In this week’s podcast episode, we’re looking at the glorious ads and features for the July 2000 issue of RT Magazine.
Thank you to Mari for this issue!
You can also find all the RTRW content at our category page for Romantic Times Rewind.
If you want to listen and follow along with this entry, we have more detail in the audio, but you can click play and listen and read and absorb all the visual goodness:
This month’s cover is for Juliet Marillier’s Daughter of the Forest, which is not a great book cover. Amanda and I degree the color palate is “depression.”
There are also a bunch of pages missing from this issue – oops! We’ll have to go to Portobello Road for the missing pages, right?
This was an era of stepbacks and incredible cover art. Get ready!
A very supportive sleeveless top is in order for this scene:
The ad has the full illustration where the horse is looking RIGHT AT YOU.
Highland Lovesong also has pretty impressive cover art:
But the ad has the entire oil painting – where they appear to have mirrored the mountains on the top left there?
I love cover art, and I especially love the whole painting where there’s just nature and stuff to make room for the cover copy.
Ahem. LOOK AT THIS WATCH!!!!!!!
YOU CAN GET ONE!
There are a few on eBay for between $40 and $60!
Remember how Swatch was The Coolest? I had rubber screen protector bands that I’d twist over the watch face. And the plastic watchband became the most disgusting thing, and there were so many to choose from?
I cannot believe I didn’t know this existed until now.
Speaking of cannot believe: did you know Harlequin once gave away a brand new VW Bug in a contest in which folks had to write a 200 words or less short story?
A whole car! For a 200 word short story! To celebrate the NEWLY DESIGNED WEBSITE.
I am telling you, the 2000s were a wild time.
There was a lot of travel talk in this issue, with Kathryn Falk promoting Lady Barrow Tours, with trips to Italy
Look at the prices – $2000 – $2200 for 10/11 night trips?!
Do you recognize this author?
That’s Meg Cabot!
Then we got to a multi-page spread about Steve Sandalis, aka The Topaz Man, featuring a full page of list of titles featuring Steve on the cover, with a lot of incredible snapshots.
To quote Amanda, “He has no pants on!”
The collections of covers at the bottom of this multi page spread are incredible.
This was the era of the stepback, so let’s take a closer look at two of them.
That is the stepback for Lord of the Wolves by Heather Graham. The cover is rather understated given what’s inside:
It’s just…look at that art. Covers and stepbacks do not look like this any more.
And then there’s this one, where they appear to be bathing in fire?
Here’s a larger pic from the eBay listing:
PLEASE DO NOT BATHE NAKED IN THE VOLCANO. THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION.
The cover is a foil image of a white lily, and this fire bathing naked shiny duo is behind the cover.
Also – he is very smooth down there, if you know what I mean, and I think that you do.
Sometimes the stepback was in the ad!
I give that mullet an 8 out of 10.
When the page from Love Spell is in black and white, of course I go hunt down the covers.
Attention, fans of Elyse’s Bachelor and Bachelorette recaps: THAT is the ROSE GOD, right?!
And The Wild Swans is an incredible cover:
Look at that. You’d never know it was that incredible in black and white.
This ad gave us a lot to discuss:
If that’s Inca, can he stay away? Because I’m very creeped out. I’d rather he not come.
This event at the RT Convention sounds truly unhinged and I am SO sorry I missed it:
LOOK at all the stuff going on in this one day event! Strolling minstrels! Swing lessons! Tarot card and past life regression sessions!
Wow, we missed a party.
There’s also an appearance from EXTREME TROY!
I’m now regularly sending this image to Amanda with different captions.
So, folks, those are the Ads & Features from July 2000!
Remember, if you join the Patreon, you’ll get access to the entire issue as a PDF.
Do you miss stepbacks? Ebulliently colorful cover art? Did you have the Romance Swatch?!
What do you think? Do you remember any of these books?