Sarah MacLean

Image of Sarah MacLean
The best partnerships aren't dependent on a mere common goal but on a shared path of equality, desire, and no small amount of passion.
- Sarah MacLean
Collection: Best
Image of Sarah MacLean
There is perhaps no more rewarding romance heroine than she who is not expected to find love. The archetype comes in many disguises - the wallflower, the spinster, the governess, the single mom - but always with one sad claim: Love is not in her cards.
- Sarah MacLean
Collection: Sad
Image of Sarah MacLean
Teenagers are asking, 'Who am I?' and 'How do I fit in?' in every aspect of their lives, and the best YA romances appreciate that there is more to a teen's life than finding love.
- Sarah MacLean
Collection: Teen
Image of Sarah MacLean
That first meeting - the one where the hero and heroine start the slow burn that takes the whole story to turn into true love - is the single most important part of the whole book. Nail it, and you've won yourself readers.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
Of all the myriad ways we define love, there is perhaps none more honest and powerful than this: Great love is rooted in great partnership.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
Like so many others, I came to romance during the golden age of it - Judith McNaught, Julie Garwood, Johanna Lindsey and Jude Deveraux were at the height of their historical domination. Without those women, I wouldn't be a romance novelist.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
For the most part, my characters don't talk to me. I like to lord over them like some kind of benevolent deity. And, for the most part, my characters go along with it. I write intense character sketches and long, play-like conversations between me and them, but they stay out of the book writing itself.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
I want to wake up one morning and know how to write page one, or page 10, or page 250. But I never seem to know how to do it. Every book is different and takes a different structure, style, process, etc. And relearning how to write is where the insanity comes from.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
As for the zone, I always find the zone immediately after I am sure I will never ever find the zone again because it has left me for some other, better writer.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
If you think back to your time as a teenager, everything was dramatic.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
I think we can all agree that Colin Firth falls into the George Clooney category of 'Men Who Age Like Fine Wine.'
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
'A Rogue by Any Other Name' is the first book in the 'Rules of Scoundrels' series, centered on a legendary pre-Victorian casino and her four scandalous aristocratic owners.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
By the time I was 10 or 12, I had discovered the lure of the romance genre - and the dusty copy of 'The Thorn Birds' on my parents' bookshelf.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
Colleen McCullough taught me that desire is the heart of romance.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
There is a whole generation of romance readers and writers who suffer from what I like to think of as 'Thorn Birds' Fever.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
I never met Colleen McCullough; if I had, I probably would have cried and made a fool of myself.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
I'm so thrilled to have won the RITA. The award is particularly special because it is given by other romance authors. It's deeply rewarding and not a little humbling to be honored by such a talented tribe of writers.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
No matter how troubled a character's history, romance novels tell us, love can be built upon it, and happily-ever-after can result. What's more, the darker the past, the brighter the future - and the better the read.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
Boring heroines are, in my opinion, the most common romance mistake. We loathe hanging out with women who define themselves purely through their relationships... why would we want to read about them?
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
In real life, I'd say that your commitment-phobe/narcissist/bad boy boyfriend is a lost cause, but romance is shelved in fiction for a reason.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
The trick to great romance is in overcoming adversity. In realizing that love is worth some uphill climbs.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
Even in 2014, when romance heroes are as varied as their genre, somewhere in them you can still always find the alpha male.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
No doubt, much of the joy of a great romance is the moment when these stoic heroes crack open and reveal themselves to their heroines - the only women strong enough to match them.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
Gone are the days when heroes are emotionally locked away from the world until the end of the book, and thank goodness for that. Modern romance heroes are more complex than ever.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
At the heart of every successful romance novel lies the evolution of its characters. Through love, heroes and heroines grow not only into a perfect match, but into stronger, better, more admirable people.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
Perhaps summer's ephemeral nature is what inspires us to embrace the beach read. We tell ourselves that these twisted plots and wild characters are literary ice cream sundaes - extravagant treats that aren't as calorie-laden when we're wearing flip flops.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
Alas, summer sun can't last forever. The days will grow cooler and shorter, and our skin will once again pale.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
In fiction, as in real life, love might inspire acts that are at best foolish and at worst life-threatening, but in the best romances, love is the final, secret ingredient that turns mere mortals into heroes and heroines.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
One of the most common criticisms of romance is that the genre is too prescribed: If every romance novel ends happily ever after, don't the stories lack complexity? Don't the readers get bored?
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
Critics seem to forget that every love story is different - that there is uniqueness in even the most commonplace of matches.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
When it comes to love, the English language bears no shortage of cliches.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
I think back on that day when 16-year-old me scribbled on some silly piece of paper for some long-forgotten high school career-day project that my dream job was 'romance novelist.'
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
I'm not entirely sure why I write.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
As a romance novelist, I have a rather skewed view of babies. You see, they don't typically fit into the classic structure of the romance novel - romance is about two people finding each other and falling in love against insurmountable odds. Babies... well... babies are complicated.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
In seven books, I've written my fair share of baby epilogues. Pregnancies and births and even grandchildren have made an appearance in the final pages of my books.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
Here's the thing about romance novels: The moment when the hero and heroine discover that they're perfect for each other is often the moment when it's them against the world.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
In books by women and for women, it should come as no surprise that heroines are the heroes of the action, finding themselves, their power and their future through love.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
Romance readers love a wealthy hero, and why not? There's value in a man able to hire a helicopter, a coach and six horses, or a collection of werewolves to do his bidding - and the bidding of the lucky woman on his arm.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
The best romance writers know there's nothing that builds conflict or makes a gentleman of a rogue more quickly than responsibility.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
As winter approaches - bringing cold weather and family drama - we crave page-turners, books made for long nights and tryptophan-induced sloth.
- Sarah MacLean
Image of Sarah MacLean
I had a perfect life in my reach once, and it was a crashing bore. Perfect is too clean, too easy. I don't want perfect any more than I want to be perfect. I want imperfect.
- Sarah MacLean
Collection: Perfect
Image of Sarah MacLean
You are my siren,” he said, running his hands along her thighs and down her calves, feeling the shape of her even as the silk of her gown kept them both from what they wanted. “My temptress . . . my sorceress . . . I cannot resist you, no matter how I try. You threaten to send me over the edge.
- Sarah MacLean
Collection: Running
Image of Sarah MacLean
To be honest, I thought it was similar to animal husbandry." Sally's tone turned dry. "Sometimes, my lady I'm afraid it isn't that different." Pippa paused, considering the ords. "Is that so?" "Men are uncomplicated, generally," Sally said, all too sage. "They're beasts when they want to be." "Brute ones!" "Ah, so you understand." Pippa tilted her head to one side. "I've read about them." Sally nodded. "Erotic texts?" "The book of Common Prayer.
- Sarah MacLean
Collection: Prayer
Image of Sarah MacLean
The most confident of women are those who believe in every scrap of fabric they wear. They are the ones who are as happy wih their drawers as they are with their gowns. You can tell the difference between a woman who wraps herself in beautiful silks and satins and she who wears...otherwise.
- Sarah MacLean
Collection: Beautiful
Image of Sarah MacLean
I practice loving-kindness meditation, which cultivates compassion and equanimity.
- Sarah MacLean
Collection: Kindness
Image of Sarah MacLean
I feel able to comfort myself emotionally, and this keeps my heart open.
- Sarah MacLean
Collection: Heart
Image of Sarah MacLean
Silent mantra practice helps me respond rather than react.
- Sarah MacLean
Collection: Practice
Image of Sarah MacLean
I've spent twenty-eight years doing what everyone around me expected me to do...being what everyone around me has expected me to be. And it's horrid to be someone else's vision of yourself.
- Sarah MacLean
Collection: Eight
Image of Sarah MacLean
Why now? Why not wait for a man to come along and…sweep you off your feet?” She gave a short laugh. “If the man you speak of had ever planned on coming, my lord, I’m afraid he has obviously lost his way. And, at twenty-eight, I find I have grown tired of waiting.
- Sarah MacLean
Collection: Tired
Image of Sarah MacLean
You are beautiful and brilliant and bold and so very passionate about life and love and those things that you believe in. And you taught me that everything I believed, everything I thought I wanted, everything I had spent my life espousing--all of it...it is wrong. I want your version of life...vivid and emotional and messy and wonderful and filled with happiness. But I cannot have it without you.
- Sarah MacLean
Collection: Beautiful