Margaret Pargeter (10 October 1925 – 11 February 2023; née Appleby) was a British romance novelist. Between 1975 and 1986, she published 49 romance novels with Harlequin and Mills & Boon, including titles such as Hold Me Captive and Boomerang Bride.[1] As of 1986, she was one of the most widely read authors in Britain, according to the Public Lending Right scheme.[2] Her first full-length novel, Misconception, was published in 1997 by Scarlet.[3]

Margaret Pargeter
BornMargaret Appleby
10 October 1925
Longhorsley, Northumberland, England
Died11 February 2023(2023-02-11) (aged 97)
Morpeth, Northumberland, England
OccupationNovelist
Period1975–1986, 1997
GenreRomantic novels

Early life

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Pargeter was born Margaret Appleby in Northumberland, England, on 10 October 1925.[4][1][5] Her father was a farmer in the Northumbrian Valley.[6] She started writing in her early teens, always carrying a notebook in her pocket so she could write stories and poems between chores on Smallburn Farm.[6][7] During the Second World War, she was a volunteer in the fire-fighting section of the Air Raid Precautions.[6]

Career

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In 1973, Pargeter had her first major break as a writer when her husband urged her to enter a writing competition advertised in the newspaper by a Scottish publishing firm.[6][7] Although she did not win the romantic story competition, the editor liked her style and asked her to write serial stories.[6][7] The publisher, Thompsons of Dundee, published a mystery story by Pargeter.[3] The experience gave her the confidence to write her first 66,000-word novel, originally titled Music in the Wind, and submit it to Mills & Boon, who accepted it.[7] The novel was set in the Hebrides where her family spent many holidays.[7]

By the time her first romance novel, Winds from the Sea, was published in 1975, Pargeter had a contract to publish two more.[7] Between 1975 and 1986, Pargeter published 49 romance novels with Mills & Boon in the United Kingdom, and with Harlequin in Canada.[1] In 1997, her 50th book and first full-length novel, Misconception, was published by Scarlet.[3]

Personal life

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Pargeter lived in Longhorsley near Morpeth.[7] Her husband Leslie, a building engineer, died in 1976 as a result of industrial exposure to asbestos.[8][7] They had two sons.[9] She died at home, aged 97, on 11 February 2023.[4]

Analysis

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In an analysis of the author's works, Arlene Moore argued that Pargeter had developed a distinctive style over the course of her career, "drawing on modern 'literary' techniques of writing".[9] She highlighted Pargeter's use of "inner turmoil as a constant counter-point as the heroine reacts to events in the novel", with plots that were "generally complicated as are her characters" as she "maintains near melodramatic levels of stress" throughout.[9]

Moore characterizes Pargeter's early novels such as Better to Forget (1977) and Ride a Black Horse (1975) as more "traditional" in their conflicts and reactions, while her later novels had the "heightened emotionalism" that became her trademark.[9] In The Devil's Bride (1979), the heroine Sandra is forced to marry her cousin's fiancé who has been blinded in a skiing accident, after being coerced by her cousin into deceiving him. Her new husband, a well-known writer, forces her to return to Greece with him, and treats her vindictively as he takes out his anger and frustrations on her. Despite the constant conflict, she grows to love him.[9]

In Boomerang Bride (1979), the male character Wade deeply resents his grandfather who desperately wants an heir to continue running their station in the outback. To spite him, Wade marries Vicki, a temporary home helper whom he considers "very ineligible", as a mutually agreed business arrangement. Although he is desperate not to have children, they succumb to passion. Vicki becomes pregnant and is sent away by her angry husband, only to return four years later with their son, Graham.[9]

In an analysis of Harlequin romances, Tania Modleski quotes extensively from Hold Me Captive (1976).[10] Modleski identifies common tropes within Harlequin romances that are evident in Pargeter's work, including the "more or less brutal" hero whose brutality must be explained by the novel, as well as the heroine's latent "anxiety about rape and longings for power and revenge", underlying an apparent "desire to be taken by force".[10]

In an analysis of Western "desert romances" and their exotification of sheiks, Evelyn Bach examines Pargeter's The Jewelled Caftan (1978).[11] Bach notes that the heroine is suspicious of a sheik she meets who is "clean and literate", which runs counter to her expectations; ironically, when the hero's part-French lineage is finally revealed, this somehow redeems him in the heroine's eyes.[11]

List of romance novels

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Title Mills & Boone Harlequin Scarlet
Winds from the Sea 1975 Does not appear
The Killed Stranger 1975 1976 Does not appear
Ride a Black Horse 1975 1976 Does not appear
Stormy Rapture 1976 Does not appear
Hold Me Captive 1976 Does not appear
Blue Skies, Dark Waters 1976 1977 Does not appear
Better to Forget 1977 1978 Does not appear
Never Go Back 1977 Does not appear
Flamingo Moon 1977 1978 Does not appear
Wild Inheritance 1977 1978 Does not appear
The Jewelled Caftan 1978 Does not appear
A Man Called Cameron 1978 Does not appear
Marriage Impossible 1978 Does not appear
Midnight Magic 1978 Does not appear
The Wild Rowan 1978 1979 Does not appear
Autumn Song 1979 Does not appear
Boomerang Bride 1979 1981 Does not appear
The Devil's Bride 1979 Does not appear
Only You 1979 Does not appear
Savage Possession 1979 1980 Does not appear
Kiss of a Tyrant 1980 Does not appear
Deception 1980 1981 Does not appear
Dark Surrender 1980 1981 Does not appear
The Dark Oasis 1980 1981 Does not appear
The Loving Slave 1981 1982 Does not appear
Captivity 1981 Does not appear
Collision 1981 Does not appear
At First Glance 1981 Does not appear
Substitute Bride 1981 1983 Does not appear
Man from the Kimberleys 1982 1983 Does not appear
Not Far Enough 1982 Does not appear
Prelude to a Song 1982 1983 Does not appear
Storm Cycle 1982 Does not appear
Storm in the Night 1983 1984 Does not appear
Clouded Rapture 1983 Does not appear
Chains of Regret 1983 Does not appear
Carribbean Gold 1983 Does not appear
The Demetrious Line 1983 Does not appear
The Silver Flame 1983 Does not appear
Born of the Wind 1984 Does not appear
The Odds Against 1984 Does not appear
Captive of Fate 1985 Does not appear
Impasse 1985 Does not appear
Total Surrender 1985 Does not appear
Lost Enchantment 1985 Does not appear
Model of Deception 1985 Does not appear
The Other Side of Paradise 1985 Does not appear
Beyond Reach 1986 Does not appear
A Scarlet Woman 1986 Does not appear
Misconception Does not appear 1997

Sources: Twentieth Century Romance and Historical Writers (1994);[1] Misconception (1997)[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Moore, Arlene (1994). "PARGETER, Margaret". Twentieth-century romance and historical writers. London; Detroit: St. James Press. pp. 504–505. ISBN 1558621806.
  2. ^ Mitgang, Herbert (30 March 1986). "Penny for their thoughts – How authors can get library 'royalties'". The New York Times Book Review. Retrieved 30 September 2024 – via Gale General OneFile.
  3. ^ a b c d Pargeter, Margaret (1997). Misconception. London: Scarlet. ISBN 1854879979.
  4. ^ a b "The obituary notice of Margaret PARGETER (née Appleby)". The Journal. Newcastle. Retrieved 2 October 2024 – via Funeral Notices.
  5. ^ "Mrs Margaret Pargeter" in the England and Wales Death Index, 1989–2023. West Yorkshire: Wilmington Millennium.
  6. ^ a b c d e "MARGARET PARGETER". The first 30 years of the world's best romance fiction. Harlequin Enterprises. 1979. pp. 220–223. ISBN 9780373000012.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h "Romance of a farmer's daughter". Evening Chronicle. Newcastle-upon-Tyne. 6 March 1975. Retrieved 2 October 2024.
  8. ^ "Asbestos death". The Journal. Newcastle-upon-Tyne. 30 March 1976 – via Newspapers.com.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Moore, Arlene (1990). "PARGETER, MARGARET". Twentieth-century romance and historical writers. Chicago: St. James Press. pp. 508–509. ISBN 1558621806.
  10. ^ a b Modleski, Tania (1992). "The Disappearing Act: Harlequin Romances". In Irons, Glenwood (ed.). Gender, Language and Myth. University of Toronto Press. pp. 20–45. ISBN 9780802050045.
  11. ^ a b Bach, Evelyn (May 1997). "Sheik Fantasies: Orientalism and Feminine Desire in the Desert Romance". Hecate. 23 (1) – via EBSCOhost.