Jane Porter's Bulletin Board

Find out more on the Galvan Family Tree Series. Below are Jane’s three other books from the Galvan Family Tree:


The Latin Lover’s Secret Child

 


The Spaniard’s Passion

 

Mistaken For A Mistress
(free online serial) - Sorry, no longer available.

 

 

 

 

Argentina


One of Argentina's beautiful historic estancias.

 

Her Latin Lover is a UK anthology featuring Lazaro's Revenge.
Visit Buenos Aires, Argentina with Jane and
In Dante's Debt
and Lazaro's Revenge.
Both are from the Galvan Brides series.


North American Editions



Buenos Aires, Argentina


Tango dancers showcase their talent at San Telmo square.


Buenos Aires' famous cemetary where all Argentina's important people are buried, including Eva Perron.


Changing of the guards at St. Martin's square; they parade before the Pink House


Free tango and comedy show in La Boca


The colorful historic buildings in La Boca, one of the old immigrant barrios

I write because I love adventure and writing for Harlequin Presents lets me travel all over the world. But I want to be accurate so when I start a new book or series for Harlequin Presents, I head out on a...ahem, research trip. I know all about www.google.com, but why sit at the computer if I can jump on a plane?

Last April I flew to Argentina for 11 days to research my new Galván Brides series for Harlequin. The great thing about flying to Buenos Aires from the US is that it's only an hour ahead of East Coast time so you don't arrive jet-lagged. After checking into the Alveár Palace, one of Argentina's top 5 star hotels, we hit the town. Buenos Aires is a very sexy, cosmopolitan city that that's part New York and part Paris, and a city that doesn't come to life until after ten pm! I did everything possible from taking in tango shows to exploring old Italian and Spanish barrios like La Boca and San Telmo but we never did get used to eating enormous steak dinners at midnight and rolling into bed two hours later with impossibly full stomachs.

Argentina is full of warm, sultry, sensual beauty. In San Telmo I learned that the tango isn't a prescribed set of steps. Rather, each tango is performed impromptu. The reason the man holds the woman so tightly is to enhance communication as the woman is responsible for following his lead, and his changing will. I loved watching dancers perform the tango as its quite emotional at times and it fits Argentina's personality. In Argentina it's an insult not to flirt!

After four days in Buenos Aires I spent the next two days exploring the pampas and visiting estancias. One of my favorite days was spent at San Antonio de Areco, home of the revered gaucho. My third book, The Latin Lover's Secret Child, is about Anabella Galván and Lucio, her gaucho lover, and touring old estancias, and having afternoon tea at another, gave me a wonderful glimpse of life on the pampas.

Six days after arriving in Argentina we hoped on a plane for Iguzau, up in the north. Iguzau is like no other place on earth. The amazing waterfalls and rainforest is bordered by three countries -- Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay - - and Iguazu National Park was the setting for the movie, "The Mission" (starring Robert DeNiro and Jeremy Irons) about the Jesuits from Spain and Portugal who built missions in the rainforest, attempting to convert the native Indians. You can still visit the haunting mission ruins today, where they rise in red stonearches from the jungle vines, and my fourth Galván book, featuring Alonso Huntsman, takes place at the falls.

I was desperate to get as close as possible to the roaring falls and we ended up bumping along the falls using the twisting catwalks, taking a speedboat up the river beneath the base of the first set of falls, and then a helicopter over the horseshoe shaped falls to get every perspective possible. Our tour guide assured us the boat trip up the river to the falls was accessible, but it wasn't until after we'd paid our money and taken a jolting jeep ride to the rainforest cliffs that we discovered that the boat jetty was down over 200 narrow stone steps! Happily, the boat trip was nothing short of fantastic, and the adrenaline of that wild ride carried over into our evenings where we dined outside along with the other guests at the old mission style hotel in the middle of the rainforest serenaded by live Brazilian music, curious lizards and the squawk of tropical birds.

Talk about a successful "research" trip! I can't wait to return to Argentina!


In Dante's Debt

 

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