Book A Magical Trip by Maida Malby

“A book is a magical thing that lets you travel to far-away places without ever leaving your chair.” Katrina Mayer

I grew up in the Philippines and coming from a poor family, I did not have the resources to travel out of my birth country until I was already a working adult. Thankfully, I had a bookworm for a father and a teacher for a mother who both encouraged me from a young age to read books that took me all over the world before I was able to actually travel to the locations in which they were set.

Judith Krantz’s I’ll Take Manhattan familiarized me with New York City landmarks prior to my first visit there in 1994. I had seen the grandeur of the Sydney Opera House through Emma Darcy’s Harlequin romances set in Australia before I beheld it for the first time in 1998. Peter Mayle’s A Year in Provence had me enthralled with the South of France years before I toured Europe in 1999. Imagine how often I’ve been to England from reading books by Jane Austen, the Brontë sisters, Barbara Cartland, Judith McNaught, Julie Garwood, and Johanna Lindsey. Truly, if there’s a special passport that gets stamped every time I travel in books, I would have to renew it every year.

I want to believe that this is the same for millions of readers all over the world. In reality, however, the US-centric world of Romancelandia has limited book travel options to Asia. There’s Sonali Dev’s angsty A Distant Heart which transported me to India and Hong Kong, Sherry Thomas’s epic The Hidden Blade and My Beautiful Enemy duology set in Imperial China, and Mina V. Esguerra and her Romance Class cohorts’ works which always bring me home to the Philippines.

There are a few others but I feel strongly about the need for many more books to take readers to the biggest continent on Earth without leaving their homes. That’s why, when I started writing, I’ve chosen to conjure the magic of traveling through books by setting my first series in my home region of Southeast Asia. I’d like readers of Carpe Diem Chronicles to not only visit the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand when they read Boracay Vows, Singapore Fling, Samui Heat, and Palawan Promises, but also to experience the cultures through the languages, customs, and food I feature in them.

People fall in love all around the world. The magic is in witnessing that love blossom within the pages of a book.


Maida Malby writes, reads, reviews, and lives Romance. Through her multicultural contemporary romance stories, she takes readers to her favorite places in the world and shares her experiences of their rich cultural heritage.

She is a member of the Romance Writers of America (RWA), San Antonio Romance Authors (SARA), Cultural, Interracial, Multicultural Special Interest Chapter of the Romance Writers of America (CIMRWA), and several romance book clubs. Her To-Be-Read Mountain and reviews of romance novels are featured on her website .maidamalby.com.

When not writing, reading, or reviewing books, Maida consults her husband on word selection, debates with her ten-year-old son regarding the Oxford comma, cooks the dishes she features in her stories, procrastibakes using Baileys as her secret yummy ingredient, and watches golf and food shows on TV.

(This article was first posted at Read-A-Romance-Month https://www.readaromancemonth.com/2019/08/rarm19-maida-malby-book-a-magical-trip/)

 

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Nan De Plume
Nan De Plume
Guest
11/05/2019 9:43 pm

Books and the libraries that house them are beautiful things indeed. (A certain e-book publisher who has not been kind to libraries and their patrons via punitive embargoes shall remain nameless at this time…)

You are so right about the limited romance novel travel options to Asia. I have nothing against Regency and contemporary American romances, but the market is inundated with them. This can make it difficult to discover all the amazing stories that take place in other eras, areas, etc. So thank you, Ms. Malby for your wonderful guest post and Ms. Russomanno for all the links.

“Maida… debates with her ten-year-old son regarding the Oxford comma.” As a fellow writer, dare I ask where you stand in this debate?

Robin
Robin
Guest
11/05/2019 8:54 pm

What a magical post! Thank you.

nblibgirl
nblibgirl
Guest
11/05/2019 3:05 pm

Thanks for this post! I’m mostly an armchair traveler but am looking for inspiration for the real thing. Maybe reading more books in these settings is the motivation I need to actually get out there and explore some new places.

Maria Rose
Maria Rose
Guest
11/05/2019 8:20 am

I love books with settings not in North America – I’m always up for learning something new about countries I’m unfamiliar with. Thanks for the post Maida!

Maida Malby
Maida Malby
Guest
Reply to  Maria Rose
11/05/2019 10:10 am

Thank you, Maria. I also learn more about these countries as I write. When we’ve been living in a place for so long, sometimes we take for granted things tourists and foreigners find fascinating.

Caroline Russomanno
Caroline Russomanno
Member
11/04/2019 7:27 pm

I’m delighted to see this because I featured the Philippines in our Tropical Romance Book Club and really loved it as a setting. (The book was a wonderful novella, Bianca Mori’s One Night at the Palace Hotel – she’s a RomanceClass author – and you can see the interview here: https://allaboutromance.com/the-tropical-romance-book-club-features-bianca-mori/)

Our tagging project in the database is ENORMOUS so this is woefully incomplete, but I do have some Asia tags started. If you’re looking for Asia reads, try:

China: https://allaboutromance.com/review-tag/china/
India: https://allaboutromance.com/review-tag/india/
Pakistan: https://allaboutromance.com/review-tag/pakistan
Korea: https://allaboutromance.com/review-tag/korea/
Japan: https://allaboutromance.com/review-tag/japan
Malaysia: https://allaboutromance.com/review-tag/malaysia/
Indonesia: https://allaboutromance.com/review-tag/indonesia/
Thailand: https://allaboutromance.com/review-tag/thailand
Vietnam: https://allaboutromance.com/review-tag/vietnam/
Singapore: https://allaboutromance.com/review-tag/singapore
And of course
the Philippines: https://allaboutromance.com/review-tag/philippines/

(Sorry about the capitalization on some countries… the DB did it at some point and I can’t figure out how to change it!)

Maida Malby
Maida Malby
Guest
Reply to  Caroline Russomanno
11/05/2019 9:51 am

This is awesome, Caroline. Hope to see my books tagged as Recommended Reads under those country headings in the near future.