Today we are pleased to welcome British author Sarah Bower who is currently on a blog tour promoting her book The Sins of the Borgias. This book was previously released in the UK as The Book Of Love, which is an interesting change of title. This is her second novel following The Needle in the Blood.
My love affair with the Borgias goes back a long way, to reading Jean Plaidy’s Madonna of the Seven Hills and Light on Lucrezia in my early teens. It won’t surprise you that a fourteen year old girl fell for Cesare Borgia first – handsome, brilliant and clearly in need of taming by a good woman – a perfect foil for a somewhat solitary and dreamy teenager. He’s the reason why, once I’d finished the Jean Plaidy series, rather than going on to more of her wonderfully entertaining fiction, I set out to read The Prince, for whose lucid and hard-nosed exposition of real politik Cesare was the inspiration, and Rafael Sabatini’s romantic hagiography of the man, written at a time when Cesare was enjoying a brief moment in the sun as a ‘hero’ of the Italian Risorgimento. In the space between the two is a fascinating, enigmatic and contradictory human being, who fought bulls but adored his horses, deserted his wife but was devoted to his mother and sister, wrecked swathes of central Italy and then employed Leonardo da Vinci to plan the rebuilding.
Through Cesare, I got to know the rest of his extraordinary family. As well as giving us the legend of the murderous adulteress, Lucrezia, who inspired Victor Hugo’s play and Donizetti’s opera, the Borgias (or Borjas, as they were known in their native Catalonia) gave us two Popes and a saint, a convicted murderer and the man who built the famous Villa d’Este and its garden. This contrast exists best in microcosm in the life of Lucrezia, whose early years were marked by rumours of adultery, incest, extravagant partying and even lying to a convocation of cardinals about her virginity. Yet by the time of her death, she was a much-loved matriarch, a heroine of resistance who sold all her jewellery to buy artillery to defend her home in Ferrara, and a distinguished patron of the arts.
What it’s easy to forget when you list the achievements of these lives, is how short they were. Cesare and Lucrezia’s father became Pope Alexander VI in 1492. His sudden death in 1503 brought his dynasty crashing down; within twelve months Cesare had lost control of the Papal States and three years later, aged just 31, he was dead. The period of Borgia ascendancy lasted a mere nine years, in an age dominated by the great Italian dynasties such as the Medici, the Orsini and the Visconti. They left no cultural legacy, no great paintings or palazzi, yet their name remains far better known than some of the others.
They didn’t need permanent monuments. They had chutzpah, guts, flair, a glorious and flamboyant disregard for what anyone thought of them as they pursued their high, and ultimately impossible, ambitions. They were gallant and brave in the face of treachery, disease, loss and war. When they had power and wealth, they flaunted it, when they lost it, they set out undaunted to get it back.
I do sometimes wonder if the romance would have tarnished if Cesare and Lucrezia had lived to a ripe old age. You know what they say about an early death, and both these two died in their thirties. Perhaps it’s the brevity of their lives that makes them seem so bright, like shooting stars, there, then gone, invested with magical power. Or perhaps, for the novelist, it’s the fact that for every Borgia legend, there’s an opposite. Cesare was obsessively secretive and committed almost nothing to writing. Lucrezia wrote many of her most important letters in codes which remain undeciphered. Over five hundred years, the fog of secrecy has thickened, and it’s a special pleasure for a fiction writer such as myself to grope around in it for the strange, half-readable shapes, the muffled voices and glimpsed faces which are all these mercurial figures have left behind. I love them because I’ve been able, in my novel, SINS OF THE HOUSE OF BORGIA, to make them my own.
Showing posts with label Sarah Bower. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sarah Bower. Show all posts
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Saturday, January 17, 2009
The Needle In The Blood - Sarah Bower

January 1067. Charismatic bishop Odo of Bayeux decides to commission a wall hanging, on a scale never seen before, to celebrate his role in the conquest of Britain by his brother, William, Duke of Normandy. What he cannot anticipate is how utterly this will change his life - even more than the invasion itself.Although I overall enjoyed my reading of Needle In The Blood when I started it I was hoping for a book on the Bayeux Tapestry and now that I've finished it it feels the tapestry was just a small part of this story. In that sense I was a bit disappointed. It's not even a story about the weavers but more the story of one weaver - Gytha - and her love story with Bishop Odo.
His life becomes entangled with the women who embroider his hanging, especially Gytha - handmaiden to the fallen Saxon queen and his sworn enemy. But against their intentions they fall helplessly in love; in doing so Odo comes into conflict with his king and his God and Gytha with Odo's enemies, who mistrust her hold over such a powerful man. Friends and family become enemies, enemies become lovers; nothing in life or in the hanging is what it seems.
Gytha is one of the handmaidens to Harold Godwinson's steadfast wife - Edith Swan Neck - and she goes with her mistress to reclaim is body for burial. The fate of the Saxon women is not a happy one and for a while Gytha resorts to being a prostitute so that she can survive.
Her life changes when Bishop Odo decides to commission a tapestry to register the story of his brother William the Conqueror's victory over Harold Godwinson, he charges his sister Agatha, a nun, of organising the work and Gytha is one of the women selected to embroider the tapestry.
Bower does a good job in bringing this secondary cast to life, but the one that truly stands out is Gytha. She manages to catch Odo's eye and they fall in love starting a relationship in which the power alternates between them and if at first their idyll has a dreamy feel things soon get complicated because Gytha is a Saxon. The blurb in the cover of the book is very accurate – a tale of sex, lies and embroidery...
I must say it took me a while to get into the story and I even abandoned it at some point and picked it up months later so it's not exactly a page turner but I thought Bower was good at conveying the medieval feel and it's quite refreshing to read a story set immediately after the 1066 conquest.
Grade: 3/5
Marg's review is here
Labels:
Ana's Reviews,
Historical Fiction,
Medieval,
Sarah Bower
Monday, April 7, 2008
Upcoming Release: The Book of Love by Sarah Bower
Last year I read and really enjoyed Needle in the Blood by Sarah Bower - a book about the creation of the Bayeaux Tapestry and a love story between one of the embroiderers and the King of England's brother, who also happens to be a bishop. (Click here to read my review).
I am very excited to see the new blurb for her next book up on Amazon UK:

The book is being released in the UK on 1 June, but if you are interested in pre-ordering the publishers (Snowbooks) have a great deal where you can save a third of the price for the Hardcover. Just click on the icon below to go to the checkout area or click here for the details. Please note that this is for UK residents only.
I will be seriously tempted to buy this as soon as it comes out, even though I am really trying to not buy too many books at the moment!
I am very excited to see the new blurb for her next book up on Amazon UK:

In 1492, when Ferdinand and Isabella expel the Jews from Spain, six year old Esther Sarfati finds herself travelling to Rome to join her father, a successful banker who has helped his fellow Spaniard, Rodrigo Borgia, finance his bid for the Papacy. Nine years later, as Pope Alexander VI, he repays the favour by offering Esther a place in the household of his daughter, Lucrezia, who is about to marry Alfonso d'Este, heir to the Duchy of Ferrara. Against her own better judgement, but in accordance with her father's wishes for her future, Esther converts to Christianity and enters Lucrezia's service as lady-in-waiting.Flattered by Lucrezia's favour, seduced by the friendship of her cousin, Angela Borgia and swept off her feet by Lucrezia's glamorous and dangerous brother, Cesare, she is drawn into a web of intrigue and deceit which will test her heart to its utmost and burden her with secrets she must carry to her grave. Set against the glittering background of the court of Ferrara in the early sixteenth century, this is the heart-breaking story of what happens to an innocent abroad in the world of the Borgias.
The book is being released in the UK on 1 June, but if you are interested in pre-ordering the publishers (Snowbooks) have a great deal where you can save a third of the price for the Hardcover. Just click on the icon below to go to the checkout area or click here for the details. Please note that this is for UK residents only.
I will be seriously tempted to buy this as soon as it comes out, even though I am really trying to not buy too many books at the moment!
Wednesday, January 2, 2008
Needle in the Blood by Sarah Bower

January 1067. Charismatic bishop Odo of Bayeux decides to commission a wall hanging, on a scale never seen before, to celebrate his role in the conquest of Britain by his brother, William, Duke of Normandy. What he cannot anticipate is how utterly this will change his life - even more than the invasion itself.
His life becomes entangled with the women who embroider his hanging, especially Gytha - handmaiden to the fallen Saxon queen and his sworn enemy. But against their intentions they fall helplessly in love; in doing so Odo comes into conflict with his king and his God and Gytha with Odo's enemies, who mistrust her hold over such a powerful man. Friends and family become enemies, enemies become lovers; nothing in life or in the hanging is what it seems.
I first heard of this book when Dovegreyreader started raving about it earlier in 2007, and the story sounded so good to me, that I went ahead and bought it instead of waiting for it to come in to the library. Good job too, seeing as it still isn't on the catalogue yet!
Our main female character is Gytha. She was a handmaiden to the former Saxon queen. When William the Conqueror, for want of a better word conquered, Gytha was in some ways lucky to escape from the same fate of her queen who became a prisoner. In other ways Gytha was not so lucky, because she had to find some way to make a living and becomes a prostitute. Gytha is saved from this fate when the quality of her needlework is recognised and she is recruited by Odo and William's sister, a formidable woman in her own right, to join the team of embroiderers who are working on an embroidery which will tell the story of the Norman invasion of England. It is there that Gytha meets Odo, a charismatic churchman who is not, let it be said, all that chaste. The attraction between the two is intense, as is the hate that Gytha feels towards him, and she is not sure what action to take - to kill him or love him.
Odo makes Gytha his mistress, an action which in itself causes many issues for the couple, including with the all powerful king of England. As the two fall deeply in love, Odo must fight for both his political and canonical lives. The line between the church and politics has over the years has often been thin, and it is particularly thin during these early medieval days.
This is an extremely detailed book, and I would be stretching it to say that it is a book that I found myself swept away by. It took me a bit longer to read than I would have anticipated but having said that, I was immersed in the 11th century, and I was compelled to continue reading to find out what happened next. In some ways, the romantic side of this story was almost fairy tale like - a sweeping epic love story between two unlikely people. This aspect, along with much historical detail, meant that this was a book to savour and enjoy.
On the front cover the byline says 'A powerful tale of sex, lies and embroidery' and that about covers it!
Rating: 4/5
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