Entry Genre/Form Term
Number of records used in: 187
001 - CONTROL NUMBER
- control field: 48
003 - CONTROL NUMBER IDENTIFIER
- control field: DLC
005 - DATE AND TIME OF LATEST TRANSACTION
- control field: 20250109090802.0
008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS
- fixed length control field: 141201|| anznnbabn |a ana c
010 ## - LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CONTROL NUMBER
- LC control number: gf2014026370
040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE
- Original cataloging agency: IlChALCS
- Language of cataloging: eng
- Transcribing agency: DLC
- Subject heading/thesaurus conventions: lcgft
- Modifying agency: DLC
155 ## - HEADING--GENRE/FORM TERM
- Genre/form term: Historical fiction
455 ## - SEE FROM TRACING--GENRE/FORM TERM
- Genre/form term: Historical romances
455 ## - SEE FROM TRACING--GENRE/FORM TERM
- Genre/form term: Regency fiction
455 ## - SEE FROM TRACING--GENRE/FORM TERM
- Genre/form term: Romances, Historical
555 ## - SEE ALSO FROM TRACING--GENRE/FORM TERM
- Control subfield: g
- Genre/form term: Fiction
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: Henry, L. The fiction dictionary, c1995
- Information found: (Historical fiction: fiction that takes place during a definite, recognizable period in the real past; generally involves important political or social events of the day, as well as the daily lives of ordinary people; also includes fiction that uses actual historical figures as characters.)
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: GSAFD, 2000
- Information found: (Historical fiction: Use for novels set during a time prior to the time in which they were written, and based around real events, people, or situations. UF Historical novels, Historical romances.)
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: Work cat.: Heyer, G. Cotillion, 1953
- Information found: (a regency novel)
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: Kloester, Jennifer. Georgette Heyer, 2013, via Google books, viewed Mar. 26, 2019:
- Information found: Georgette Heyer's novels (Cotillion, 1953, [genre] Regency)
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: Women writers of Great Britain and Europe, 2013, via Google books, viewed Mar. 26, 2019
- Information found: (Georgette Heyer, 1902-1974; she is best known for her Regency novels; she "writes ... historical novels, set in Regency England, in which people never lose their lives, their virtue, or even their tempers"; Regency romances)
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: The Oxford companion to twentieth-century literature in English, 1996
- Information found: (under romantic fiction: Romances with a historical setting, such as the Regency novels of Georgette Heyer; under Heyer, Georgette: British writer of historical novels and detective stories; she was an expert on the Regency period; The most popular of her Regency romances include Devil's Cub (1934), Regency Buck (1935), Faro's Daughter (1941), Venetia (1958), and Lady of Quality (1972))
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: Goodreads website, Mar. 26, 2019:
- Information found: Genres > Historical > Regency (Regency literature is generally set during the period of the English Regency or early 19th century. Rather than simply being versions of contemporary stories transported to a historical setting, Regency novels are a distinct genre with their own plot and stylistic conventions that derive from the works of Jane Austen and Georgette Heyer, and from the fiction genre known as the novel of manners. In particular, most Regencies feature a great deal of intelligent, fast-paced dialog between the protagonists and (traditionally) very little explicit sex or discussion of sex. Other common elements of Regency romances include mystery or farce elements in the plot; references to the Ton (le bon ton); a secondary romance between another couple in addition to the more serious story involving the main protagonists; mistaken identity (deliberate or otherwise); false engagements; marriages of convenience; depictions of activities common during the social season such as balls, routs, carriage riding, theatre events, fittings, suppers, assemblies, etc.; references to, or descriptions of, leisure activities engaged in by fashionable young men of the period, including riding, driving, boxing, gambling, fencing, shooting, etc.)
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: Guidelines on subject access to individual works of fiction, drama, etc., 2000
- Information found: (Regency fiction. UF Regency novels. BT Historical fiction. SN Use for historical works set during the late 18th and early 19th century up to the reign of Queen Victoria)
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: Camden, E. Where did the traditional regency go?, via Elizabeth Camden website, posted Apr. 25, 2013, viewed Mar. 26, 2019
- Information found: (traditional regency, books written in the tone of Jane Austen and Georgette Heyer. Emphasis was on the setting, manners, and foibles of upper class British society between 1811-20; the sensual regency romance, lead by writers such as Amanda Quick, Lisa Kleypas, Eloisa James, and Christina Dodd. The time period was the same, but these regencies featured seething emotions, turbulent affairs, and explicit sex. The new regencies paid scant attention to the exacting historical detail prized in the earlier version of the genre)
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: Moore, H. Several LDS authors pen Regency romance novels, in Deseret news, July 2, 2012, viewed online Mar. 26, 2019
- Information found: (Regency romance novel; Regencies; Regency novels; Regency romances; the Regency genre; Regencies, which are typically set in the early 1800s in England, are known for their humor, for their heroines who battle against "stiff judgments" of an upper-crust society, and for characters and plot that operate within a strict societal structure; Regencies emphasize themes such as love and values and family--not stressing over things we can't control--which translates to money and titles and property in the Regency world)
680 ## - PUBLIC GENERAL NOTE
- Explanatory text: Fiction set during a recognizable time prior to the time in which they were written.