Monday, May 31, 2010

Upcoming Releases - June 2010

This is a compilation of titles we have found in several places on the web, feel free to add your suggestions if we missed them.


June 1
The Hostage Queen by Freda Lightfoot
A Novel of Cornwall; Demelza by Winston Graham (book 2 of the Poldark series) (rerelease)
Dawn of a Legend by Christopher Nicole
Murder of Crows by P.F. Chisolm. US and UK
Everlasting by Angie Frazier
Captivity by Deborah Noyes
The Secret Confessions of Anne Shakespeare by Arliss Ryan
Leaving Rock Harbour by Rebecca Chace
The Spy by Clive Cussler and Justin Scott´
The Rebellion of Jane Clarke by Sally Gunning
The Cigar Maker by Mark McGinty
Fate and Fortune by Shirley McKay

June 3
Theodora by Stella Duffy
The Jewel of St. Petersburg by Kate Furnivall
Nemesis by Lindsay Davis
Falco, The Official Companion by Lindsey Davis
Ghost Light by Joseph O'Connor
A Type of Beauty by Patricia O'Reilly
The Eagle of The Ninth Chronicles by Rosemary Sutcliff (reissue)

June 4
The Lady's Slipper by Deborah Swift

June 7
The Pindar Diamond by Katie Hickman

June 8
The de Lacy Inheritance by Elizabeth Ashworth
The Queen's Daughter by Susan Coventry
Attila: The Gathering of the Storm by William Napier

June 10
The Blood of Alexandria by Richard Blake
The House of Dust and Dreams by Brenda Reid
Brothers at War by Alex Rutherford. UK

June 17
Spies of The Balkans by Alan Furst

June 22
The Rebel Princess by Judith Koll Healey
The Devil Amongst The Lawyers by Sharyn McCrumb
Shadow of The Swords by Kamran Pasha

June 29
The Quickening by Michelle Hoover
Tatiana and Alexander by Paullina Simons
The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet by David Mitchell
The Condor's Feather by Margaret Muir
 Murder on Lexington Avenue by Victoria Thompson
Open Country by Kaki Warner

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Why I Love by Deborah Swift (including giveaway)

Everyone has a favourite pair of shoes. For me it is a pair of shoes I got married in - black patent with black and white spotted bows on the front. I know, they may not be to your taste, but shoes are very individual things! You can tell a lot about a person, or a character, by their shoes. My novel, The Lady’s Slipper, set in the seventeenth century, is about the wild flower of that name, but also about shoes. Ella the maidservant is fascinated by her mistress’s footwear. Accustomed to wearing heavy clogs, Ella sees Alice’s butter-coloured slippers as representing everything she cannot afford. The silken slippers with their embroidered roses speak of a life of luxury and leisure.
 

So why are shoes such a potent symbol for me? It is partly because they’re a metaphor for a mode of transportation and transformation. Look at Dorothy in Frank L Baum’s The Wizard of Oz – her silver slippers (miraculously turned to glistening ruby in the film) are able to take her home with a click of her heels.

Similarly Cinderella is one of the most common folk stories in the world, and her shoes transport her to the ball. Ask anyone about Cinderella, and the image most associated with it is the single glass slipper, probably originally a fur slipper (verre is French for glass, vair is French for fur) which became a symbol of Cinderella’s beauty, leading to the Prince’s search for its pair – the holy grail of footwear!

Shoes take us places literally, but also a change of shoes can bring about a change of personality. Put on a different pair of shoes and you become suddenly someone else. As a child I read the terrifying The Red Shoes by Hans Andersen. Nearly everyone knows the tale where the shoes take on a mind of their own. Vain Karen is horrified to discover that she cannot remove the shoes as they are welded to her feet. Worse, they continue to dance on against her will. Even when she cuts off her feet the wilful shoes continue to dance their macabre polka.

I discovered the origins of this story go back to an incident Andersen witnessed as a small child. By all accounts his father was sent a beautiful piece of red silk by a rich lady to make a pair of dancing slippers for her daughter. He used fine red leather and the lady’s silk for the lining, and worked lovingly on the shoes, only to have the customer tell him he had done nothing but spoil her silk. "In that case," he said, "I may as well spoil my leather too," and he cut up the shoes in front of her. When I read this, I felt the loss of those shoes. What a waste!


 
When researching The Lady’s Slipper I was able to indulge my appetite for beautiful footwear by researching 17th century shoes. Whilst men's were made of leather, women's were mainly made of brocade, satin or embroidered silk. Appliquéd braid was widely used, or a decoration of rosettes made from ribbon, lace or looped leather. A conspicuous feature of women's shoes was the white kid edge, used in attaching the sole. The Northampton Shoe Museum has a fantastic collection of antique footwear, showing just how much the shoe reflects the wearer.

But the oldest shoe in the world is not at Northampton. It is a sagebrush bark fibre sandal in the University of Oregon Museum of Natural and Cultural History. It was found in Fort Rock Cave in central Oregon in 1938, and is probably 10,500 years old. Most likely it was worn by a native North American who lived in caves during the winter months and hunted in marshes in summer. Tom Connolly, the museum's research director says of the sandals, “the charred pinpricks on the toe flaps allow you to put yourself at a fireside.”

And for me shoes are objects that reflect not only the aesthetic and fashionable concerns of the day, but also the practical. Looking at them you sense the foot of the wearer, but also the terrain on which they stood.

But one of the oddest thing about old shoes is that they were often concealed and hidden in old buildings. Nobody knows why, but it was supposed that a shoe trapped the spirit of the wearer, and some 1,700 concealed shoes have been found—not just in Britain, but in Germany, Australia, Canada and the United States. More information here.

These have been recorded in a registry by June Swann, Curator at the Northampton Shoe Museum, who according to a National Geographic article, “doesn't just read books for plot. She reads them for shoes. Madame Bovary's lover gave her a pair of pink satin shoes trimmed in swan down. Jonathan Swift mentioned wood-soled shoes in Gulliver's Travels.”

And I am proud to be a follower in her footsteps.


UK (left) and US covers for The Lady’s Slipper

Find out more about Deborah Swift at her website or at her blog. The Lady's Slipper is released in the UK on 4 June 2010, and will be released in the US in November. Here's the synopsis:

It is 1660. The King is back, but memories of the Civil War still rankle. In rural Westmorland, artist Alice Ibbetson has become captivated by the rare Lady's Slipper orchid. She is determined to capture its unique beauty for posterity, even if it means stealing the flower from the land of recently converted Quaker, Richard Wheeler. Fired by his newfound faith, the former soldier Wheeler feels bound to track down the missing orchid. Meanwhile, others are eager to lay hands on the flower, and have their own powerful motives. Margaret Poulter, a local medicine woman, is seduced by the orchid's mysterious herbal powers, while Sir Geoffrey Fisk, Alice's patron and a bitter enemy of Wheeler, sees the valuable plant as a way to repair his ailing fortunes and cure his own agonizing illness. Fearing that Wheeler and his new friends are planning revolution, Fisk sends his son Stephen to spy on the Quakers, only for the young man to find his loyalties divided as he befriends the group he has been sent to investigate. Then, when Alice Ibbetson is implicated in a brutal murder, she is imprisoned along with the suspected anti-royalist Wheeler. As Fisk's sanity grows ever more precarious, and Wheeler and Alice plot their escape, a storm begins to brew, from which no party will escape unscathed. Vivid, gripping and intensely atmospheric, "The Lady's Slipper" is a novel about beauty, faith and loyalty. It marks the emergence of an exquisite new voice in historical fiction.
*******************
Thanks to Deborah Swift and Macmillan (UK), we are very pleased to have 3 copies of this book to giveaway! In order to win leave a comment about your favourite shoes in fact or fiction, along with a valid email address.

- leave comment about your favourite shoes in fact or fiction
- the giveaway is open to UK residents only
- only one entry per person
- please leave us a valid email adress
- open until the 11th June 2010 midnight GMT


Three winners will be choosed randomly using random.org and their names and addresses will be sent to the publisher who will ship the books directly to them. Good luck to everyone!

Feel free to leave a comment as well even if you can't win the prize.

Band of Angels winners

Thank you to everyone who entered our giveaway of Band of Angels by Julia Gregson. I am pleased to announce that the winners are:


Michelle from The True Book Addict
Mystica
almybnenr


If all the winners could please email their postal details to us at historical.tapestry@gmail.com we will pass your details on and get your prize on it's way to you.

Thanks also to Simon and Schuster for this giveaway.

Saturday, May 29, 2010

To Defy A King by Elizabeth Chadwick

A story of huge emotional power set against the road to Magna Carta and the fight to bring a tyrant king to heel.
A story of huge emotional power set against the road to Magna Carta and the fight to bring a tyrant king to heel.

The privileged daughter of one of the most powerful men in England, Mahelt Marshal's life changes dramatically when King John suspects her father of treason. Her brothers are taken hostage and to keep her safe, Mahelt's father marries her to Hugh Bigod, heir to the great earldom of Norfolk. Mahelt finds adapting to her new life hard and although she comes to care for her husband deeply, defying her powerful father in law brings disgrace and threatens her bond with Hugh.

As the Magna Carta crisis looms, King John sets out to subdue the rebellious Bigods and when the royal forces besiege Framlingham Castle, Mahelt is caught up in a heart-rending struggle, knowing that she and her marriage might not survive as wide rifts open between family members.
 
After having read the stories of William Marshall and Isabelle de Clare I was looking forward to read about their eldest daughter, Mahelt Marshall. Elizabeth Chadwick is another author that never lets me down and I am happy to say that To Defy a King was another wonderful read.


The book starts with familiar events but now from Mahelt's perspective. When her parents decide to go to Ireland they want to leave her well cared for and so negotiate a marriage between Mahelt and Hugh Bigod, the eldest son of the powerful Earl of Norfolk. Mahelt is very much aware of her importance as a Marshall and of her sense of honor which sometime clashes with her father in law's will. Hugh, however, realises that his young wife's spirit is what attracts him and that he will have to employ subtlety to make her grow up and learn where her loyalties must now lie.

Although they are in good standing with the King, the Bigods have to take care about who they associate with and Mahelt's reckless actions may well put them in danger. They are connected with the King through Hugh’s half brother William Longespée but the relationship between the two is strained at best. It will take some time and persuasion till Mahelt learns to balance her feelings and weigh what's really important, to think of herself as a Bigod. And while Mahelt and Hugh work on their marriage, King John continues his rule through war and fear. Soon Hugh and the other barons start plotting to limit his power and protect their rights and privileges. If her father was always the king’s man even when in disgrace, now Mahelt sees her husband rebelling against the king and take up arms to defend what he believes in.

To Defy A King is a lovely book! Chadwick’s characters are people that you can identify with, who have the same basic expectations about life, love and society in general that everyone has and in each of her books there's a solid background of research that really brings to life the everyday events of the Middle Ages without it being obvious.

If Mahelt is a strong heroine, Hugh is the one I appreciated all the more because of the way he read his wife and managed to make her grow up and learn her place without crushing her. I wonder how Chadwick manages to consistently write male characters that are wonderful examples of humanity and sensitivity without losing any of their manliness? There are many reasons to pick up this book, the solid historical background, the plot that makes use of it and the engaging characters will appeal to every historical fiction lover but the truth is that her descriptions of feelings, emotions and needs with which we can identify will make this a terrific read for everyone.

Grade: 5/5

** And don't forget to check on our To Defy a King conversation **

Friday, May 28, 2010

Why I Love Classical Music by Carrie Lofty

My family did not listen to classical music much when I was growing up. We were much more of a pop music bunch, with MTV providing the soundtrack to most of my childhood--back when they played music, of course. The exception came at Christmas time, when my mothers' favorites included Bing Crosby and Tchaikovsky's THE NUTCRACKER. Cozy, happy memories of her baking cookies and making candy for holiday functions are twined with "Waltz of the Snowflakes" and the various coffee, tea and chocolate dances.

That's a good place to start: classical music as a portal into the most comforting of childhood memories.

In later years I expanded my repertoire not through learning to play an instrument, but out of a snobbish inclination that I should. Not the most honest of motives, I admit. The effect, however, was profound. What started with dabbling in the soundtrack to AMADEUS turned into an all-out classical music adventure when my daughters were just born.

Have you had children? Did you experience a brain void in those months after they were born? I found that I couldn't concentrate very well. Even the most formulaic books were beyond my limited ability to focus. I started listening to a lot of classical music once again, not out of a snobbish curiosity but because I enjoyed its soothing powers.

As my brain thawed, I took in more and more. I discovered that Beethoven's Fifth was more than just its famous opening four notes. I discovered that I am deeply fond of the cello, but that the right violin vibrato can make me cry. I also discovered a marvelous teaching series about classical music, which opened up the theory and history in ways I'd been unable to study before.

That interest coincided with my decision to actively pursue publication. Where else would I set a romance other than Salzburg, Austria, the birthplace of Mozart? And who else would it feature other than musicians? The decision was a natural extension of my fascination.

What I didn't know much about at the time was how romance publishing worked. The manuscript that became my June release, SONG OF SEDUCTION, received almost identical rejections wherever I submitted: a great book, but the setting is a deal-breaker.

I went on to indulge in other research obsessions, including Robin Hood (for WHAT A SCOUNDREL WANTS) and Spanish warrior monks (for SCOUNDREL'S KISS), but I never gave up on my sensuous Salzburg-set baby. Now we're mere days from its launch and I couldn't be happier. I think this happy occasion calls for a little Tchaikovsky.




_________________________________



Born in California, raised in the Midwest, Carrie Lofty met her husband in England—the best souvenir! Since earning her master's in history, she's been devoted to raising two precocious daughters and writing romance.

In June 2010, SONG OF SEDUCTION, Carrie’s sensual tale of two lovelorn musicians in Napoleonic Austria will help launch Carina Press, Harlequin’s new digital-first venture. Its sequel, PORTRAIT OF SEDUCTION, will follow in early 2011. You can learn more about the author at her site: http://www.carrielofty.com/ and read her interesting guest post Why I Love unusual settings posted here at Historical Tapestry a few months ago.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

HT News

Normally I find it confusing enough when the same book has a different title in different countries, but it's even more so when the author also has a different name. Brandy Purdy (aka Emily Purdy) is giving away a copy of her book The Boleyn Wife (aka The Tudor Wife) on her website. Click here for the details.

Recently Bill from DorothyDunnett.co.uk was asked to give a talk about Dorothy Dunnett. He has put the transcript up on his blog, and it makes for very interesting reading and includes lots of details about this much loved historical fiction author. One of these days I will actually get around to reading some of her books!

Lizzy from Historically Obsessed recently went to meet and listen to Jean Kwok, author of Girl in Translation and she has shared some footage with the rest of us. I am always grateful when people do that as there is little chance that I will ever get to meet some of these authors.

Do you often wish you could walk in the footsteps of history? Elizabeth Kerri McMahon has shared her experiences from the first Anne Boleyn Experience where she got to stay at Hever Castle amongst other things. Sounds like a lot of fun to me!

To Shield The Queen by Fiona Buckley

Rumor has linked Queen Elizabeth I to her master of horse, Robin Dudley. As gossip would have it, only his ailing wife, Amy, prevents marriage between Dudley and the Queen. To quell the idle tongues at court, the Queen dispatches Ursula Blanchard to tend to the sick woman's needs. But not even Ursula can prevent the "accident" that takes Amy's life. Did she fall or was she pushed? Was Ursula a pawn of Dudley and the Queen?

Suddenly Ursula finds herself at the center of the scandal, trying to protect Elizabeth as she loses her heart to a Frenchman who may be flirting with sedition against her Queen. She can trust no one, neither her lover nor her monarch, as she sets out to find the truth in a glittering court that conceals a wellspring of blood and lies.

To Shield The Queen is an Elizabethan mystery but unlike my previous read (The Poyson Garden) the detective here is one of the queen's lady's in waiting. Ursula Blanchard is a young widow, when she finds herself almost destitute after the death of her husband a post is found for her as lady in waiting to the queen thanks to the fact that her own mother was fulfilled that same role for queen Anne Boleyn.

When Ursula arrives in court it is common knowledge that the Queen and Robert Dudley, her Master of the Horse are romantically linked. Nothing inappropriate has happened but they do spend a lot of time together and since Dudley is married there is a lot of gossiping going round. Ursula is adjusting to her new duties and its obligations when Dudley, with the Queen's accent, asks her to go to his wife, Amy Robsart, and assure her that he is not trying to harm her as she, and half the court believes.

Ursula manages to gain Amy's trust and tries to convince her but the truth is that a few weeks later Amy Robsart is found dead at the bottom of a flight of stairs. Ursula suspects murder but unable to prove it she directs her efforts to find the killers of her trusted servant John instead. While she follows the killer's trail and uncovers a plot against the queen she ends up finding out exactly what happened to Amy.

I really enjoyed reading about Ursula, she was an intelligent and strong willed woman, forced to make her own way in the world to support herself and her young daughter, but still a woman of her time with the restrictions and limitations of the period. Then I really liked that there's a true sense of history. In fact it almost feels like Buckley used the historical facts we know and believably connected all the dots, explaining what we do not know, it's always nice to have an author filling the "holes” of history so well. And then I really enjoyed the subplot and how the political and religious unrest also played a huge part in this story.
I can't wait to find out what happens next both to Ursula Blanchard!

Grade: 4.5/5

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

C W Gortner on Why I Love Catherine de Medici

Anyone with an interest in famous women of history will have heard of Catherine de Medici: she’s that evil queen who allegedly poisoned her enemies and orchestrated a massacre. Or so the legend says.

Initially, I was attracted to Catherine because of her legend. I figure, when someone has such a bad reputation there must be more to their story. But as I began to research my book, I realized just how little I truly knew about this extraordinary woman who dominated France in the latter half of the 16th century, a contemporary of Elizabeth I and mother-in-law to Mary, Queen of Scots.

Catherine has been the target of a smear campaign that began in her lifetime and culminated with Alexander Dumas’s highly entertaining yet implausible 19th century depiction of her in La Reine Margot. One of the greatest misconceptions about Catherine is the accusation that she nurtured a “passion for power.” Catherine was not raised to rule yet she became regent for two of her sons until they came of age; naturally, she was overzealous at times in her protectiveness and had a tendency to seek compromise when a hard decision might have served her better. But it is unfair to accuse her of some innate ruthless drive to retain her power at any cost. Catherine faced a unique set of circumstances that would have challenged the most skilled of monarchs: she had under-age children and a kingdom that was being torn apart by the nobility. The clash between Protestants and Catholics was particularly brutal in France; it was Catherine’s misfortune to be caught up in it. Her alleged passion for power was in truth an attempt to retain control over the destiny of her realm and to safeguard her sons’ throne—both of which may have suffered far more, had she not been there.

To this day, Catherine remains tainted by actions that in essence she did not take of her own volition. She made serious errors in judgment but she was more motivated by the urgent need to stave off or salvage a crisis than to indulge a cold-blooded urge to eliminate all those who stood in her way.

C. W. Gortner, half-Spanish by birth, holds an M.F.A. in writing, with an emphasis on historical studies, from the New College of California and has taught university courses on women of power in the Renaissance. He was raised in Málaga, Spain, and now lives in California.

Acclaimed for his insight into his characters, he travels extensively to research his books. He has slept in a medieval Spanish castle, danced in a Tudor great hall, and explored library archives all over Europe. His debut historical novel The Last Queen gained international praise and has been translated into eight languages to date. His new novel, The Confessions of Catherine de Medici, will be published on May 25, 2010. He is currently at work on The Princess Isabella, his third historical novel, and The Secret Lion, the first book in his Tudor thriller series,The Spymaster Chronicles. You can visit C. W. Gortner’s website at http://cwgortner.com/

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

HT News

You can win a copy of Band of Angels by Julia Gregson at The Tome Traveller. Don't forget that our own giveaway of this book is still open, and you can find all the details here.

Christine Trent recently contacted us to let us know that her next book has had a title change. It is now known as A Royal Likeness, and will be out in January 2011. You can find out more about the book at Christine's website.

Lucy from Enchanted by Josephine is celebrating the end of her special Queen Victoria Long Weekend with a giveaway. Head on over to her site, where you can win a copy of A Victorian Lady's Album: Kate Shannon`s Halifax & Boston Diary of 1892, by Della Stanley and a copy of The Victoria and Albert Museum Souvenir Guide from 1977. (Not sure why 1977, but there you go!)





There is another chance to win By Fire, By Water by Mitchell James Kaplan  over at The Maiden's Court. The author has also written an interesting guest post in conjunction with the giveaway.

HT Recommends: Books Set in Ancient Egypt

Author Christine Trent asked for our help on behalf of a friend who wanted to read more books set in Ancient Egypt after enjoying NEFERTITI and THE HERETIC QUEEN, by Michelle Moran.

By Moran there's also Cleopatra's Daughter and the first authors that came to mind were Christian Jacq and his huge list of books set in Ancient Egypt and Pauline Gedge who also has quite a few books set during that period.
 
Then there's author Paul Doherty two series:
Amerotke
1. The Mask of Ra (1998)
2. The Horus Killings (1999)
3. The Anubis Slayings (2000)
4. The Slayers of Seth (2001)
5. The Assassins of Isis (2004)
6. The Poisoner of Ptah (2007)
7. The Spies of Sobeck (2008)
Egyptian Mysteries
1. An Evil Spirit Out of the West (2003)
2. The Season of the Hyaena (2005)
3. The Year of the Cobra (2006)

Author Wilbur Smith's Ancient Egyptian series:
1. River God (1993)
2. The Seventh Scroll (1995)
3. Warlock (2001)
4. The Quest (2007)


And

Karen Essex - Kleopatra
Nick Drake - Nefertiti
Nick Drake - Tutakhamun
Duncan Sprott - The House of The Eagle
Duncan Sprott - Daughter of The Crocodile
Margaret George - The Memoirs of Cleopatra
Eloise Jarvis McGraw - Mara, Daughter of The Nile
Eloisa Jarvis McGraw - The Golden Goblet

 
We're sure that there may be many more books set during this period so if you have a favourite set in Ancient Egypt do leave a comment and let us know what more to add to our list.

Monday, May 24, 2010

To Defy a King by Elizabeth Chadwick

From acclaimed novelist Elizabeth Chadwick comes a story of huge emotional power set against the road to Magna Carta and the fight to bring a tyrant king to heel. 

The privileged daughter of one of the most powerful men in England, Mahelt Marshal's life changes dramatically when her father is suspected of treachery by King John. Her brothers become hostages and Mahelt is married to Hugh Bigod, heir to the earldom of Norfolk. Adapting to her new life is hard, but Mahelt comes to love Hugh deeply; however, defying her father-in-law brings disgrace and heartbreak. 

When King John sets out to subdue the Bigods, Mahelt faces a heartbreaking battle, fearing neither she, nor her marriage, is likely to survive the outcome ...

Magnificent in scope and detail, with characters that leap off the page, this is historical fiction at its finest.

Elizabeth Chadwick's last new book was released around about 20 months ago and consequently it felt I had been waiting for this book for an eternity. The problem with such highly anticipated books is that when you finally get to read it, the book often doesn't live up to the anticipated enjoyment of it. I am pleased to say that this is one occasion when that didn't happen! It was fortunate for me that my son wasn't well and so I had time to sit down and read, and I finished reading this book in just over a day.

In some ways this book is a rounding out of the various novels that this author has been writing over the last few years. The Greatest Knight was the first EC novel that I read, and it featured William Marshal, as did the follow up book The Scarlet Lion. Then I read A Place Beyond Courage which is about William Marshal's father John. The heroine of this novel is John's granddaughter, William's daughter, Mahelt. Similarly, Hugh is the son of Roger and Ida who were the main characters in The Time of Singing.

Mahelt is the cherished eldest daughter William Marshal, one of the most influential men in England. Being respected and influential isn't however enough to keep you safe from the machinations of one of the most changeable kings in English history - King John. With two of the Marshal's sons already being held hostage by the mercurial king, the Marshals are planning to stay out of John's way as much as possible by withdrawing to their lands in Ireland, but before they do that they want to marry their eldest daughter Mahelt to the best possible husband, in this case Hugh Bigod, son of another very influential and powerful man, Roger Bigod, Earl of Norfolk.

Mahelt is sent to Framlingham to live with her new family, although at this early stage she is married but not really a wife, and so it is a little difficult for her to find her place in the household. It is also difficult for her as she is a spirited and head strong young woman who is used to thinking for herself, and so she clashes with the very rigid and set in his ways Earl who struggles with her independence and her tendency to say what she thinks in quite a direct manner.

As the young couple truly begins their married lives together, they have to face challenges caused by these clashes with Hugh's father, as well as with the growing instability caused by John's constant demands, and then with the fact that Mahelt and her new family find themselves on the opposite side of the political arena to her own family. And when the Bigod's find themselves in danger, even if they survive the trials they are undergoing, there is no guarantee that Hugh and Mahelt's marriage can survive the aftermath.

Whilst there are many people who willingly go off into danger to protect the freedoms that we so often take for granted, I really am glad that we do not have to deal with the inevitability of our loved ones going off to fight to some degree every single summer. There is not only the danger of them being injured or killed, but also that they may be captured and held hostage.  I thought this scene between Ida (Hugh's mother) and Mahelt was very touching.


Ida bent over her sewing once more, but had to stop again as tears splashed on to the fabric. "My sons," she said in a grief-stricken voice. "I bore them from the travail of my body. I bathed and tended and watched over them and soothed their hurts with love and ointments. Now again and again they ride to war. Their father spent so many months away serving the King that our good years were wasted and in our twilight, there is only long familiarity like two stones rubbing together with the harder one wearing away at the softer until the softer is dust. I watch my boys leaving their wives and children - leaving me - and the pattern repeats itself all over again." She fixed a drenched gaze on Mahelt. "The first thing a man asks of his newborn son is 'Will he be a good soldier? Will he have a strong fist?' Never do they ask: 'Will he be a good husband and father?' And as mothers we never ask that question. That is what makes me weep.

"Unless our sons become monks, they are bound to be soldiers," Mahelt replied pragmatically. "It is their station in life. The first thing I would ask is: 'Will he be honourable? Will he be strong - not of fist, but of principle?' We should change what we can and make the best of what we cannot."

Ida wiped her eyes again and forced a smile. "That sounds like your great father talking."

Mahelt flushed. "It was what we were taught from the cradle." She gave a self-deprecating laugh. "I am too impatient. I want to change everything."
One of the interesting relationships in the book was between Hugh and his half-brother William Longespee, who in turn is half brother to King John. There had long been a difficult relationship between the two men which started in childhood, and relates to the fact that whilst William has royal connections, he was removed from his mother at a very young age. William is also the kind of man who has to be the best and have the best, almost as though trying to make up for his illegitimacy. He was fiercely loyal to his royal brother, King John, until finally events forced him to reconsider that position. The relationship between Hugh and William is multi-layered, often difficult, some times untrusting, and yet, they are brothers.

Once again Elizabeth Chadwick provides the reader with a tantalising glimpse into the medieval past, into the political machinations of the time, the business of running an important household, but never without losing sight of the hearts of the people involved.


Ne vuz sanz mei, ne mei sanz vus.

(No you without me, nor I without you)

Another excellent read from one of my favourite historical fiction authors. I gave this one a rating of 5/5


*** Don't forget to check out the conversation between Alex, Ana and myself about this book.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Winners Announcement

Over the last couple of weeks we have had two Elizabeth Chadwick contests going!

We actually have very exciting news regarding one of the contests. Initially we were giving away one gently used copy of The Time of Singing, but Elizabeth Chadwick herself contacted us and offered the winner a copy of both The Time of Singing and the new release, To Defy a King. Thank you so much to Elizabeth Chadwick for such a generous prize. The lucky winner of this prize is


We still wanted to give away the original prize, so the winner of the copy of  The Time of Singing is



In addition to that contest, we had the contest for 5 copies of To Defy A King. We were really pleased with the number of entries we received for this contest. We can only giveaway five copies so the winners are:

Jennifer from Rundpinne
Gwendolynn B from A Sea of Books
Melissa from Shhh I'm Reading

If all the winners could please email their postal details to us at historical.tapestry@gmail.com we will pass your details on and get your prize on it's way to you.

Look out for our reviews of this book to start appearing on the blog this week. In the meantime, if you haven't read it already, check out the the three way conversation between Alex, Ana and Marg here about To Defy a King.

Thanks to Hannah from Little Brown and Elizabeth Chadwick for their generosity, and especially for making it possible for this contest to be international, and to Alex for putting up one of the prizes as well.

Don't forget that we still have one giveaway running where you can win Band of Angels by Julia Gregson, and keep checking back as we have more exciting giveaways coming up very soon!

Saturday, May 22, 2010

Reading about... Agnès Sorel, la Dame de Beauté

Some years ago, I had the chance to see “La Vierge et l'Enfant entourés d'anges”(The Virgin and the Child surrounded by angels), one of the most known works of Fouquet. I vividly remember being mesmerized by the lady in the portrait. She was like no other Virgin Mary depiction I ever saw before. The colors of the angels surrounding her, her expression and the face, that face I quite never forgot. Weeks later, I found in a bookstore Jeanne Bourdin's book about the lady of the painting: Agnès Sorel, also known as The Lady of Beauty (La Dame de Beauté). I bought it immediately.

Some months ago, I accidentally saw another book about her and I couldn't resist grabbing it right away. This brought back old memories and I couldn't stop thinking about her.


La Vierge et l'Enfant entourés d'anges by Jean Fouquet

Agnès Sorel was the first official royal mistress in France. She created a position that would be coveted by many other women through the centuries. When she meets Charles VII (Joanna d'Arc's king Charles), she's very young and a lady in waiting of Isabella, Duchess of Lorraine. Agnès was an educated, refined and fashionable woman who was very aware of her assets. Charles, in the other hand, was far from handsome and for many years was known for his indecision and lack of charisma. Certainly someone pleasant but far from being a strong leader and powerful king. When he reached his forties, Charles changed and became more sure of himself. Some historians claim it was Agnès doing but other are sure this transformation begin before they met.

Agnès Sorel by Jean Fouquet
A fair and lovely young woman and a newly self assured king. Before they knew it, they were living a passionate love story. But many resented Agnès and her influence over Charles. Her taste for fashion and finery made her the center of mockery and scorn of her peers and even the French people. Her habit of giving strategic positions to her family members and friends didn't help her reputation either. The Dauphin, Louis, hated her fiercely and didn't hide his feelings for her or even for his father's weakness, who he thought manipulated. He wanted to rule and impatiently waited for an opportunity to win the throne.


Charles VII by Jean Fouquet
Pregnant with her fourth child, Agnès decided to travel to be with her lover, away at war in Rouen. In her way home, while staying in a local manor at Jumièges (Normandy), she is seized by violent cramps in her middle section. A few hours later she dies in agonizing pain and her child follows some weeks after. She was twenty-eight years old.

A distressed Charles VII orders two magnificent tombs: one for her heart and the other for her body. And quickly, he replaced her by her cousin, Antoinette Maignelais, also a fair maiden who resembled Agnès...

La Dame de Beauté by Jeanne Bourin (slightly romanticized version of Agnès life)
Agnès tomb at Loches (click here to enlarge)

French books I read about Agnès Sorel:
Other French books I heard about:
English books I found after some research:
Agnès Sorel's death always seemed suspicious and if many looked at the Dauphin as the main suspect, nothing could be ever proved. And several other people had as many reasons to eliminate the royal mistress as the king's son...

In 2004 a team of French scientists decided to examine Agnès skeleton who survived all those centuries of church renovations and grave robbing. They could not prove if she was murdered or not, but one thing was sure, her body contained very high levels of mercury who was a perfect poison. The same product was also used for worms treatment those days. A dosage accident is considered but her doctor was one of the most renowned of the realm. Accident or murder? We'll never know...

Considered by many of her contemporaries as the most beautiful woman in the world, Agnès Sorel continues to fascinate. I for instance would love to see more of her in historical fiction.

Friday, May 21, 2010

HT News

Lucy from Enchanted by Josephine has a long weekend this weekend, and she is ready to party! It's Victoria Day weekend, and she is celebrating all thing Victoria (as in Queen Victoria), and we can all join in. Check out all the details at Enchanted by Josephine!

There's a new historical fiction author group blog in town. Check out Historical Belles and Beaus! The list of author's involved include a number who I either have read and enjoyed or I want to read and enjoy!

Susan Holloway Scott has just posted a preview from her upcoming novel, once again set in the court of Charles II, The Countess and the King. I can't wait to read more.


Have you noticed all the posts about Edith Pargeter's The Brothers of Gwynedd? Sourcebooks have just rereleased this book. Originally it was published as four separate books, but this time is being rereleased as one huge volume. To help promote the book, Sourcebooks have organised a Summer Reading Club where a number of bloggers are reading their way through this mammoth book. On Monday night at 7pm EST (US), Amy from Passages to the Past will be hosting a discussion of the first part of the book. It will be interesting to see what comes up in the discussion.


Current Giveaways

By Fire, By Water by Mitchell James Kaplan (5 copies - includes guest post) at Passages to the Past plus 2 copies (including guest post) at Historical-Fiction.com
The White Queen by Philippa Gregory at Raucous Royals

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Joanna by Roberta Gellis


In A World Of Deceit And Danger, Love Was The Deadliest Risk Of All Beautiful, iron-willed heiress to power, Joanna secretly burns with an explosive inner passion as wild and– radiant as her flaming red hair. But her deepest emotions are tragically frozen by the cold fear of a man’s tender love.

Ensnared in the violent lusts and dangerous intrigues of King John’s decadent court, she defies every outward peril-only to come face-to face with the terror in her own heart. Caught between willful pride and consuming desire, she struggles to avoid surrendering herself to the irresistible fires raging within her.


After reading the first two books of The Roselynde Chronicles, I knew I had to continue the series even if I knew that Alinor and Ian de Vipont were not the main characters of the story.

Joanna is the eldest daughter of Alinor and her first husband, Simon. She is the heiress of Roselynde and was raised accordingly to her rank. Joanna is young but of marriageable age and her parents want her betrothed to Geoffrey Fitzwilliam, the young son of William of Salisbury. Geoffrey had a hard life at court as a child, being the constant target of Queen Isabella’s hate for his father. King John is on the throne and Geoffrey and Joanna will have to deal with revenge and jealousy from their both sovereigns.

The young man and Joanna know each other since childhood, since he was raised in Roselynde as Ian’s squire. Despite the situation, they don’t know each other well and it’s obviously since the beginning of the story that their relationship would not be a smooth one.

I have to say that it is a joy to return to Roselyne and to read Roberta Gellis. Her historical research and attention to detail are a real pleasure to read. My main problem with this book were the misunderstandings between Joanna and Geoffrey. Yes, they are young and inexperienced but it seemed they couldn’t have a single conversation without jumping to conclusions, having immediately a fight and leave each other bitterly. I was tired of this attitude halfway through the book making it almost painful to read. Quite disappointing when I read Roselynde and Alinor in one sitting and was eager for more.

While I was still interested to know a little more about Alinor and Ian’s life (Ian de Vipont is such a wonderful man!), I cannot say that I really cared about this young couple. Nonetheless, it is still an interesting read mostly because of the rich historical background also present in the two previous books of the series.

I’m definitely reading the other books of The Roselynde Chronicles even if I read some so-so reviews about them.

Grade: 3/5

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

HT News - Giveaway reminder

Just a reminder that we currently have three giveaways here at Historical Tapestry. We don't normally have so many giveaways at the same time, and believe me, we have even more giveaways on the way. In the mean time, don't miss out on your chance to win one of the following awesome books!



The Time of Singing by Elizabeth Chadwick - closes 20 May

We have a special surprise for the winner of this giveaway, so be sure to get your name in the draw.






To Defy a King by Elizabeth Chadwick - also closes 20 May

This is the latest UK release by this fantastic author. There are 5 copies up for grabs, open worldwide.



Band of Angels by Julia Gregson - closes 28 May

Originally released in the UK under the title The Water Horse, I read this book some time ago, and really enjoyed this portrayal of the Crimean War, and at the role of one of Florence Nightingale's nurses. We have three copies of this book available to US readers.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

HT News

You can win one of 5 copies of LE Butler's novel Relief from the author herself. Click here for details of how to enter.

It's Marie from The Burton Review's turn to be the featured Blogger Buddy at Fly High! As part of the feature, you can win a copy of In the Company of the Courtesan by Sarah Dunant or The Tsarina's Daughter by Carolly Erickson.

Other Giveaways

Daughters of the Witching Hill by Mary Sharratt at Devourer of Books
Brothers of Gwynedd by Edith Pargeter at A Reader's Respite
The Pendant by Mirella Patzer at Historical Novel Review
My Name is Mary Sutter by Robin Oliveira at Booking Mama, and also at Genre Reviews
The Last River Child by Lori Ann Bloomfeld at Peeking Between the Page
By Fire, By Water by Mitchell James Kaplan (includes guest post) at The Burton Review and also at Historically Obsessed

Julia Gregson on Why I Love a Bolter! **includes a giveaway**

I’ve always loved a bolter- Nancy Mitford’s perfect description of women who make a dash for it. But strangely enough, until I was asked to write this blog, it had not occurred to me that all of my heroines are, without exception, bolters, or traveling women-- either in the direction of a new job, or a new life, a new country or some unsuitable adventure in a stranger’s arms.

The reasons why I am drawn to such women wouldn’t take long on the analyst’s couch. I was an air force brat.

When I was a child, I changed friends, schools, houses, and often countries every two and a half years. As children do, I accepted this as normal, and if I was emotionally scarred by it, I’m not aware of it, but what it does mean is that certain restlessness is bred in the bone.

Which is why I love writing historical fiction: it gives me a perfect grown up excuse to scratch that itch periodically - roughly every two years come to think of it.

My first book, The Water Horse, published in the U.S. under the title: Band of Angels, is a fictionalized account of the life of a woman called Jane Evans. She lived in a tiny town in Wales called Pumpsaint and, in 1853, ran away from home with some Welsh cattle drovers in order to join Florence Nightingale and her nurses in Scutari.

When I first found Jane Evans- on a small plaque outside a windswept church in Pumpsaint- I felt a tingling in my scalp. I’d found my book and it was a traveling book!

At first I planned a biography, but quickly realized that as most of the nurses were illiterate, that would be next to impossible. This led to what felt like my own leap into the unknown- a novel.

The first part of this journey involved a horse. In Wales, where I live, the mountains and valleys are criss- crossed by wide green grassy tracks which were once the only way to transport, cattle, sheep and even geese (with their feet tarred and shod) to the meat markets of England. Outside our farmhouse, at the end of our path, there are the two huge pine trees that used to signal to drovers that they and their animals were welcome to stay here for the night.

I rode with an amateur historian and passionate horsewoman, Daphne Tilley, who leant me her own retired show jumper, Fred. I wanted to imagine what it would feel like to be Jane Evans and ride for miles and miles across Wales.

It was one of the best weeks of my life. It was tiring, yes, occasionally scary- at one point, crossing the Snowdon Mountains, Fred and I nearly fell off the side of a cliff when an electrical cable collapsed onto him and scared him half to death. But mostly it was heaven- perfect summer weather, agreeable companions, picnics in the wild with horses cropping grass nearby, and constant changes of scenery: wild mountains, green tracks, the sea.

There is something incredibly soothing too about the rocking rhythm of a horse, which takes you out of ordinary time, gives you space to dream and think.

The next trip for the same book was to Istanbul, this time with my 81-year-old mother, another one with itchy feet. There, we took a ferry across the Bosporus, to explore the gaunt looking naval barracks that was once the hospital where Florence Nightingale and her nurses lived.

An armed guard agreed to take me up to what was once Nightingale’s bedroom. This room with its green velvet chaise longue, its desk neatly arranged with bottle of ink, note book, dip pens, felt almost spookily alive for me- she might almost have nipped out in a hurry to supervise the making of beef jelly, or some fortifying tea.

That night, to check out another scene in the book, my mother and I left our modest hotel for drinks at what was once considered the poshest hotel in Istanbul – The Pera Palace.



This was the hotel where passengers off the Orient Express used to sip champagne, where Mata Hari and Rita Hayworth stayed, and where Agatha Christie went to lick her wounds after hearing of her husband’s infidelity. For reasons I can’t remember now, we ended up at a Turkish wedding in the main ballroom, where there was a riotous band and we were taught to dance Turkish style and drank raki the local tipple.

My second book, East of the Sun, was another good excuse for bolting, now officially called research. This time my husband and I went north to Rajasthan, where we took the tiny little Noddy and Big Ears train up the foothills of the Himalayas to Simla. The second time, I went on my own to Mumbai (Bombay), and then to an ashram near Poona. In Poona, I went to see the hospital where my husband was born. (His father was in the Indian cavalry).

In Delhi, I explored the old cantonments where the British lived; I went to a shabby shop to talk to a beaming old man called Tailor Ram. When I asked him if he remembered his British clients, he produced for me in a cloud of cloud of dust an old pattern book full of measurements and orders for jodhpurs and shark skin dinner jackets, and morning suits, made for the British Sahibs. These are the moments that give you the kind of tingle you’ll never get in a library. You have to go, or at least I do- the travel is the treat, the carrot and the perfect excuse for catching a bolting heroine.

Julia Gregson’s BAND OF ANGELS (Touchstone / Simon & Schuster)
is available May 18, 2010

You can find out more about Julia at her website, read her blog, or follow her on Twitter.


****************

Giveaway Details

Thanks to the author and Touchstone/Fireside (part of Simon and Schuster), we are very pleased to have 3 copies of Band of Angels to give away to our US based readers.

- the giveaway is open to US residents only
- only one entry per person
- please leave us a valid email adress
- open until the 28th May 2010 midnight GMT


Three winners will be choosed randomly using random.org and their names and addresses will be sent to the publisher who will ship the books directly to them. Good luck to everyone!

Monday, May 17, 2010

The Green Bronze Mirror by Lynne Ellison

15 year old Karen is exploring the sea side when she finds an ancient looking mirror in the sand. Now everyone knows that if you find an old mirror, do not stare into it. Of course Karen does and she is transported through time to ancient Rome. Some solders happen upon her and believe she is a runaway slave.

She is taken to a house where she is given to a slave to give her decent clothes and to wash her. Shorts and a tee shirt were very odd clothes indeed. She was taken to the market place and sold. She was a slave to Mistress Julia and was made to take care of Julia's two children. She made friends with some of the other slaves and fell for a older slave boy, Kleon.

Christianity was a new religion back then and when the fires started and destroyed home after home, the Christians were blamed and persecuted. Karen and Kleon flee together to avoid persecution. Eventually Karen confesses to Kleon that she is from the future and he helps her find her way back.

Lynne Ellison wrote this short young adult novel in 1966, when she was just a teenager. It was just re-issued in 2009 by CnPosner Books. The copy I received was a final copy, not an advance reader edition. However, page after page I found spelling errors and word omissions. Instead of fixing these, the publisher has all of the errors listed on their website and invite readers to notify them of any other errors they may have missed. Though I really enjoyed the story, I found these errors rather annoying. I know it costs money to reprint books but I feel that it is unprofessional and does not do Lynne Ellison's good story justice.

Karen told Kleon that the time that she lives in everyone in the world is Christian and how wonderful it is. There is no persecution. I guess this is also suppose to be Christian fantasy novel, because the world I live in, not everyone is Christian and there are still all kinds of people who get persecuted because of their religion. That said, I did like Karen as a character and I liked the story of her as a slave. The story took place when the Roman Empire was ruled by Nero and Ms. Ellison did bring the ancient time to life.

3/5

Note: The publisher just informed me that they did a new printing of the book to correct all the the errors.

Saturday, May 15, 2010

HT News

There is a guest post by Laura Viera Rigler at Historica-fiction.com and it includes a giveaway of Rude Awakenings of a Jane Austen Addict . Also mentioned in the guest post is that "there’s a new comedy web series inspired by RUDE AWAKENINGS OF A JANE AUSTEN ADDICT and CONFESSIONS OF A JANE AUSTEN ADDICT on Babelgum.com. The first of 20 episodes premieres May 17. Watch the teaser trailer and the first episode at http://babelgum.com/sexandtheaustengirl.)"

As part of the HFBRT event, Lucy from Enchanted by Josephine and Heather from The Maiden's Court are giving away a copy of The Final Properties of Nostradamus by Erika Cheetham.

The blogiversary celebrations at She Read a Book continue. This time you can win the first two books in the Morland Dynasty series, The Founding and The Dark Rose.



Other Giveaways:

Daughter of the Witching Hill by Mary Sharratt at She Read a Book
Secrets of the Tudor Court by D L Bogdan at Passages to the Past
The War Lovers: Roosevelt, Lodge, Hearst and the Rush to Empire, 1898 by Evan Thomas (audiobook) at So Many Precious Books, So Little Time
Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Hunter by Seth Grahame-Smith at Books and Needlepoint

Challenge: The Alphabet in Historical Fiction

It's time for a new letter in The Alphabet in Historical Fiction but first let's take a look at our entries for the letter K:


1. Sarah (Reading the Past) - Diana Norman - King of Last Days
2. Cat (Tell me a Story) - The Heretic's Daughter by Kathleen Kent
3. Ana T (Aneca's World) - K is for Dido Kent
4. Marg (The Adventures of an Intrepid Reader) - K is for King Charles II
5. Miss Moppet - The King's Mistress by Emma Campion
6. Leya (Wandeca Reads) - K is for Knights
7. Rowenna (Hyaline Prosaic) - K is for Kingdom of Summer
8. Steph at Laughing Stars - K is for Kabul
9. Teddy (So Many Precious Books) - The Secret River by Kate Grenville
10. Carrie (Opalescent Essence) - The Known World by Edward Jones

And now it's time to remember the rules and introduce the new letter!

Each fortnight you have to write a blog post about an historical fiction book of your choice (it might even be something you already read before), but it MUST be related to the letter of the fortnight.

You have several possibilities:

- the first letter of the title
- the first letter of the author's first name or surname
- the first letter of a character's first name or surname
- the first letter of a place where an historical event took place

You just have to choose one of them and participate.

Please check our blog each 1st and 15th of the month to find out our new letter, and then link your post (not your blog) back to our page through Mr Linky (see below). Then come and check to see who else has posted and visit their blog to find out all the details of the book they were reading.

You have until May 29th to complete your mission, the next letter will be published on May 30th and it is the letter L: