Thursday, September 30, 2010

Upcoming Release - October 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.

Disclaimer: the dates specified are from amazon.com or the author's website. Release dates may vary in different countries.

1 October
5 October
 
12 October
 
14 October
 
19 October
 
26 October

28 October

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

HT News

Lauren Willig has announced that she has been working with illustrator Joanne Renaud to create comic versions of a few scenes from the Purple Gentian's adventures. Best of all, there will be a chance for her fans to win copies of the cartoons. They are signed, limited editions, and will up for grabs on Tuesday. Below is just one of the scenes. To have a look at the rest, head over to  Lauren's site.
 

Celticlady from Blog O' The Irish is celebrating her first blogiversary, and to celebrate she is giving away a book from a selection of those she has reviewed. There are a number which may be of interest to hsitorical fiction readers.

This month marks the 200th anniversary of the birth of Elizabeth Gaskell, and so to celebrate Laurel Ann from Austenprose has organised a blog tour to various sites who are going to be talking about Elizabeth Gaskell and her books (and the mini-series adaptations - yay! more Richard Armitage). You can see all the stops on the tour here.

Other giveaways

Heart of Lies by ML Malcolm (2 copies) at Hist-fic Chick
The Exile: An Outlander Graphic Novel by Diana Gabaldon at Blog O' The Irish
North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell (audiobook) at Fly High!
Mr Darcy's Little Sister by C. Allyn Pierson (2 copies) at Austenesque Reviews

Spotlight on the Earth's Children series by Jean Auel.

Tomorrow. September 30, is the 30th anniversary of the release of The Clan of the Cave Bear by Jean Auel, the first book in the Earth's Children series. With the sixth and final book due to be released in March 2011, it seems a fitting time to do a Spotlight feature on the series.

Ever since I decided to write this post, I have been trying to remember the name of the couple that introduced me to these books. I think that they were Neville and Sue, and they used to be the neighbours who lived over our back fence. When I was in my mid to late teens I used to go and babysit for them, and it was during one of those occasions they introduced me to these books. I loved the world that Auel had created with it's mix of history, drama, love, tragedy, and the fact that they were all chunksters didn't hurt either, because this was at the stage in my reading life where the bigger the book was, the more likely I would want to pick it up and read it.

Jean Auel is one of those authors who doesn't seem to need to put out books very regularly but still can maintain a very loyal supporter base. There was a 12 year gap between the Plains of Passage and the Shelters of Stone, and by the time the final book comes out in March next year, there will have been a 9 year wait for the finale of Ayla and Jondalar's story.


The books in order (and the year that they were originally released in) are:
  1. The Clan of the Cave Bear, 1980
  2. The Valley of Horses, 1982
  3. The Mammoth Hunters, 1985
  4. The Plains of Passage, 1990
  5. The Shelters of Stone, 2002
  6. The Land of Painted Caves, 2011
So what are the novels about?

They are set in the Ice Age, and open with Ayla, a young Cro-Magnon girl who has been orphaned during an earthquake, and who is taken in by a Neanderthal clan (known throughout the novels as The Clan). Ayla is very different from her Neanderthal family but she learns to communicate with them, and learns various skills including healing, and weaponry, much to the clan leader's displeasure. She is, and always will be an outsider though.

Without wanting to spoil too much, the novels follow Ayla's journey as she travels to find others like her, as she learns more skills, and as she tries to balance the two different sides of herself. She struggles with socialisation, and with being a relatively independent woman in a very male dominated world.

There are times that Ayla can be something of a too-good-to-be-true character and certainly modern sensibilities are catered for. The last book was a little more average than I remember the earlier books being when I read them 20+ years ago. That doesn't mean that I won't be eagerly anticipating The Land of Painted Caves. You can be guaranteed that I will have my name down on the lists to get my copy as soon as possible when it comes out!

Below are a selection of covers of the different books showing the various styles of covers that have been given to this series over the years. It will be interesting to see if the publishers rebrand the whole series when the final book is finally released.

The other thing that is interesting is that I read somewhere that the author is looking forward to working on something different now. I can't imagine how hard it will be for her to move onto something new after working on the same series for 30 odd years.

Have you read the Earth's Children series? Are you looking forward to the last book? Share your thoughts on the series in the comments.

Monday, September 27, 2010

HT Recommends - Catherine de Medici

Recently Cassondra contacted us and asked:

Any suggestions for Catherine de Medici?

There don't seem to be a lot of books around about Catherine although there were a couple that came out in the last year or so.

Jean Plaidy has a trilogy of books about Catherine - Madam Serpent, The Itallian Woman, Queen Jezebel

Catherine de Medici by Leonie Frieda (biography)

Duchessina by Carolyn Meyer

The Confessions of Catherine de Medici by CW Gortner (Read our review of CW Gortner's book, and a guest post from him about Catherine de Medici). 

The Devil's Queen by Jeanne Kalogridis

Catherine also appears as one of the major characters in Susan Carroll's Cheney sisters novels, particularly the first one which is called The Dark Queen.

Anyone have any other recommendations for books about Catherine de Medici?

Sunday, September 26, 2010

HT News

The tributes continue to flow in for Judith Merkle Riley who passed away on September 12. CW Gortner has posted a lovely tribute to his friend and Julianne Douglas from Writing the Renaissance has shared her tribute to one of the author who she names as one of her favourites.

Marie from The Burton Review has been having some domain issues, and so has reverted to her old URL, so if you  are looking for her blog go to BurtonReview.blogspot.com

Stephanie from Books are a Girl's Best Friend is celebrating reaching 150 followers, and she has a selection of mainly YA historical fiction up for grabs.

Other Giveaways

Prisoners in the Palace by Michaela McColl at Historically Obsessed.
Come Again No More by Jack Todd at The Burton Review 
Willoughby's Return by Jane Odiwe (signed) at My Jane Austen Book Club
The Mistaken Wife by Jane Melikan (2 copies) at Hist-Fic Chick
For the King by Catherine Delors at Historical Novel Review

Saturday, September 25, 2010

For the King's Favor by Elizabeth Chadwick

Ida de Tosney was a ward of King HenryII through childhood. As a teenager she was presented to the King who would determine her future. Hopefully he would find a suitable marriage for her and she would have a happy life. However, once set eyes on Ida, he decided to keep her for himself and kept her as his mistress. She had no say in the matter.

Ida prayed that she wouldn't become pregnant and have King Henry's bastard child. She took every preventative measure she could find however, she conceived a son. Though she was worried about the religious ramifications, she fell in love with her son. In the mean time, she became infatuated with Roger Bigod.

Roger had a story of his own. He rebelled against his father and took the side of King HenryII. He spent the majority of the time trying to win the Kings favor and getting his family land holdings after his father died. His rightful title was Earl and he wanted it.

Eventually, King Henry married Ida de Tosney off to Roger Bigod and they had many children of their own. However, the son she had with King HenryII, was kept from her.

Many of my friends, including those at Historical Tapestry have been encouraging me to read a Elizabeth Chadwick book for a very long time. I have had her on my TBR and finely had the chance to read one of her books when I received an invitation to review this advance readers' copy.

Chadwick did not disappoint! She had a good cast of characters from real life to draw from. She made them come back to life with richly textured scenes of England and Royalty. I felt like I was one of the maids, getting to witness everything that happened. I will definitely be reading more Chadwick in the future!

Note: For the King's Favor was released previously as The Time of Singing.

4.5/5

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Books of a Lifetime: Katherine from Historical Fiction Notebook

Over the last couple of months, each of us here at Historical Tapestry has had a go at trying to make a list of our Books of a Lifetime. Now, we want to open that opportunity up to you - our fellow bloggers! If you would like to do a guest post about the books that made a difference at various times in your life, then email us and we will work out the details. We would love for this to become a sort of community event!

To get things started, we have invited a few people if they would like to participate so over the coming weeks we will have a few posts coming up. First up, we thought it would be good to highlight one of the newer historical fiction bloggers  - Katherine from Historical Fiction Notebook.

Welcome Katherine, and thanks for being our first blogger guest!

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

I interpreted this challenge as a chance to consider not the best books I've ever read or my favorite books but the books that were most important to me at a particular time in my life. It was great to look back and remember how much these books meant to me.

I know that even when I’m a little old lady, I’ll still be searching for used bookstores and looking forward to the thrill of opening up a book that’s completely new to me and holds the chance of becoming another book of a lifetime.

Childhood


The “color” fairy books (age 9 & 10)

My father fondly recalls my early attempts at “reading” around age three or four, when I would open up a book of fairy tales and – working from the pictures and what I remembered of his bedtime stories – would pretend to read the stories. In reality, I was just making things up as I went along! As I got older, I graduated to these books which seemed to come in every color of the rainbow and with an inexhaustible supply of magical tales.


The Charles W. Morgan by John F. Leavitt (age 10 & 11)

A trip to Mystic Seaport – a recreation of a 19th century New England seaport – when I was ten years old triggered a year-long obsession with whaling and cemented my love of history. I never tired of reading about the whaling ship’s many voyages, its fake portholes painted on the sides to fool pirates and its eventual place of honor as the only surviving whaling ship. As a child, I seriously considered stealing this book from the library because I loved it so much and hated returning it!



Legacy by Susan Kay (age 11)

I have no idea how many times I've read this book since the day I was eleven years old and found it on the shelves of my little hometown library in Vermont but even now, I can see whole passages of it in my mind.

Oddly, Legacy isn't the most historically detailed novel but for me it will always be the truest to my idea of Elizabeth I. The novel is spot-on emotionally and became a kind of talisman for me during a difficult time in my childhood. I could open this book up and immediately be transported to Tudor England - where intrigue, spirit and intelligence have consequence and meaning. I felt completely enveloped in the author's vision of that world.

Teenage Years



Sharon Kay Penman Welsh Trilogy (age 13)

Before Amazon, eBay and Alibris made finding any book as easy as a mouse-click, I desperately searched used bookstores for a copy of Susan Kay's Legacy. My beloved grandmother made the greatest mistake ever and introduced me to one of my all-time favorite authors when she bought me this book for Christmas, confusing Susan Kay with Sharon Kay! Consequently, I read the last of Penman's Welsh trilogy first - although it didn't take me long to find the others. I clearly remember reading the end of "Here Be Dragons" because it was the first time I felt physical distress because of a character's situation. I had to remind myself that it was just a book!

I still have that copy of "The Reckoning" with my grandmother's inscription talking about the importance of thorough historical research!


Margaret George "Autobiography of Henry VIII" (age 12)

This is easily my favorite of Margaret George's enormous historical novels - although Memoirs of Cleopatra and Mary, Queen of Scotland the Isles come close. I think Henry wins out because he's such an incredibly vulnerable and likeable character - you feel like you know him inside and out. This book also has one of my favorite ending passages - when Henry's fool Will Somers leaves royal service after Henry's death. The emotion, the careful descriptions of grief and loss have stayed with me well into my adult years.




Jean Plaidy (age 11-16)

This list would not be complete without the great Ms. Plaidy! Her books were never the big presents for Christmas or my birthday - they were the reliable paperbacks, the ones I could buy for a buck or two at a used bookstore and collect to my heart's content. I loved studying the covers with their overdramatic queens in 70s and 80s hair and makeup. I loved sorting them out into their respective series - Queens of England, The Plantagenet Series. Even now, I suspect that I sort English history in my head according to Jean Plaidy series.

My favorite? Oddly, it’s one of her novels written under the name of Victoria Holt – “My Enemy the Queen” - the story of Lettice Knollys, second wife of Elizabeth I's favorite Robert Dudley. I remember it was the very first book I read from beginning to end in one day - sitting out on the porch in the summertime, with no where to go and nothing else to do but read.

Adult

I've kept a notebook listing every single book I've read since the Christmas I was fourteen years old. As I look back, I can see a sharp drop-off in the amount of my historical fiction reading as I started college, dipped into more current events and literary fiction reading; then moved on to DC and completed grad school. You could say that life got in the way - I feel like I blinked and it had been several years since I had read a historical novel.


An Unexpected Light by Jason Elliot


This was one of the first books I read about Afghanistan and it remains my favorite. I picked it up when I was just becoming interested in the topic that would eventually become my undergraduate thesis, provide my interest in journalism with a focus and lead me to my current job. I’ve read this book probably four or five times and each time I scribble thoughts all along the margins – it’s a book I constantly “talk” to. Eliott is a compassionate, sensitive writer who understands the emotions that imbue a place with meaning.


Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy

The summer after I graduated from college, I decided there was no better time to take on a major reading challenge. This book followed me from my old life in Vermont to my new life in Washington, DC. I read this book everywhere – on breaks from waitressing, in my tiny little rented bedroom and by Lake Champlain looking out to the Adirondack Mountains. Everyone tells you this is a great book but you have to experience it for yourself – Tolstoy manages to touch on almost every aspect of human existence with a clear-eyed compassion and a boundless curiosity regarding human nature.

Recent

After I finished grad school and found a job in my chosen profession, I felt like I was finally able to return to the historical research and writing I loved. I started to look online and realized that while I was gone historical fiction had undergone a renaissance - it was no longer the shameful cousin of paperback romances, it was a booming industry with hundreds of options. Consequently, I challenged myself by starting to read in different eras and from different points of view.

I enjoyed the brilliant mix of page-turning suspense and in-depth historical inquiry of Toby Lester’s “The Fourth Part of the World” – the story of the first map to depict America. One old novel “A Tree Grows in Brooklyn” by Betty Smith and one new novel “Wolf Hall” by Hilary Mantel are the kinds of books everyone says you should like – I read them and loved them apart from their considerable reputations.

With Sally Gunning's Satucket novels (Widow's War; Bound; Rebellion of Jane Clarke) - I experienced a kind of immersion reading that I haven't felt since I was in my teens, curled up with Margaret George and Sharon Kay Penman. I think it has a lot to do with Gunning's pacing and use of detail - unlike other authors she isn't afraid to give a character time to wander around in their own world. She also has a brilliant command of historical detail - you never feel overwhelmed by research but each character thinks, talks, writes and acts in a way that is true to their time.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

HT News

It was sad to read the news that historical fiction novels Judith Merkle Riley has passed away recently. Sarah from Reading the Past has a nice post up about her. Ms Merkle Riley is one of those authors I have been meaning to read for a long time. Maybe now is the time to pick up one of her books.


Giveaways

The Jewel of St Petersburg by Kate Furnivall at Hist-Fic Chick
Come Away No More by Jack Todd at Hist-Fic Chick

The Talisman Ring by Georgette Heyer

'I dare say it will not be so very bad, our marriage, if I can have a house in town, and perhaps a love.' 'Perhaps a WHAT?' demanded Shield, in a voice that made her jump. Neither Sir Tristram Shield nor Eustacie, his young French cousin, share the slightest inclination to marry one another. Yet it is Lord Lavenham's dying wish. For there is no one else to provide for the old man's granddaughter while Ludovic, his heir, remains a fugitive from justice...

I have been a long time fan of Georgette Heyer, I first read some of books while a teenager in translated versions and now, as an adult, I have been collecting them in the original English thanks to Arrow and Sourcebooks who made them readily available everywhere.

The Talisman Ring was one of the books that I read more recently. A mixed story, part romance / part mystery, it sees two couples searching around for a family jewel to exonerate one of the heroes from a murder charge. To make a long story short, Sir Tristam Shield and Eustacie de Vauban are ordered by their great granduncle and grandfather respectively to embark on a marriage of convenience to guarantee Eustacie’s well being and status in life after the old man dies. But Eustacie is a lively and romantic girl who finds Sir Tristam a stuffy unromantic old man and decides to run away to become a governess. On the road she finds her cousin Ludovic, her grandfather’s heir who has been on the run for the past two years after having been suspected of murdering a man on the night his favourite jewel – the talisman ring – disappeared. Ludovic is now a free trader, which seems utterly adventurous and romantic to Eustacie, and after an encounter with the excise men he is hurt and they find shelter at a nearby inn. There they find Lady Sarah Thane, a young woman who travels with her brother and seems to have an original sense of humour, and that’s where Sir Tristam eventually finds them. With Eustacie and Ludovic on their way to falling in love the four set out to find the jewel and prove his innocence.

I must admit that this is not one of my favourite Heyers. I think the story, as a mystery, loses pace because of the romance and all those secondary characters – the free traders, the excise men, the Bow Street Runners – and as a romance looses interest because so much time is devoted to finding the jewel. I think I am more used to those Heyer romances where we find sparkling and witty dialogue between the main characters, where the funny coincidences make for laugh out loud moments and where we have closure in the end. Here, although there are some funny moments they are not so sparkling and witty, and while the story ends with one couple engaged, the other doesn’t get the same king of closure, although everything indicates that they will do so too.

I did like Lady Sarah Thane and Sir Tristam Shield very much. To the point where I would have loved to have the book devoted solely to them. In a way, because they are an older couple they reminded me of Abby and Miles from The Black Sheep which I greatly enjoyed. If only we had seen more of them I am sure that we had been gifted with some witty dialogues. Eustacie seemed a bit too young and, well, silly. I have been fond of other young heroines like Horry and Leonie and I have forgiven them their silly naiveté because of their wonderful heroes but here I must confess that Ludovic was not a favourite with me either. He seemed impulsive and extravagant but oh so perfect for Eustacie who only wanted a husband to ride “ventre a terre” to her death bed.

But don’t be discouraged by my review, lots of Heyer fans seem to love this story so my advice to you is try it and see. There are a lot of farcical moments in this story and if nothing else it will definitely put you in a good mood.

********************************
This review was written for the Heyer Celebration at Austenprose in August 2010

Monday, September 20, 2010

HT News

It was Heather from The Maiden's Court's birthday earlier this week, and to celebrate she has three books up for grabs. Head on over for your chance to win copies of O Juliet by Robin Maxwell, The Scarlet Lion by Elizabeth Chadwick or Confession of Catherine de Medici by CW Gortner.

Speaking of celebrations, Scandalous Women is celebrating their 3rd blogiversary, and are giving away three Jean Plaidy novels.

Robert Parry is having a "guess the title of my next novel" competition. Check out all the details here.


Other giveaways

The Countess and the King by Susan Holloway Scott at Scandalous Women
The Mistaken Wife by Rose Melikan at The Burton Review
The Blue Bells of Scotland by Laura Vosika at The Burton Review

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Wolf Hall giveaway

If there was just one book that swept the literary fiction world last year, it was Hilary Mantel's ambitious take on the life of Thomas Cromwell, Wolf Hall.

Wolf Hall won a number of prizes including the Booker Prize award as well as the inaugural Walter Scott Prize for historical fiction, and from memory I think that the book was shortlisted for the Orange Prize as well! The critics loved the book, but how about you?

Haven't read the book yet? In celebration of the fact that Wolf Hall is now available in paperback, we have one paperback copy of Wolf Hall available to win to anyone with a US address.


Here's the book description:

In the ruthless arena of King Henry VIII’s court, only one man dares to gamble his life to win the king’s favor and ascend to the heights of political power…

England in the 1520s is a heartbeat from disaster. If the king dies without a male heir, the country could be destroyed by civil war. Henry VIII wants to annul his marriage of twenty years, and marry Anne Boleyn. The pope and most of Europe opposes him. The quest for the king’s freedom destroys his adviser, the brilliant Cardinal Wolsey, and leaves a power vacuum.

Into this impasse steps Thomas Cromwell. Cromwell is a wholly original man, a charmer and a bully, both idealist and opportunist, astute in reading people and a demon of energy: he is also a consummate politician, hardened by his personal losses, implacable in his ambition. But Henry is volatile: one day tender, one day murderous. Cromwell helps him break the opposition, but what will be the price of his triumph?

In inimitable style, Hilary Mantel presents a picture of a half-made society on the cusp of change, where individuals fight or embrace their fate with passion and courage. With a vast array of characters, overflowing with incident, the novel re-creates an era when the personal and political are separated by a hairbreadth, where success brings unlimited power but a single failure means death.”


Rules:

Giveaway open to US address only
One entry per person.
To enter leave a comment, including your email address so we can contact the winner.
Contest closes 30 September 2010.

Instant History Expert giveway winner

I am very pleased to announce that we have a winner of the pack of 6 DVDs from the people behind the Instant History Expert!


Katherine from Historical Fiction Notebook

is our lucky winner!

I will be emailing Katherine for her details, but if we haven't heard from her in 5 days we will redraw another winner!

Thanks to everyone who entered this giveaway.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

HF News

Congratulations to Meghan from Medieval Bookworm who was chosen as the winner of Best Historical Fiction blog as part of the Book Blogger Appreciation Week. We were honoured to be shortlisted with Meghan, and also with Allie from Hist-fic Chick.  Thank you to everyone who voted for us too. We appreciate your support!

Just a few more days to enter our Instant History Expert DVD giveaway pack. You can find all the details here.  When I finish writing the post, we also have another giveaway as well coming soon.

I don't often have giveaways on my own blog, but I am this week, and so I am definitely going to post about it here! You can win one of two signed copies of The Shadowy Horses by Susanna Kearsley. Read my post and enter the giveaway here.


Other giveaways

The Countess and the King by Susan Holloway Scott at All Things Royal.
For the King's Favor by Elizabeth Chadwick (2 copies) at Historical Boys (blog of C W Gortner)
Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel at Historically Obsessed
Mr Darcy's Little Sister by C Allyn Pierson at Laura's Reviews
An Echo in the Bone by Diana Gabaldon at Suko's Notebook

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 R:


1. Ana T (Aneca's World) - R is for Ring
2. Heather (Epoch Tales) - R is for Riel
3. Teddy (So Many Precious Books, So Little Time) - R is for Roger Bigod
4. Sarah (Reading the Past) - Russian Winter by Daphne Kalotay
5. Carrie C. (Opalescent Essence ) - Gardener to the King by Frederic Richaud
6. Cat (Tell Me a Story) - R is for Remarkable
7. Alex (Le Canapé) - Le Roi de Fer by Maurice Druon


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 September 30th to complete your mission, the next letter will be published on October 1st and it is the letter S:

Why I Love Fan Mail by Cathy Marie Buchanan



My Very Favourite Fan Mail

Most writers will tell you that hearing from readers makes their day. As I reread all the lovely notes and letters I’ve received, I realized just how much my readers’ kind words have stayed with me over the year since The Day the Falls Stood Still launched.

The story was inspired my William “Red” Hill, a riverman with an uncanny ability to predict the often erratic behavior of the Niagara River and Falls. The scrap of paper on which the first of the below notes was written was pressed into my hand by his 94-year old daughter, Edith, at a reading I gave in Niagara Falls. I include it here, along with others, each of which has touched me in some way.

z

“I have just read your novel about the falls and my dad and others. I congratulate you for a wonderful novel. It sure brought memories back. Also, I lived on May Avenue for 30 years and attended Loretto for a short while. As they say, “It’s a small world.” Thank you for your interest in my family and a really great novel.” –Edith Adeline Hill-Powell, born 1915

Note – Loretto is the convent school where The Day the Falls Stood Still opens in 1915, and May Avenue is the street where my riverman makes a home with his wife.

z

“Congratulations on your skill in combining the history of Niagara with such a beautiful love story. I was so caught up in the story, in the lives of Bess and Tom, and feel richer for having read it. You leave me wishing for your next book right now!”Charlotte
z

“Thank you for writing The Day the Falls Stood Still. It was with a great deal of appreciation that I read your book. It evoked for me not only my own childhood around Niagara Falls but gave me a unique look into what life must have been like for my grandmother, who must have been near the same age as your narrator, Bess.
I am homesick for Niagara and collect Niagara postcards, guidebooks, old letters and ephemera. My most favorite is this little slip of paper, no wider than one and a half inches, which has somehow survived for 180 years. It is a certificate given to those who have dared walk on a rocky ledge running behind the falls.
Thanks for the wonderful trip in time.” –Jean

z

“The Day the Falls Stood Still is one of the best books I have ever read, tears and all. At 88, I have read many books and you are in my top ten! I am looking forward to your next venture. Health and happiness to you.” –Marie

z

“I am reading your book, The Day the Falls Stood Still, and have to say, I am having a hard time putting it down! It's been a long time since a book has captivated me like this one has!
This week my husband, two kids, and I went to Niagara Falls to see the sights. As we were walking along the Falls I was thinking about your book: the history, the stories about Fergus and Tom, all of it. I have seen the Falls many times before, but now, they have so much more meaning to me.
Believe it or not, as we were driving around the city we came across Loretto Academy, and I literally shouted out, ‘Oh my God, this is the convent school from the book I am reading! Stop the car!’ My daughter and I climbed out, and I just stared at the building. It was so cool to see the former academy and the windows overlooking the Falls, as described in your book.
Thank you for writing such a gem. Please keep writing; I will be waiting for your next book with baited breath.” –Christine

z

“I just had to write to tell you that your book touched me on too many levels to count. I’m sure by now you’ve heard a great deal of praise about your flawless prose, compelling story, and that your setting is a memorable character in itself. I’ve seen several readers remark that you transported them to another time and made them forget the real world for awhile. For me, though, it was your theme about faith in those things that you can’t see that moved me most of all.”–Kim

z

“I just finished The Day The Falls Stood Still. It is a beautiful, moving story. The flap contains no mention of the grief thread interwoven into the story so it took me a bit by surprise. My oldest son was killed in an accident a few years ago, and after a long period of being unable to read, I have slowly begun reading again in the last six months. Your portrayal of the suddenness of death and the loss of faith that can happen in its wake, and then the coming to terms and moving forward was spot on. I was moved to tears. Thank you for a lovely, compassionate and hopeful story. I wish you all the best and am looking forward to reading your next novel.”–Michelle

z

“I very much enjoyed your book, and your adept mixing of fact and fiction. I thought Tom was a terrific character, what we would call a conservationist today. I thought his fears about so-called progress and the impact of the tunnels and canals diverting water away from the falls for hydroelectricity made the book feel really relevant. Interesting, that all these years later, we are still struggling with how to meet our demands for electricity and decisions about the sacrifices to the natural world we are prepared to live with. Well done.” –Jeff

z

Go ahead. Make your favourite writer’s day.

Cathy Marie Buchanan is the author of The Day the Falls Stood Still, which was just recently released in paperback. To learn more about her and her book be sure to stop by her website!

Monday, September 13, 2010

HT News

Susan Higginbotham is celebrating the redesign of her website with a giveaway of two copies of her book The Traitor's Wife. Head over to have a look at the new site and enter the giveaway.

I mentioned a couple of days ago about the Author Chat featuring Susan Holloway Scott which is being hosted by Amy from Passages to the Past. Please note that the starting time for this chat has been changed to 7pm EST.

Other Giveaways

Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel at Chick with Books
J - The Woman Who Wrote the Bible by Mary F Burns at Historical-Fiction.com
Russian Winter by Daphne Karlotay at Booking Mama
The Queen's Daughter by Susan Coventry at Rebecca's Book Blog
The First Assassin by John J Miller at Historical-Fiction.com

The Winter Sea by Susanna Kearsley


History has all but forgotten the spring of 1708, when an invasion fleet of French and Scottish soldiers nearly succeeded in landing the exiled James Stewart in Scotland to reclaim his crown. But when bestselling author Carrie McClelland is drawn to the coastal town of Slains and decides to base her new historical novel there, it's an opportunity for the past to come to life. She focuses her story on the inhabitants of Slains Castle and decides to place one of her own ancestors - Sophia Paterson - into this Jacobite stronghold, through whom she can relate events.
Her subsequent discovery that Sophia did indeed live at Slains Castle during the rebellion leads Carrie to realise that this story is not entirely her own and that inspiration is coming to her direct from the past. As Sophia's memories draw Carrie more deeply into the intrigue of 1708, she comes to realise that a hitherto unrealised bond with her ancestor is providing her with a direct window into the true events of the time.
Mesmerising and meticulously researched, The Winter Sea is a haunting tale of two women's experiences of love, political intrigue and personal betrayal in two very different times.
For Historical Tapestries Blogiversary, Marg, Ana, and Alex posted their Books of a Lifetime posts. When I was reading them I noticed that both Marg and Alex included The Winter Sea (Sophia's Secret) on their lists. Marg has been talking about Kearsley for a while, and I even had her out from the library, but I hadn't got around to reading anything by her. The Books of a Lifetime posts inspired me to try again. The verdict is that I agree with Alex and Marg! This book was a wonderful mix of the supernatural, historical fiction, and modern-day Scotland. I knew I was going to love the book from about the first page, but by the first chapter I was hard-pressed to put the book down. Since this hasn't happened as much this year as I would like, I was so happy to have found a 'wow' book and an author that easily just hit my list of favourite authors.

Scotland is a place I wouldn't mind visiting at some point and time, but in the meantime I enjoy reading books with a Scottish setting. Kearsley's book takes place in both modern-day Scotland and a Scotland of the 18th-century. Carrie McClelland is an author that winds up being drawn to the area and writing a book while living in a little cottage on the Scottish coast. It turns out that she has a bit unnatural connection with the Scotland of the past. The developing of her novel and the novel that we are reading is done so seamlessly and even when it might stray to a little strange, you still believe it. I did, anyways. I found it really well done! You can tell that Kearsley researched every aspect of her novel extensively. It was intriguing to watch the woman of the past and the woman of the present progress as characters. I enjoyed learning more about them.

If I had just read the back of the book I probably never would have read this book, but thanks to the power of book blogging I found a fantastic author! It was a real page-turner, and even if it is marketed as romance you have to remember that there is a lot more to the book than that. I recommend this book entirely! I am so glad I took a chance on this book because it was so worth it!

Saturday, September 11, 2010

The Kitchen Boy by Robert Alexander

Though the events are almost a century old, the imprisonment and execution of Tsar Nicholas and his family still hold an aura of mystery that fascinates. In haunting prose, Robert Alexander retells the story through the eyes of Leonka, on the kitchen boy to the Romanovs, who claims to be the last living witness to the family's brutal execution. Mysteriously spared by the Bolsheviks, the boy vanished into the bloody tides of the Russian Revolution. Now, through Alexander's conjuring, he reemerges to tell his story. What did the young boy see in those last days of the Imperial Family? Does he have answers to long-standing questions about secret letters smuggled to the Tsar, thirty-eight pounds of missing tsarist jewels, and why the bodies of two Romanov children are missing from the secret grave discovered in 1991?

I hesitated for a long time in picking up this book because I once read a description of Tsar Nicholas last moments and it so impressed me for its brutality that I always felt a bit depressed whenever I thought of reading this about it even in HF. But yesterday I was looking for something different to read and I thought it was time to give this one a chance.

I'm very glad that I did it because I think Alexander wrote an engaging story. Nothing is really new in the first chapters but he manages to make us care for the characters at the same time that he points out their flaws. We see them through the eyes of Leonka, the kitchen boy of the title. It is though him that the Imperial family receives notes from their supporters detailing a plan to release them. Since we know from the beginning how it all ends it's a bit sad to read of how much hope they had. The narrator is now an old man telling his granddaughter of the events of the past. He feels guilty that he did not manage to save them and he is the only witness of what really happened in the "House of Special Purpose" in that fateful night of July 17th 1918.

Leonka's narrative also gives a clue about why two of the children's bodies were missing from the family grave. When this book was published (2003) only three of the children's bodies had been found thus leading to stories about how two of them had maybe survived and been smuggled out of Russia. Alexander uses that in an interesting twist at the end of the book but in 2007 those two last bodies were finally identified in another grave thus proving that the whole family did die that night.

It is quite incredible the amount of research that Alexander must have needed to do to write such a story. There's a huge amount of information about Nicholas and Aleksandra's family and about their personalities and behaviour towards others. He doesn't shy away from concluding that Nicholas' rule was far from successful but it is difficult to accept that anyone should be condemned to the brutality the Romanovs faced. While it didn't much add to my knowledge of the period and people involved I found the fiction bits were interesting and well merged in the narrative. I think I might just have to try another on of his books in the future.


Grade: 4/5

Friday, September 10, 2010

HT News

Elizabeth Chadwick is celebrating the release of For the King's Favor in the US with a giveaway of three copies. Please note that this is virtually the same book as The Time of Singing (just a few minor editorial changes). Visit Elizabeth Chadwick's website for all the details.

Amy from Passages to the Past is hosting her inaugural Author Chat Night, and the featured author is going to be Susan Holloway Scott. The chat will be held on Monday 13th September at 6.00 to 7.00pm EST. I wish I could be there! Because of time zones that is when I am working during the day on Tuesday, but I definitely plan to read through the chat after the event so that I know what I have missed out on.  In the meantime, don't forget to check out the guest post that Susan wrote for us a couple of days ago!

Roseanne Lortz is hosting her first ever giveaway on her website. In order to celebrate 500 sales of her book I Serve on Kindle, Roseanne is giving away a paperback copy. You can read Ana's enthusiastic review of I Serve here.

Other Giveaways
The Countess and the King: A Novel of the Countess of Dorchester and King James II by Susan Holloway Scott at Enchanted by Josephine, Historical-Fiction.com and at Historically Obsessed
For the King's Favor by Elizabeth Chadwick (2 copies) at Passages to the Past
Rival to the Queen by Carolly Erickson at Scandalous Women
Industrial Pioneers by Patrick Brown at The Burton Review
Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel at Hist-Fic Chick

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Restitution by Kathy Kacer

Restitution is the true story of one families' struggle to escape Czechoslovakia right after Hitler's invasion. Marie Reeser, the matriarch of the family enlists the aid of her husband, Victor's non-Jewish business associate, Alois Jirak to help her hideaway the families' valuables to claim back later. He is also given power of attorney. A big part of the belongings were four paintings which, she adored. She then arranges for her two children, Karl and Hana and herself to meet up with her husband, Victor in France. From there, they escaped to Toronto, Ontario Canada.

Soon after the war ends, Marie and Victor return to Czechoslovakia, in part to reclaim the family's belongings, including paintings that Marie loves so much. The Communist party has taken over the family home and there is no way to re-claim it. However, Alois Jirak is still there but does not want to give up the paintings and with the Communist party taking over the country, Marie and Victor are forced to flee again, without the beloved paintings.

50 years later, well after Victor and Marie's death, their son Karl receives a letter from Alois Jirak's grandson. He says that he inherited four painting but found out that they are rightfully owned by the Reeser family and would like to return them if possible.

What follows is the story of how Karl finally gets the paintings back. It is a story of friendship, betrayal, an "honest" smuggler, and restitution. Told seamlessly in part memoir and part fiction by ghost writer, Kathy Kacer Ms. Kacer writes a suspenseful story that reads like a novel.

I highly recommend it!

4.5/5

Thanks to Annie Paikeday, Marketing/Editorial Intern for Second Story Press for this book.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

HT News

Do you like reading the Jane Austen spin-off novels that have been so popular recently? If yes, then you may be interested in the new Austen Authors blog. There are 20 contributors, all of whom are published authors. There is bound to be plenty of fun to be had as the authors post daily about all things Austen related including posts, giveaways and more! The blog's official launch day is 6 September.

Katy from A Few More Pages is celebrating her first blogiversary and her readers get the gifts! There are four books that can be chosen from, including Anne Elliott: A New Beginning by Mary Lydon Simonsen and Virgin and the Crab by Robert Parry. And the contest is open to international readers as well, which we love!

Other giveaways:
Darcy's Voyage by Kara Louise (2 copies) at Austenesque Reviews, at Laura's Reviews (2 copies) and Royal Reviews (also 2 copies)
The Countess and the King by Susan Holloway Scott at The Maiden's Court
Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel at Passages to the Past
For the King by Catherine Delors at Francophilia

Guest Post: Time Travelling to the court of Charles II by Susan Holloway Scott

Today we would like to welcome Susan Holloway Scott to Historical Tapestry. Susan is the author of several books set in the raucous and riotous (at times) court of Charles II.

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

To celebrate the release of my new historical novel, The Countess & the King (available September 7), Marg suggested I do a bit of time travel, and imagine a weekend jaunt back to London in 1670, to the royal court of Charles II at Whitehall Palace.

Since I’m from Pennsylvania, which in 1674 is an English colony, I figure I’d be welcome enough. But Pennsylvania is still a primitive outpost of farmers and fur-traders and I’m woefully unstylish, so my first stop at the palace will be to visit the rooms of Louise de Keroualle. Louise is Charles’s current mistress (and the heroine of my last book, The French Mistress), a beautiful French lady known for her exquisite Parisian taste. If anyone can loan me suitable dress for court, then it would be Louise, who has a larger wardrobe than the queen herself and more jewels, too. We’re both tall, so I can borrow a gown without any alterations – though those tight-laced stays she favors will take a little getting used to. Oof!

Then it’s off to join the others already assembled in the Banqueting House, used for evening balls, masques, and gatherings. I’m presented to His Majesty, and I hope I make an acceptable curtsey. But Charles is more concerned with putting me at my ease, and he’s every bit as charming as everyone says, and looks exactly like his portraits. He honors me by asking to dance, but politely I must refuse, since I haven’t the faintest idea of the steps to a sarabande. Instead he dances with Nell Gwyn (the heroine of The King’s Favorite), a former actress who is now another of the royal mistresses. Little Nell’s a much better dancer than I’d ever be, her tiny feet kicking high and auburn curls bouncing.

I’m searching the crowd for others I’d like to meet. Across the room I see Barbara Palmer, Duchess of Cleveland (heroine of Royal Harlot), and though she’s no longer in favor as Charles’s mistress, she’s still seductive, and flirting outrageously with three much younger gentlemen. There’s the fox-faced Duke of Buckingham in the corner, doubtless plotting more political mischief to try Charles’s patience, and there’s the handsome, witty Earl of Rochester, who has clearly already had far too much to drink. Trying hard to appear as if he belongs is that plump little man from the navy board, Samuel Pepys; perhaps I should tell him that the gossipy diary he’s carefully keeping in code will one day be deciphered and printed for all the world to read.

But at last I find Katherine Sedley, the heroine of The Countess & the King. Even in this crowd, she stands out, for she’s thin and angular and not conventionally beautiful like the other ladies. For a mere maid of honor, she’s expensively dressed – after all, she’s a wealthy heiress in her own right – but what impresses me more is how funny she is, her humor sharp and wry. She’s very outspoken about the other courtiers, and we laugh together at her devastating observations. But her dark eyes keep looking past me, searching for someone else. I glance over my shoulder, and there he is – James, the king’s younger brother, his gaze intent on Katherine. She opens her fan slowly, one blade at a time, and smiles at him in unspoken invitation. He’s not seeing any other lady in the room but her, and she understands exactly what he wants, and more, what he needs.

And yes, I can guess what will happen next….


Katherine Sedley
James II


Here’s a link to an excerpt from The Countess and the King on my website (susanhollowayscott.com).

I hope you’ll also stop by my blog with fellow author Loretta Chase, where we discuss history, writing, and yes, even the occasional pair of great shoes: http://twonerdyhistorygirls.blogspot.com/

The Historical Fiction Bloggers Round Table have been featuring The Countess and the King for the last few days so if you would like to hear more about Katherine Sedley and the court of Charles II, then you may like to visit the following links. There are also chances to win a copy of the book on these blogs as well.

Hist-FicChick: Two Merry Ladies: Katherine Sedley and Nell Gwyn,
Enchanted by Josephine: Dressing a Royal Bridegroom:
The Maiden's Court: The Fine Art of Poetical Slander:
Historically Obsessed: Introducing Katherine Sedley:
All Things Royal: Guest blog, 9/2, Two Brothers, Two Kings:

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Houdini Pie by Paul Michel

Halley, named after Halley's Comet was born right after his father Charles got caught in one of his fraudulent schemes. Once Hal was considered old enough he was expected to work for Charles in his less than honest business ventures including running a lucrative alcohol business during prohibition.

In 1934, as a young man Hal is a pitcher for and upstart baseball team and strikes just about everyone out. His Uncle Warren shows up after a long absence and asks Hal to join in him in a business venture that his Charles is also tied up with. Hal thinks it sounds preposterous but his mother Vera talks him into doing it with the promise of riches, gold actually. 

A Hopi Indian and his daughter lead the search, with the story of their ancestors, who were Lizard people. They hid treasure in Los Angeles California way beneath a downtown street. Somehow the crackpot sounding scheme get approval from the mayor and they are allowed to dig.

This is a story about love, hope and loyalty for Hal. Though the constant reference to Houdini Pie and it's symbolism got a little tiresome to me, the book flowed well with simple old fashioned story telling. Some of it was quite predictable but the book was enjoyable.

3/5

Thanks to Mary Myers of Bennet & Hastings Publishing for this book.

Friday, September 3, 2010

HT News

Each month, Alaine from Queen of Happy Endings runs a giveaway, and a lot of the time there are historical fiction novels included as at least some of the offerings. This month is no exception with The Distant Hours by Kate  Morton and Fall of Giants amongst the options.

The Austenesque Review is about to celebrate its first anniversary, and to celebrate there is a copy of Jane Austen: An Illustrated Treasury by Rebecca Dickson being given away.

The September event for the Historical Fiction Blogger's Round Table has begun, and I am delighted to see that it is featuring Susan Holloway Scott whose latest novel is The Countess and the King. There will be six chances to win copies of the book, the first of which is at Hist-Fic Chick (or perhaps I should say the first I've seen!)

On September 1 it would have been Jean Plaidy's 104th birthday. Over at Jean Plaidy's Royal Intrigue they are celebrating, and you could win a copy of Madonna of the Seven Hills as a result!

Other giveaways:

For the King's Favor by Elizabeth Chadwick (2 copies) at Reading the Past
The de Lacy Inheritance by Elizabeth Ashworth at Passages to the Past
The Queen's Captive by Barbara Kyle (2 copies) at Passages to the Past
Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel at The Burton Review and at Tudor Book Blog

Teddy's Books of a Lifetime

First I want to apologize to my colleagues here, at Historical Tapestry for not doing this for our blogiversary.  I have to admit that I have really struggled with this post.   Pinning down my Books of a Lifetime is like having to go to the dentist for me.  There are so many books that I have read in my lifetime that it is hard for me to narrow down.  Lets just say that these are my Books of a Lifetime, for the present.  You will see that my favorites vary and are not all historical fiction.

CHILDHOOD

Peter Rabbit by Beatrix Potter

I have always loved animals and read just about every book with animals I could get my hands on, as a child.
We all know the story of Peter Rabbit.  His mother told him not to go into Mr. McGreor's garden but he didn't listen and suffered the consequences.

Charlotte's Web by E.B. White

I read this book as a child and then again in university for a class on death and dying.   I became a vegetarian at a very young age because of my love for animals so this book really struck a cord with me.  Charlotte is a spider whom shares her love for Wilbur, the pig with their human friend, Fern.

James and the Giant Peach by Roald Dahl

This was a book that taught me that reading books can give me a respite from stress.  I was actually in the peach with James and his new friend,s as I read it.  When James losses both of his parents, he is sent to his wicked Aunts.  He is miserable, until one day, a old man gives him some magic crystals.  James accidently spills them on his aunt's peach tree.

TEENAGE YEARS

Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck

I was a pretty serious teen and liked to read serious books, for the most part.  I read Grapes of Wrath in high school and started my "love affair" with Steinbeck.  It is about one family's struggle during the Great Depression.

The Illustrated Man by Ray Bradbury

I did read a bit Science Fiction and loved The short story collection, The Illustrated Man.  The Illustrated Man, himself is an man with exotic tattoos all over his body.  They are all animated and we get to see each story unfold one by one.

The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne

I must admit that I felt like an outcast as a teen.  Our circumstances were quite different however, since Hester Prynne was an outcast, I related well to her.  In a New England colony, Hester had an adulterous affair that resulted in giving childbirth.  The ramifications ran deep.

ADULTHOOD

The Secret River by Kate Grenville

I have mentioned this book many times as an all time favorite and it still is.  William Thornhill is deported with his family from England to New South Wales Colony, what later became Australia.  It is the story about their struggle.  This book is historical fiction at it's finest.

The Poisonwood Bible by Bargara Kingsolver

I fell in love with thios book from the first page.  Nathan Price gets the "bright idea" to uproot his family and move to Africa to do missionary work.  As with most stories of people who go to far away places, to teach the gospel, "all hell breaks loose."

Gone With the Wind by Margaret Michell

As a young child, I fell in love with the movie.  As an adult, I fell in love with the book.  With sweeping scenes of the south before, during, and after slavery and the civil war, we are introduced to memorable characters such as Scarlett O'hara and Rhett Butler.

Alias Grace by Margaret Atwood

This was the first Atwood book I ever read and it just so happens to be historical fiction.  Set in 1843 Canada and based on a true story, Grace Marks is a housemaid who was tried for the murder of her employer and mistress.

Cleopatra's Daughter by Michelle Moran

This is my more recent favorite.  Rich in historical detail this portrait of imperial Rome is a masterpiece.  It is the story of Cleopatra's daughter, Selene and how she fared after her parents were killed and she was carted off to live in Rome to live with Octavian's family.

I really could go on and on naming my books of a lifetime, but I guess I have to stop somewhere, so here is the end.

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