Wow, it's been ages since I did a HT News roundup, and I know that I have missed some great stuff! I haven't been able to blog hop properly for ages, but hopefully will be able to stay on top of it now.
First off, some Historical Tapestry related news!
Don't miss our current giveaway of a set of Instant History Expert DVDs. There are a variety of topics covered in the pack. Find out more here.
Secondly, we are very pleased to announced that we have made it to the shortlist for the Best Historical Fiction blog for Book Blogger Appreciation Week. It's going to be a very tough category to win because I know that I am a huge fan of both Meghan's blog, Medieval Bookworm, and of Allie's blog, Hist-Fic Chick.
Now onto other interesting pieces of information!
Jenny from Jenny Loves to Read is having a 151 Followers contest, and there are a number of historical fiction novels among the prizes! And the contest is open to international entrants as well! Thanks Jenny!
I love reading the books by Susan Holloway Scott which are set predominantly in the courts of Charles II. To celebrate the release of The Countess and the King, Amy from Passages to the Past is giving away all 5 of Susan's books! All 5! If I didn't already own them, and if I lived in the right country I would be entering this prize draw!
This was posted about a couple of weeks ago, but hopefully you will still be able to get a spot if you are interested! I know I am tempted by a Tudor queens of England tour. All the details are available at EverythingTudor.com
Other Giveaways
The Thousand by Kevin Guilfoile at Historical-Fiction.com
Red Queen by Philippa Gregory at S Krishna's Books
Dracula in Love by Karen Essex at Readaholic and at A Bookworm's World
War on the Margins by Libby Cone at Pudgy Penguin Perusals
The Jewel of St Petersburg at Luxury Reading
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Upcoming Releases - September 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.
Historical Tapestry is now a Book Depository Affiliate and all commissions earned from sales through our links will be used to fund future giveaways.
September 1
Rag and Bone by James Benn
City of Tranquil Light by Bo Caldwell
The Bells by Richard Harvell
The Gentleman Poet by Kathryn Johnson
Margaret Beaufort: Mother of the Tudor Dynasty by Elizabeth Norton
An Impartial Witness by Charles Todd
Come Again No More by Jack Todd
September 2
Winter's Knight by Richard Argent
Empire of Silver by Conn Iggulden
Emily Hudson by Melissa Lynn Jones
Daniel by Henning Mankel
A War of Her Own by Sylvia Dickey Smith
The Anatomy of Ghosts by Andrew Taylor
September 7
The Tale of Oat Cake Crag by Susan Wittig Albert
The Crocodile's Las Embrace by Suzanne Arruda
Dead Man's Chest by Kerry Greenwood
The Countess and the King: A Novel of the Countess of Dorchester and King James II by Susan Holloway Scott
C by Tom McCarthy
Mary Tudor: Princess, Bastard, Queen by Anna Whitelock
September 14
The Montmartre Investigation by Claude Izner
The Mistaken Wife by Rose Melikan
The Unbelievers by Alastair Sim
September 16
Dark Moon of Avalon by Anna Elliott
The Lost Kings by Bruno Hare
The Fool's Crusade by Pip Vaughan-Hughes
The Death Instinct by Jed Rubenfeld
September 24
Elizabeth's Women: Friends, Rivals, and Foes Who Shaped the Virgin Queen by Tracy Borman
September 28
Jane and The Madness of Lord Byron by Stephanie Barron
The Exile: An Outlander Graphic Novel by Diana Gabaldon
Fall of Giants by Ken Follett
Sphinx's Queen by Esther Friesner
The Wrong Blood by Manuel de Lope
September 30
Sick of Shadows by M.C. Beaton
Our Lady of Pain by M.C. Beaton
The Fort by Bernard Cornwell
Styx and Stones by Carola Dunn
Rattle His Bones by Carola Dunn
Merlin: Demon's Gift by M K Hume
She Lover of Death by Boris Akunin
Monday, August 30, 2010
Instant History Expert DVD giveaway
We are excited to have a giveaway with a difference here at Historical Tapestry. We are all about historical fiction and books here, but underlying is a love of history, and so when we were offered the chance to do a giveaway of six DVDs from Instant History Expert we jumped at the chance.
This exciting prize includes the following six DVDs. The links in the title take you to the Amazon page for each DVD.Please note that this prize is being sent directly from the people behind Instant Experts and as such is open to US residents only. The contest will close on September 17.
Here are the details of the six DVDs that form the prize pack.
FRENCH REVOLUTION
The story of THE FRENCH REVOLUTION is an epic tale of political rebellion and economic upheaval. From the grandeur of Versailles and the marriage of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, to the disintegration of the revolution nearly a decade later, THE FRENCH REVOLUTION details this pivotal period in European history.
BEOWULF
The legend of Beowulf, the Viking world’s most famous warrior, is the ultimate tale of courage. Pit against thirsty invaders, barbaric monsters, and a fire-breathing dragon, BEOWULF emerged as Norse mythology’s greatest hero.
BEN FRANKLIN
Narrated in a straightforward, conversational tone, BEN FRANKLIN features in-depth interviews with renowned biographers and historians, as well as on-location reenactments shot in high-definition, for a truly remarkable walk in this founding father's footsteps.
THE MAYFLOWER
The epic saga of the pilgrims and their journey to and colonization of the New World is one of the fundamental narratives of our nation. THE MAYFLOWER explores the true story of the pilgrims and how the colony’s saga continued in the decades after their fateful voyage.
EGYPT
Through cutting-edge digital graphics and interviews with noted Egyptologists, EGYPT explores the civilization’s awe-inspiring engineering accomplishments, chronicling the pharaohs and feats that helped build the world’s first superpower.
THE STORY OF OIL
An energy source unrivaled in efficiency and power, oil is the driving force behind today’s industries and economies. THE STORY OF OIL traces the story of oil through the centuries, from its birth deep in the dinosaur-inhabited past to its ascendancy as an indispensable ingredient of modern life.
In order to enter this contest, please complete the form below:
This exciting prize includes the following six DVDs. The links in the title take you to the Amazon page for each DVD.Please note that this prize is being sent directly from the people behind Instant Experts and as such is open to US residents only. The contest will close on September 17.
Here are the details of the six DVDs that form the prize pack.
FRENCH REVOLUTION
The story of THE FRENCH REVOLUTION is an epic tale of political rebellion and economic upheaval. From the grandeur of Versailles and the marriage of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, to the disintegration of the revolution nearly a decade later, THE FRENCH REVOLUTION details this pivotal period in European history.
BEOWULF
The legend of Beowulf, the Viking world’s most famous warrior, is the ultimate tale of courage. Pit against thirsty invaders, barbaric monsters, and a fire-breathing dragon, BEOWULF emerged as Norse mythology’s greatest hero.
BEN FRANKLIN
Narrated in a straightforward, conversational tone, BEN FRANKLIN features in-depth interviews with renowned biographers and historians, as well as on-location reenactments shot in high-definition, for a truly remarkable walk in this founding father's footsteps.
THE MAYFLOWER
The epic saga of the pilgrims and their journey to and colonization of the New World is one of the fundamental narratives of our nation. THE MAYFLOWER explores the true story of the pilgrims and how the colony’s saga continued in the decades after their fateful voyage.
EGYPT
Through cutting-edge digital graphics and interviews with noted Egyptologists, EGYPT explores the civilization’s awe-inspiring engineering accomplishments, chronicling the pharaohs and feats that helped build the world’s first superpower.
THE STORY OF OIL
An energy source unrivaled in efficiency and power, oil is the driving force behind today’s industries and economies. THE STORY OF OIL traces the story of oil through the centuries, from its birth deep in the dinosaur-inhabited past to its ascendancy as an indispensable ingredient of modern life.
In order to enter this contest, please complete the form below:
Sunday, August 29, 2010
Kailana's Books of a Lifetime
Back in July Marg, Ana, and Alex all posted their Books of a Lifetime Post. My computer broke, so I was a bit delayed in even finding out that it was happening and now I am really late doing my post, but it was too fun to not. It's hard to narrow things down.
Childhood Years
Fantasy and science-fiction have always been my main genres over the years, but I am going to leave them off the list because this is a historical fiction blog. I might do a post with a fantasy-theme on my own blog. Anyway, the others all mentioned Trixie Belden. I feel I should have a series like that, but I only really read Nancy Drew and I always found them a bit corny and 'too nice'.
This is one of the first historical fiction novels that I ever read. I was in like the fourth grade and I remember being really captivated by this story. Back when I read it I didn't know a lot about the Underground Railroad and I still am drawn to books that cover this aspect of history, so I credit this as my start. I really should reread this.
One summer when I was about 10 I decided to read this entire series. I loved it and I really really need to reread it. Anne was a fantastic character and I enjoyed learning all about her family, friends, and the beautiful island that she calls home.
Teenage Years
Not entirely historical, but I am counting it anyways. I loved this series and even if I never read it again it will always be on my best of list. There is so much going on in these books and lots of characters to enjoy.
This might be adult years, but I almost forgot this book! I love Allende. Love, love, love her! Some are not historical fiction, though, so I just mentioned this one. There were a couple of her books that were not as strong as this one, but overall she can do no wrong and remains one of my favourite authors of all time. I recently read her most recent novel and I loved it!
Adult Years
I loved this book. It is over 900 pages long, if I remember correctly, and so in-depth! I knew what was going to happen, but I still enjoyed watching things unfold and I still was hoping that things would turn out differently even though that was impossible! This is the only book I have read by Penman and I really need to remedy that one day!
I really enjoy anything that combines historical fiction and fantasy. This series might not be entirely factual, but I really enjoyed reading it anyways. The first three books were my favourite, but overall I loved them all. I was really sad to see this series end.
I really enjoy series about strong female characters and this is another series that I am really excited about. This series seems rather believable, though. It might not have actually happened, but it brings in aspects of history and historical characters. The latest book wasn't as strong as the rest of the series, but I am still looking forward to the next book.
There are a lot more, but those were the three that came to mind first!
Recently I read The Winter Sea by Susanna Kearsley and I loved it! The other bloggers all ready mentioned it, so I won't really say much more about it. Just point out that they were right and you really should read it! Plus, Kearsley is Canadian, so something else that always gets me excited. I also read Mariana by her and really enjoyed that book, too. This is an example of why book blogging is great.
Friday, August 27, 2010
For the King by Catherine Delors
The Reign of Terror has ended, and Napoléon Bonaparte has seized power, but shifting political loyalties still tear apart families and lovers. On Christmas Eve 1800, a bomb explodes along Bonaparte's route, narrowly missing him but striking dozens of bystanders. Chief Inspector Roch Miquel, a young policeman with a bright future and a beautiful mistress, must arrest the assassins before they attack again. Complicating Miquel's investigation are the maneuverings of his superior, the redoubtable Fouché, the indiscretions of his own father, a former Jacobin, and two intriguing women.
Based on real events and characters and rich with historical detail, For the King takes readers through the dark alleys and glittering salons of post-revolutionary Paris and is a timeless epic of love, betrayal, and redemption.
The story opens with an extremely powerful scene, an attempted murder of the First Consul, Napoléon Bonaparte, who is passing by Rue Nicaise in his way to the Opera. Two Chouans, Pierre Saint Régent and Joseph de Limoëlan, block the street with a cart and provoke an explosion with a strange device called “La Machine Infernale”. In a few minutes, a deadly explosion kills dozens of people, innocent Parisians, but fails to get the target of their mission. Bonaparte leaves in his carriage with his escort perfectly safe. The details of the effects of the bomb are striking, I could easily imagine the horror of those who first arrive to that slaughter.
Roch Miquel is a Chief Inspector who leads this investigation. Young, handsome and intelligent, he knows the importance of finding out the responsible minds behind the attack of the Rue Nicaise, especially after seeing the consequences. He is the son of a Romani Auvergnat, Antonin Miquel, the owner of The Mighty Barrel tavern and also a Jacobite who doesn't hide his opinions about the First Consul and the government. Roch is in love of his beautiful mistress, Blanche, a married, refined and cultivated young woman who seems too perfect to be real.
As I mentioned before in Historical Tapestry conversation about For The King, I had some troubles warming up to Roch in the first half of the book. His judgments towards several people he meets all along the story really got into my nerves. He was quick to love and even quicker to hate. I often felt bad for Alexandrine about the way he treated her and her father. I do understand his background, his story but sometimes it was a bit too much rudeness for my taste. With the development of the investigation, he slowly changes his attitude and becomes less distant and less judgmental towards those who really care for him..
The secondary characters are inevitably captivating, despite their actions. I couldn't stop myself searching for more information about Saint Régent and Limoëlan. Both are responsible for the massacre in Rue Nicaise and yet, I cannot dislike them as much as I did Fouché. They fight for what they believe and if I cannot forgive them for what they did, I felt that neither could them, especially Limoëlan. He seems to have lived all his life riddled with guilt.
Now, someone I completely disliked but couldn't help feeling drawn to him was the untrustworthy Fouché, the minister of Police. He is perfect in the role of villain, an unscrupulous turncoat who switches allegiances as he see fit. He always sides with the winners, no matter what. Definitely a very dangerous man!
Joseph Fouché |
The Old Miquel is definately my favorite character. He is so touching with his unconditional love for his son, even if he can be very harsh with him as a young boy. He is a man who always remains faithful to his ideals. We learn that he had a very difficult life filled with poverty, hard work and death, but he seems to enjoy life as much as he can. The details of his life in Auvergne and his work in Paris were fascinating.
The historical research behind the story is remarkable and we can feel in every page the incredible work Catherine Delors did to recreate the Post Revolutionary Paris. For those who know this city, For the King is a tremendous treat, those who don't I'm sure you'll enjoy it and you'll want to come to Paris and visit every corner mentioned in the book.
This period of French history, just after the Revolution and the first years of Napoleon as First Consul, was never really appealing to me, mostly due to my profound dislike for the future French Emperor. Catherine Delors novel didn't change my opinion but made me realize that I will read everything she writes no matter the historical period. Meanwhile, I already add Mistress of the Revolution to my TBR pile for my next vacation. Can't wait!
Grade: 4.5/5
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Bluegate Fields by Anne Perry
Inspector Pitt was shocked. The body was found in the filthy sewers of Bluegate Fields, one of London's most dangerous slums, but the dead boy was clearly from high society. And he had been violated before he was murdered. So vile a case was hardly a proper topic for drawing room conversation. But when the Waybournes, the boy's family, refused to answer the police's questions, Inspector Pitt began to wonder what secrets they were trying to hide. His wife and co-sleuth, Charlotte, was determined to find out--even if it meant tearing, down the facades of an oh-so-proper family....
Bluegate Fields go a bit deeper in the Victorian underworld than most of Charlotte and Pitt's stories. Unlike the previous story where Charlotte and her family took center stage, in this one it is Pitt, his boss and his young colleague who are the primary investigators. Charlotte is still a much needed figure though as she is the only one who can find the answers needed in society's salons.
The story opens with a body being found in the sewers. Called to the occurrence Pitt eventually concludes that the naked body is of a young gentleman, a teenager really, and the police doctor tells him that there is evidence of homosexual activity. And so starts an investigation that first is about who is the dead boy, and secondly what happened to him and who killed him.
There were several things that I really enjoyed about this book. There were the class distinctions that are present in every story, but here more so because we are dealing with those with the lowest status in Victorian society - the ones who sell their bodies for a few pennies. Who live in misery, either because they are born to it or because fate brought them there. After the first body is found with signs of what was then a hanging offence it was immediately obvious that almost everyone was happy to let the matter rest. How in society's eyes it was preferable to find an easy scapegoat that would allow closing the subject with relative discretion, instead of looking for the real culprit.
Pitt refuses to stop investigating, despite his superior's orders, and with Charlotte's help he eventually finds the murderer. I was disappointed in that we never have a clear idea of the victim. If he had indeed been a victim of abuse or a willing participant. And in that we never have a final confrontation with the killer. As it had happened previously I ended up asking myself if that was another cover up or indeed the real thing.
Grade: 4/5
Labels:
Ana's Reviews,
Anne Perry,
Historical Mystery,
Victorian
Monday, August 23, 2010
Winner of The Fairest Portion of the Globe by Frances Hunter
I promise I hadn't forgotten to draw the winner's name for The Fairest Portion of the Globe! I just haven't had a chance to do everything I need to do blogging wise!
With apologies for the tardiness of this announcement, I am very pleased to announce that the winner is
Susan from Wink and Wonder
Congratulations to Susan. Please email us your contact details so that we can get your book on it's way to you.
Thank you to everyone else who entered and to Frances Hunter for providing the book for this giveaway.
Stay tuned for more giveaways soon.
With apologies for the tardiness of this announcement, I am very pleased to announce that the winner is
Susan from Wink and Wonder
Congratulations to Susan. Please email us your contact details so that we can get your book on it's way to you.
Thank you to everyone else who entered and to Frances Hunter for providing the book for this giveaway.
Stay tuned for more giveaways soon.
HT Recommends: Books Set in Venice
Faith L. Justice says:
I checked out your recommendations but didn't find anything set in Venice 12-16C. I had a request from a colleague for good historical novels set in this time and place. It’s the topic of a Humanities West program in San Francisco, and he's responsible for making reading recommendations to the audience. Any recommendations?
Since some of us do like Italian history it was actually a nice challenge to look for books with this theme. Here's what we found:
13th Century
Mark Frutkin - The Lion of Venice
14th Century
G. A. Henty - The Lion of St. Mark: A tale of Venice in the 14th Century
15th Century
14th Century
G. A. Henty - The Lion of St. Mark: A tale of Venice in the 14th Century
15th Century
Barbara Cherne - Bella Donna
Elizabeth Eyre - Dirge for a Doge
George Herman - A Comedy of Murders
Michelle Lovric - The Floating Book
Elle Newmark - Bones of The Dead
Elizabeth Eyre - Dirge for a Doge
George Herman - A Comedy of Murders
Michelle Lovric - The Floating Book
Elle Newmark - Bones of The Dead
Elle Newmark - The Book of Unholy Mischief
Thomas Quinn - The Lion of St Mark
Thomas Quinn - The Sword of Venice Donna Raven - Daughter of Venice, Queen of Cyprus
Barry Unsworth - The Stone Virgin
16th Century
Federico Andahazi - The Anatomist
James Cowan - A Mapmaker's Dream: The meditations of Fra Mauro, cartographer to the court of Venice
Edward Charles - Daughters of The Doge
Sarah Dunant - In the Company of the Courtesan
Robert Elegant - Bianca
George Herman - Carnival of Saints
Erica Jong - Serenissima
Kay MacCauley - The Man Who Was Loved
Lauro Martines - Loredana: a Venetian tale
Donna Jo Napoli - Daughter of Venice
Unfortunately nothing from the 12th century and only one title for both the 13th and 14th century so other suggestions are very welcome. Can anyone come up with more titles?
Saturday, August 21, 2010
The Stone Virgin by Barry Unsworth
When conservationist Simon Raikes goes to Venice to restore a statue of the Madonna, he is unprepared for the effect this stone virgin's strange, seductive beauty and mysterious past will have on his life.
The Stone Virgin is set in Venice in 3 different periods in time, the 1400s, the 1700s and in present day. The story opens in the 15th century with the artist facing his accusers on a murder charge but most of the novel is set present day where Simon Raikes is restoring a statue of a Madonna, a Virgin Mary, and while he works on it he is intrigued by who made the statue and what happened to the statue over the years.
I thought it interesting that there 3 stories in 3 different periods all directly related with the statue, or the men interest in the statue. All of them seem to focus on the sexual relationships the men had with the women in their life and the feelings, good and bad, that those evoked. I was expecting to find more interesting desciptions of Venice in those different periods and I didn't for which I'm sorry. I do understand that art appeals to the senses but lately it seems that most of the art related books I read are more than sensual, they are downright erotic, I think that's okay in a story well told but I'm starting to wonder if this is a pattern in today's art related literature...
I did like the mystery approach, who made the statue? What happened to him? Especially after that intriguing start. But Raikes affair and indeed his interactions with his colleagues take too much space and I kept wishing we got back to mystery.
As I mentioned in my review of Dunant's The Birth of Venus maybe it's just that these are not my type of books. I will definitely have to think twice before picking up another such as these.
Grade: 3.5/5
Thursday, August 19, 2010
A Murderous Procession by Ariana Franklin
Adelia is back in this thrilling fourth installment of the Mistress of the Art of Death seriesHaving spent a couple of years living in relative obscurity, happily raising her daughter, sharing her home with her friends and when possible spending time with her lover, Rowley, Adelia Aguilar is not best pleased when she is summoned by King Henry II. He has a task for her. She has been chosen to accompany the King's young daughter Joanna from England to her wedding in Sicily. Also in the party is Rowley and her Arab companion Mansur but her daughter is going to be lodging with Queen Eleanor, both for her development, but also as surety that Adelia will return to England.
In 1176, King Henry II sends his ten-year-old daughter, Joanna, to Palermo to marry William II of Sicily. War on the Continent and outbreaks of plague make it an especially dangerous journey, so the king selects as his daughter’s companion the woman he trusts most: Adelia Aguilar, his mistress of the art of death. As a medical doctor and native of Sicily, it will be Adelia’s job to travel with the princess and safeguarding her health until the wedding.
Adelia wants to refuse—accompanying the royal procession means leaving behind her nine-year-old daughter. Unfortunately, Henry has arranged for the girl to live at court, both as a royal ward and as a hostage to ensure that Adelia will return to the king’s service. So Adelia sets off for a yearlong royal procession. Accompanying her on the journey are her Arab companion, Mansur, her lover, Rowley, and an unusual newcomer: the Irish sea captain O’Donnell, who may prove more useful to Adelia than Rowley would like.
But another man has joined the procession—a murderer bent on the worst kind of revenge. When people in the princess’s household begin to die, Adelia and Rowley suspect that the killer is hiding in plain sight. Is his intended victim the princess . . . or Adelia herself?
The journey itself is dangerous. The procession goes through France, to Aquitaine, through the Languedoc region where the Cathar heresy is spreading and so is the Church's eagerness and enthusiasm in squashing that faith, and then onto Sicily. Along the way the young princess is accompanied by a large party. There are her servants, her ladies in waiting, the requisite churchmen, a few knights and soldiers. For different parts of the journey we also get glimpses of her brothers, Young Henry and Richard, who is now most famously known as Richard the Lionheart. We also spend time in the court at Aquitaine, famous for courtly love and also in the inhospitable mountains of the Languedoc region of France where Adelia comes into contact with two Cathar women and very nearly finds herself being treated as one.
In keeping with the attitudes of the time, Mansur and Adelia are mistrusted by many of their travelling companions, especially after some of their travelling companions begin to be murdered. It isn't clear though exactly who it is that is the target. Is it the princess? Is it someone who is hoping to steal the priceless treasure that is travelling with the party, or is it someone who is targeting Adelia herself?
I never thought I would find myself saying this about a Ariana Franklin/Diana Norman novel, but I didn't really enjoy this one that much.There are a number of reasons why.
The first is that the author used quite an unusual technique in that where ever we were inside the thoughts of the characters then those thoughts were italicised. No great drama there, except that we spent the majority of time inside the thoughts of Scarry, who is the villain of the piece but then we were following Adelia's thoughts, and then back to Scarry. At one point, I was waiting for us to get a glimpse into the thoughts of the dog. And yes, we know the whole time through the book who the villain is. What we don't know is who he is disguised as and what role he has within the travelling party. That mystery in itself is not too badly handled.
The second is that I didn't like Rowley as much as I usually do. I have liked Rowley in the previous books with his unusual mix of knight and churchman sensibilities. Here is a man who is in love with a woman but is restricted from being able to be with her because he was appointed to a role within the church and because of her occupation and beliefs. In this book he has morphed into a jealous and domineering lover (and yes, you are reminded repeatedly that he and Adelia are lovers). It is difficult for Adelia and Rowley because he is a church man and therefore can not be seen to have a lover and so they are forced to stay away from one another during the procession, but at one stop on their journey he hires a room for them, and basically on arrival he walks in and says " Renting this hovel is costing me a fortune. Now get your clothes off." Yes, he was always a man's man with man's needs but it just didn't feel to me as though this is the way that Rowley would have spoken to Adelia in the previous books.
Adelia was also a bit more petulant than she normally seemed to be to me, often being angry with Rowley and Mansur and not speaking to them etc. Admittedly everyone around her seemed to know what was happening to her and they did their best to make sure that she didn't know which annoyed her, but still. I didn't like this aspect of her character.
I am not sure if it is that I am not remembering this from the previous books but it seems to me that this book was a lot coarser than the earlier books in the series. For example, at one point the Bishop of Avergnon is imagining the burning at the stake of a Cathar woman and the description given is:
When Gerhardt had gone, his lord poured himself another glass of the vintage from his vineyard near Carcassonne and sipped it while he engineered a new vision of Ermengarde his black-clad tauntress, this time tied to a stake with faggots laid around her feet.
He saw himself thrusting a torch into the wood like a penis into her parts and sighed because, alas, that pleasure must be left to the executioner. One day, though, yes, yes, one day, the flames he'd light would consume them all...men, women, and children.
This really was most excellent wine.
There were also a number of new characters introduced from a new maid named Boggart, and the charismatic, charming, almost swashbuckling captain O'Donnell. I am not sure what the purpose of introducing O'Donnell was really. I liked O'Donnell a lot, and I would be happy to read more about him, but without giving too much away it almost seemed as though it was an unfulfilled attempt at a love triangle. I suspect though that we will see more of O'Donnell in future books in the series, which may give us more insight into what the author was trying to achieve.
In no way am I suggesting that I am giving up on this author, because I have enjoyed far too many of her books over the last few years to let one disappointment get in my way. I might be a little more wary though when I start the next book.
Rating: 3/5
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
The Oak Apple by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles
When civil war destroys the long years of peace in England, the clash between King and Parliament is echoed at Morland Place. Richard, the heir, brings home a Puritan bride, while his dashing brother Kit joins the Royalist cavalry under prince Rupert, leaving their father, Edmund, desperately trying to steer a middle course. As the war grinds on, bitterness replaces early fervour and divisions grow deeper, and through it all Edmund struggles grimly to protect his inheritance and keep Morland Place intact.
The Oak Apple starts a few years after the Princeling ends. The characters that ended the last book as children are now adults with children of their own. The master of Morland Place is Edmund Morland and the historical setting is the reign of Charles I and the fights between Parliament and King. A significant part of the book is devoted to the description of battles, although they are not usually my favourite reading subject Harrod-Eagles does a very good job with it and I was actually interested and horrified by what I was reading. There are no heroes or villains in this, just men who believe in different things and defending their ideas.
As in previous books the gap between generations widens due to different political sides. While Edmund is mostly worried with protecting his birthplace his son Richard marries a puritan and his second son and several cousins join the King's army. The political situation will take its toll on Edmund's marriage and the war effort will affect the whole family. I thought it interesting that there was the introduction of a puritan character but I think that sadly we only get to know the basics about Puritanism. I at least was curious to know more.
I liked it that, as in previous books, the author included a female character that stands out. Here it is Ruth Morland. In love with her cousin Kit she sees him marry another cousin - Hero - and ends up having to give Hero and their son shelter when the war reaches their doorsteps. She manages her brother's home and after his death manages to live alone and independent. Ruth eventually bears a daughter out of wedlock, Annunciata, and doesn't seem to worry about the scandal. Another thing I liked was that a branch of the family sets out to America. Since Edmund doesn't have enough land to divide for all his sons, Ambrose Morland and his wife Nell sail to Maryland where they hope to claim lands and build their lives.
I have mentioned Ruth as the strong character in this story but I have to say that Edmund's wife Mary Esther is the one that does everything to keep the family together no matter what. Despite the war there are still a household to organise, marriages to plan and funerals to arrange. And I really did enjoy reading about all of it, not everyone is nice or easy to understand but that's what life is made of...
Grade: 4.5/5
Sunday, August 15, 2010
HT News
There are lots and lots and lots of giveaways going on around blogland at the moment. You might need to check the closing date for some of these giveaways as I accidentally left this post in draft over the weekend! Sorry about that.
Dracula, My Love by Syrie James at Scandalous Women, at Passages to the Past and at Historical-Fiction.com
The Crown in the Heather by N. Gemini Sassoon at Historical Novel Review
The Red Queen by Philippa Gregory at Historical Fiction Connection, at Literate Housewife, at Booking Mama, and Medieval Bookworm
The King's Mistress by Emma Campion at S Krishna's Books and at BABAEL
Dracula in Love by Karen Essex at Chick with Books
Miracle of Prato by Laurie Albanese and Laura Morowitz at The Tome Traveller's Weblog
The Personal History of Rachel Dupree by Ann Weisbarger at Historical Novel Review
Heart of Lies by M L Malcolm at The Maiden's Court
Murder at Mansfield Park by Lynn Shepherd at My Jane Austen Book Club
For the King by Catherine Delors at Beth Fish Reads
The Russian Concubine by Kate Furnivall at Passages to the Past
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 P:
1. Rowenna (Hyaline Prosaic) - P is for The Postmistress
2. Marshallslion - P is for Sir Robert Peel
3. Ana (Aneca's World) - P is for Perry
4. Sarah (Reading the Past) - P is for Performers
5. Cat (Tell me a Story) - P is for Peony
6. Carrie (Opalescent Essence) - P is for Poppies
7. Marg (Adventures of an Intrepid Reader) - P is for Pendragon's Banner trilogy
8. Teddy (So Many Precious Books)- P is for Paul Michel
9. Wisteria (Bookworm's Dinner) - P is for Pride and Prejudice retelling
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'll have until August 31th to complete your mission, the next letter will be published on September 1st and it is the letter Q:
1. Rowenna (Hyaline Prosaic) - P is for The Postmistress
2. Marshallslion - P is for Sir Robert Peel
3. Ana (Aneca's World) - P is for Perry
4. Sarah (Reading the Past) - P is for Performers
5. Cat (Tell me a Story) - P is for Peony
6. Carrie (Opalescent Essence) - P is for Poppies
7. Marg (Adventures of an Intrepid Reader) - P is for Pendragon's Banner trilogy
8. Teddy (So Many Precious Books)- P is for Paul Michel
9. Wisteria (Bookworm's Dinner) - P is for Pride and Prejudice retelling
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'll have until August 31th to complete your mission, the next letter will be published on September 1st and it is the letter Q:
Friday, August 13, 2010
The Princeling by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles
Protestantism is sweeping the land and threatens the position of the Catholic Morlands, so they must seek new spheres of influence. John, the heir, rides north to the untamed Borderlands to wed the daughter of Black Will Percy, Northumberland cattle lord. But he finds he must first prove himself, and win her heart through blood and battle. John’s gentle sister Lettice is given in marriage to the ruthless Scottish baron, Lord Robert Hamilton, and in the treacherous court of Mary, Queen of Scots, she learns the fierce lessons of survival.
The third book in the Morland saga brings back Nanette, Paul and their respective families. Their children are now adults and marriages have to be arranged to consolidate their wealth and power during Queen Elizabeth's reign. Although Nanette and Paul still yield considerable power in the Morland house hold, despite Nanette being mostly away at court, this is the time that sees the generation of Jan, John, Lettice and their siblings and cousins reach adulthood and while some obey the patriarch´s wishes, others decide to follow their own path. The breach between the generations goes further as the older still follow the old religion and the young ones adopts the new one.
The historical background brings forth Queen Elizabeth's most important political events, the reign and fall of Queen Mary of Scotland and the problems in the border. While I did not feel that this time the characters were in the middle of the political intrigue, they are used to tell us those realities. Jan, Nanette's adoptive son, finally finds the truth about his parentage and that seems to widen the gulf between him and his mother. I have to say that I thought it interesting that Harrod-Eagles should have included in her story Mary Seymour, the daughter of Katherine Parr, that here becomes Jan's wife, and of which nothing is known after her second birthday.
While Jan and his wife want to fight to become masters of Morland Place, John is sent away to marry Mary Percy. I quite liked this Mary, totally unlike the other female Morlands, she is a warrior and a leader that fascinates John who feels he must woo her carefully and quite differently from what he was used to. Through Lettice we see the events in the Scottish court, a dangerous place where the lords had to change allegiance each time someone controlled the queen. I can't say I much liked Lettice's husband, he seemed the consummate political courtier who sacrificed everything for his political goal. Through others of the young generation we get to know the theater world or Sir Francis Drake's expedition.
While I did enjoy the historical background I think it was the characters that stand out to me in this story. There are moments of doubt, fear, pain but also happiness. Some feelings are timeless and it is easy to feel with these characters. It did strike me reading this story that nowadays we almost take for granted that we will have long lives or at least good health care. For these Morlands death was something that came often and fast taking away their loved ones.
Grade: 4/5
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Karen Essex on Why I Love Vampires
Karen Essex's new book Dracula in Love has just been released, and to celebrate Karen has agreed to share with us why she loves vampires. Given how popular they seem to be everywhere now, it seems a very timely topic! You can find out more about Karen and her books at her website, KarenEssex.com. Welcome to Historical Tapestry Karen.
Friends and readers, let me give it to you straight. I do not want to die. It’s that simple. Oh, I am not afraid of death. I believe beyond a shadow of doubt in the immortality of the soul. I am absolutely certain that death will be a pleasant, if not ecstatic experience. I always believe that the best is yet to come, and I extend that belief to my experience beyond the death of the body. If life is good, then death will be great.
On the other hand, I am conflicted. I know that my consciousness is eternal and has probably been projected into many bodies in many different eras of human existence. There are probably many more lifetimes yet to come. But I really like this body that I am in right now. It looks good enough, is aging better than I expected, and most of all, is very healthy. It has always done what I ask it to do: crawl, walk, run, shoot baskets, pitch baseball, dance, contort into weird yogic positions, sprawl on the couch. What more could I ask of a hunk of flesh and corpuscle?
I also very much like this mind; the one that is communicating with you right now; the one that talks back to me when I ask internal questions; the one I educated for years and years; the one that has read thousands of books and written six of them. Do you have any idea how much work that’s entailed? Why would I want to start over with a mushy baby mind that can’t string a proper sentence together when I already have this finely tuned machine that once did calculus and can still turn out five pages of smoking prose even on a down day? Why?
So you see, despite my optimism about the glory of the death experience, in the end, this birth-age-death-rebirth cycle just does not work for me. That is why I decided to look into other options. I am a thorough researcher, so believe me when I tell you that I investigated all sorts of things, even cryogenics.
In fact, to write my new novel, Dracula in Love, I studied every sort of magic and mythology having to do with immortality, and I concluded (along with Dracula) that the best and most attractive option, at least for me, is vampirism. As Dracula himself might have worded it, if life is good and death is great, then how much greater is undeath?
I wish that I was unique in my desire, but suddenly, massive numbers of people have come to the same conclusion. Everyone wants to be one! Did the vampire community secretly finance a multi-billion dollar image improvement campaign? For centuries, vampires were terrible monsters reflecting cultural fears; now they are more glamorous than rock stars and reflect our deepest fantasies. You can’t throw a stone without running into a woman looking for a Dracula or a Cullen to give her eternity (and I don’t mean the cologne).
I say we are very close to being vampires already. We live in a youth-seeking, youth-worshipping society—on steroids. Every generation has longed for a fountain of youth but today we actually have youth-extending tools that enable us to reject the very idea of aging. We have stem cell treatments, hormone therapies, miracle herbs and vitamins, cosmetic surgery both invasive and noninvasive, and loads of medicines that can keep us alive and looking good past our expiration date. I often run into people who look better than they did twenty years ago! We are already vampirizing ourselves at unprecedented rates!
On a practical level, shouldn’t we amortize the enormous investment we’ve made in ourselves over a few centuries at the very least? One of the most depressing things about studying history is that humans do not learn by the mistakes of their ancestors. Every generation has to learn its own lessons in its own time. But imagine a world in which a good segment of the population was immortal. These ancient beings, having been witnesses to so much history, could be our most valuable advisers and our most trusted and wise voices. The accumulated wisdom and knowledge in each undead brain would rival the world’s greatest libraries, and, being immortal, would not be vulnerable to the sorts of things that have destroyed the great libraries of the past such as fire, flood, earthquakes, or marauding hordes of warriors.
The more I ponder the idea, the more it appeals to me. I don’t suppose you want to join me for a snack?
Monday, August 9, 2010
Rutland Place by Anne Perry
London's most unusual sleuthing team, Inspector Thomas Pitt and his wife, Charlotte, could not stay away from trouble.
When Charlotte learned of her mother's distress in losing a locket with a compromising picture, she did not know it was the beginning of several bizarre events that would end in sudden death.
For hidden behind the sumptuous elegance of Rutland Place were terrible secrets. Secrets so horrifying that only murder could conceal them.
But the dangerous persistence of Charlotte and the quiet patience of Inspector Pitt made it possible to unwind this most macabre and chilling mystery....
It never ceases to amaze me how well Perry conveys my idea of Victorian society - or maybe I should say how well she convinced me with her portrayal. Small worlds where everyone knows everyone else and their worth. Where everyone believes they know each other's secrets but where most manage to conceal strong passions, hidden desires and, sometimes, hideous crimes.
In this fifth installment of the Pitt series, Charlotte and Thomas have moved to a new house with their daughter Jemima. Charlotte is pregnant again, and more worried about the house chores than going about in society, when a letter from her mother requests her presence and her help.
Caroline has misplaced a jewel with a compromising picture and, unsure of what to do but feeling threatened by an invisible presence asks Charlotte to give her some assistance. While on society calls it is apparent that more trinkets have been stolen from the neighbouring houses and the visits give Charlotte the opportunity to get to know her mother's friends and acquaintances. When one of them is found dead they can't help but wonder whether her death is connected to the thefts and whether Caroline could be in danger of a blackmailer or a murderer.
With Thomas being called upon to investigate the murder, and Charlotte working within society to discover the secrets that might have been hidden from a common policeman, it is no wonder that soon some of the secrets start to be revealed.
I particularly liked the ladies detecting skills and how everything seems to fall into place with each new secret uncovered. I also enjoyed the subplot about Caroline's feelings and how it made Charlotte examine her own feelings and look at her mother as a woman. I thought that the explanation for the first missing girl was rather funny - as was Charlotte's discovery of her fate - and it certainly contributed to lighten the mood of an, otherwise, dark and gloomy novel. Some books you close thinking that all will be well afterwards but that is not the case here, there's more pain and despair than actual justice in the end and Charlotte, who uncovers the whole truth, decides to let it rest.
Although I can't disagree with the ending I also can't help but feel that this was the easy way out in terms of a solution. I think that Pitt, unlike Charlotte, wouldn't have let it lie.
Grade: 4/5
Labels:
Ana's Reviews,
Anne Perry,
Historical Mystery,
Victorian
Saturday, August 7, 2010
HT News
Lauren Willig is having lots of fun over at her website at the moment. Recently she announced a contest asking people to design a cover for the upcoming Orchid Affair, part of her Pink Carnation series. Now, we all get to vote to choose the winners. There are also other chances to win, so be sure to check out the News page regularly.
Other Giveaways
The Secret Eleanor by Cecilia Holland at Passages to the Past
His Last Duchess by Gabrielle Kim at Historical Belles and Beaus
Dracula in Love by Karen Essex (3 copies) at Passages to the Past
His Last Letter by Jeanne Westin at Tudor Book Blog
The Killing Way by Tony Hays (4 copies) at Passages to the Past
For the King by Catherine Delors at She Read a Book
The White Queen and The Red Queen by Philippa Gregory at The Burton Review
Other Giveaways
The Secret Eleanor by Cecilia Holland at Passages to the Past
His Last Duchess by Gabrielle Kim at Historical Belles and Beaus
Dracula in Love by Karen Essex (3 copies) at Passages to the Past
His Last Letter by Jeanne Westin at Tudor Book Blog
The Killing Way by Tony Hays (4 copies) at Passages to the Past
For the King by Catherine Delors at She Read a Book
The White Queen and The Red Queen by Philippa Gregory at The Burton Review
Why I Love Eleanor of Aquitaine by Cecelia Holland
The Middle Ages was a tough time to be female; from the great Frankish queen Brunhilde being torn apart by wild horses to Bloody Mary having the word Calais engraved on her heart, those thousand years saw a lot of brave, doomed women confronting a male-dominated world. Eleanor of Aquitaine not only confronted the men, she won.
She walked the stage of twelfth century politics for sixty-seven years, and even when her exasperated (and nervous) second husband, the King of England, locked her up she was a force he had to reckon with. Before that, from the age of fifteen she had steered the policies of her weak first husband, the King of France, gone on Crusade and there defied him, and gotten back to the West by herself. Against all odds she forced him to give her an annulment so she could marry Henry of Normandy, who was only slightly more than half her age. She was stunningly beautiful, although no likenesses survive: this attested by poets and troubadours but also in her fascination for the men around her.
She bore a small legion of children and outlived all but two of them; three of her sons were Kings of England, Henry only junior king, but still. Two of her daughters became Queens. All of them nourished the vigorous renaissance of the High Middle Ages. Eleanor's Aquitaine was the heart of the worldly, luxurious and forward-thinking troubadour era, her capitol Poitiers was full of poetry and song, and her splendid court drew thinkers and artists from all over Europe.
She ruled. She wasn't just a lady on a chair, or a woman making babies; she made policy and enforced it, as Queen of France, as Queen of England with Henry II and Duchess of Aquitaine without him, and you get the feeling that Henry's efforts to exclude her from power, as much as Henry's frisky sex life, was what turned her against him.
In our time, with Hilary Clinton and Sarah Palin and Nancy Pelosi as evidence, we take it for granted that women can and should operate in the public arena. In Eleanor's time, not so much. The shock and horror she evoked in some of the onlookers shows how astonishing her career was. She burst what you could call the glass cell that confined women in her time. Her daughters and grand-daughters ruled in the space she had cleared for them in the world, and we can all look back with satisfaction on the spectacle of a woman who refused to stay in her place and instead had it all, love and children, power and achievement, a life any man would envy.
________________________________________
Cecelia Holland is the author of over thirty historical novels. She currently lives in northern California where she teaches creative writing at Pelican Bay State Prison. To learn more, please visit her website: http://www.thefiredrake.com/.
Friday, August 6, 2010
Giveaway: Power of a Woman by Robert Fripp *WINNERS*
Thank you to everyone who entered our giveaway of Power of a Woman by Robert Fripp.
The book winners:
US (two copies) - Rachel and Ellie
Worldwide (one copie) - nocas82
"Eleanor of Aquitaine's Timeline" winners (10 copies):
1. buddyt
2. enelya
3. Nancy
4. Dovile
5. Rachel
6. Linda
7. Anne Gilbert
8. Amanda
9. Tramonte
10. faithljustice
Congratulations to everyone!
Rachel, Ellie and nocas82 could you please email us your mailling addresses. We'll be sending the timeline to the winners as soon as possible.
Thanks to Robert Fripp for this giveaway!
Thursday, August 5, 2010
HT News
Author Rosanne E Lortz has just launched a new website and to celebrate readers can have a sneak peek at the first chapter of her work in progress. Ana reviewed Roseanne's novel I Serve, A Novel of the Black Prince earlier this year and thoroughly enjoyed it.
Do you like all things vampire. If you do, then TLC Book Tours is hosting a Vampire Tweetup on Friday 13 August at 4pm EST. Why am I mentioning it here? There will be chances for you to win copies of Syrie James' Dracula, My Love. To join in on the fun, follow #TLCBookchat on Twitter.
Other chances to win:
The Jewel of St Petersburg by Kate Furnivall at Tanzanite's Shelf and Stuff and at Readaholic
The King's Mistress by Emma Campion at Peeking Between the Pages
His Last Letter by Jeanne Westin at Passages to the Past and at Tanzanite's Shelf and Stuff
Dracula, My Love by Syrie James at Hist-Fic Chick and at Peeking Between the Pages
The Red Queen by Philippa Gregory at Scandalous Women
Do you like all things vampire. If you do, then TLC Book Tours is hosting a Vampire Tweetup on Friday 13 August at 4pm EST. Why am I mentioning it here? There will be chances for you to win copies of Syrie James' Dracula, My Love. To join in on the fun, follow #TLCBookchat on Twitter.
Other chances to win:
The Jewel of St Petersburg by Kate Furnivall at Tanzanite's Shelf and Stuff and at Readaholic
The King's Mistress by Emma Campion at Peeking Between the Pages
His Last Letter by Jeanne Westin at Passages to the Past and at Tanzanite's Shelf and Stuff
Dracula, My Love by Syrie James at Hist-Fic Chick and at Peeking Between the Pages
The Red Queen by Philippa Gregory at Scandalous Women
Hemingway Cutthroat by Michael Atkinson
A literary twist on what really happened while Hemingway was in '30s Spain, developing the story of For Whom the Bell Tolls and solving a murder with John dos Passos When one of Fascist Spain's political officials is found dead on a hillside, his own government colleagues suspiciously take little interest in finding the culprit. Hemingway, in the country as a journalist, can't let the murder go. Despite the other deaths everywhere around him--it is wartime, after all--he sets out to discover not just who killed the man but also the reason for the cover-up.
Written with wit and charm, Hemingway Cutthroat is equal parts classic espionage thriller and literary origin story for one of Papa's most famous novels.
When offered the chance to review a book that was a mystery, set in the 1930s in Spain and with Hemingway as the main detective I couldn't really say no. It seemed like the most interesting story! This is actually the second book in a series of mysteries with Hemingway as the main character but it can certainly be read as a stand alone.
There seems to be a trend in historical fiction about using real people as fictional detectives. Besides Hemingway I can think of Elizabeth I, Jane Austen and Josephine Tey but I am sure that there must be others out there. It doesn't really bother me nless when it clashes with the idea I have on my mind of the person involved. In this case Hemingway is just how I imagined him - loud, larger than life, a womaniser and a bullfight lover! I had every intention of rereading some of his books before delving into this one but, as if often happens, time flew and I didn't.
In Hemingway Cutthroat, Hemingway is in Spain with his friend, and fellow writer, John dos Passos. On a break from writing, he just wants to enjoy the easy life, he likes drinks and women and he seems set on getting as much as he can of both. But do Passos is worried, their friend José Robles has disappeared and he feels like they should investigate what really happened. It takes some time for Hemingway to decide to go investigating but when he does nothing can stop him!
They eventually find Robles' dead body and the unexplained circumstances behind it make Hemingway more determined to find what happened. He bribes and threatens his way around the Spanish police to discover whose side was Robles on. I quite liked the answer wasn't immediately obvious and that the motives were directly linked to what was being prepared at the time - the story is set in 1937 - and what was one of the most famous bombings during the Spanish Civil War.
While I found the beginning a bit slow there were still some humourous moments to keep me interested and after the action progresses to the murder investigation I was completely hooked. Not only because of the mystery itself but also because of all the information provided of the situation in Spain during that time. And, since Atkinson's idea of Hemingway matches mine, I thought he made quite a believable detective. A very lucky one too, because on more than one occasion it seemed that his excesses, both of action and language, would land him in jail if not worse, but in the end all's well that ends well and this made for a satisfying read.
Grade: 4/5
I would like to thank the author for sending me a copy for review. This book was released on July 20th.
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