declared in order to be understood. And yet, in the Regency era, quite the opposite was often true. To… Continue reading

  • 🌿 The Governess in Regency Society

    Between worlds, between expectations There are few figures in Regency society more quietly complex than the governess. She is, in many ways, both present and unseen. Neither servant nor family.Educated, yet not fully accepted.Entrusted with influence, yet rarely granted authority.… Continue reading

  • 🌿 Why I Write Clean Regency Romance

    On restraint, meaning, and the kind of love that endures There is a particular kind of love story that does not rely on immediacy. It does not rush forward, nor does it seek to persuade through intensity alone. Instead, it… Continue reading

  • 🌿 Welcome to Ann Redmont

    On stories, quiet moments, and the enduring power of love There are certain kinds of stories that do not announce themselves loudly. They do not begin with spectacle or urgency, nor do they demand attention through force of emotion. Instead,… Continue reading

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