During ten years of research into Georgette Heyer’s life and writing, Jennifer Kloester has had unlimited access to Heyer’s notebooks and private papers and the Heyer family records, and exclusive access to several untapped archives of the writer’s early letters. The result? A groundbreaking biography of one of Britain’s best-loved and bestselling novelists. Here, writing exclusively for Women on the Page, Kloester celebrates 80 years of Heyer’s first Regency novel, Regency Buck.

It is a rare author who can claim to have created a genre but, had she wished to do so, it is a claim which bestselling novelist Georgette Heyer could reasonably have made. This year marks the eightieth anniversary of the publication of her first Regency novel, Regency Buck, and thus the inception of what has become the most popular of all historical fiction genres.

Regency BuckHeyer began writing Regency Buck the year before its publication in September 1935. It was to be her nineteenth book and the first time she had chosen to set a story in what would come to be considered an iconic era in British history. The English Regency (1811-1820) was a period notable for (among other things) its extravagance, its drinking and gambling, manners and mores, rigid social hierarchy and its artistic achievements. The Regency upper class, known as ‘the ton’, was notorious and not least for its profligate and charismatic leader, the Prince Regent, and (until his exile in 1816) his clever favourite – that famous arbiter of elegance, Beau Brummell.

In 1934, Heyer, who already had several contemporary, detective and historical novels to her credit, had discovered a wealth of contemporary Regency material in the London Library. Ever a meticulous researcher she read widely and found much to inspire her in a range of books including such useful volumes as Annals of the Ring, Pugulistica, Egan’s Life in London, Brayley’s Account of the Pavilion and Lewis Melville’s Beaux of the Regency. A lifelong devotee of Jane Austen’s novels (and from which she would draw much of her Regency vocabulary), Heyer also made use of R.W. Chapman’s annotated Pride and Prejudice and its 1811-12 chronology – the same years in which she chose to set Regency Buck.

In the 1930s there were very few books written specifically about the Regency period and so Heyer depended mainly on contemporary sources. Her first preference was for Regency-era memoirs and letters, as well as novels written by those who had lived in the period. In the midst of her research she wrote enthusiastically to her agent, L.P. Moore, that: “I’m going to open Regency Buck with a Prize Fight – probably Cribb’s second battle with Molyneux, at Thistleton Gap…There will also be a bit of cocking, possibly a meeting of the Beefsteaks, certainly a coaching race to Brighton & a street mill. It ought to be a lovely book.”

It was a lovely book, though she never again filled a novel with quite so much historical detail as she did in Regency Buck. Heyer later confessed that she had “loved writing it” and that she had especially enjoyed recreating the language of the period. She had a remarkable ear for language and her ability to create convincing period dialogue was to become one of the hallmarks of her novels. In Regency Buck, Heyer also took pleasure in weaving real historical figures into the book. At one point she had the Regent’s brother, the Duke of Clarence, propose to her heroine on the entirely believable basis that the wealthy Miss Taverner might alleviate the debt-laden Duke’s financial woes. She later said of this scene that “I knew it was a High Light”.

HeyerHeyer’s enjoyment in writing her first Regency shows. Regency Buck is a rollicking, sparkling tale of romance, adventure and intrigue but it is also, in true Heyer style, more than a mere bubble of a novel. Underpinning a compelling plot and strongly-delineated characters is a wealth of hard-won research and an understanding of the social peccadilloes of the era that she would make her own. Not long after its publication in 1935 Heyer, in a rare moment of self-praise, noted that “It is the best I’ve done, you know. Actual writing & technique, I mean.” Remarkably, her finest books were still to come – more than two dozen of them to delight millions of readers the world over – and most of them would be the Regency novels with which she would create a genre.

Jennifer Kloester
February 2015

Jennifer Kloester’s biography of Georgette Heyer is available now. To follow Jennifer on Twitter, head here.

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Join the conversation! 3 Comments

  1. I have read almost all georgette heyer’sregency romances.my father was a die hard fan &started us- my sister&me ,on her. Now ,my daughter is a fan.Each of us have our own individual collection of Heyer’sbooks in our library. Always wondered how Heyer could write so much& so well about the regency era.she has made it her own.none of the other authors come anywhere near her.

    Reply
  2. Despite many attempts to recreate the “Regency” romance, no one seems to have been able to capture the wonderful style of G.H. Her novels sound so real, vibrant and utterly believable as well as being witty and funny. It is a source of great sorrow to me that she is no longer with us!!

    Reply

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