Monday, April 6, 2009

Giveaway: The Traitor's Wife by Susan Higginbotham

Thanks to the very generous Susan Higginbotham, we have two copies of The Traitor's Wife to giveaway.

When Susan guest posted for us last week, she offered up another alternative watching The Tudors, by suggesting that the Plantagenets would be interesting reads. In order to enter the giveaway, we would like you to tell us what other eras/families etc you like to read about, and yes, you can say the Tudors if you like!

Unfortunately, due to high postage costs, this giveaway is restricted to US/Canada addresses. The winner will be chosen randomly from all entries received by Monday 13 April.

Also, stay tuned as we will have another exciting giveaway this week as well.

Whilst we are not officially part of the blog tour that Susan is participating in to celebrate the Sourcebooks release of The Traitor's Wife, we will definitely be reading along as Susan stops by at the following blogs:

6 April Carla Nayland's Blog
7 April A Reader's Respite
7 April Passages to the Past
7 April Reading Extravaganza
7 April S. Krishna's Books
8 April Historical Novels
10 April The Tome Traveller's Weblog
13 April Jennifer's Random Musings
13 April Medieval Bookworm
13 April Steven Till.com
14 April Peeking Between the Pages
14 April A Girl Walks Into a Bookstore
15 and 16 April Savvy Verse & Wit
16 April Sam's Book Blog
17 and 20 April Diary of An Eccentric
17 April My Friend Amy

Sunday, April 5, 2009

King's Fool: A Notorious King, His Six Wives, and the One Man Who Knew Their Secrets by Margaret Campbell Barnes


He's No Fool


Will Somers starts out with a dull life in the country on the family farm. Even his family admits that he doesn't make a good farmer. That doesn't leave him with any real options, until an option lands in his lap.


Will is one of the few lucky country children that had an education. He is given to a merchant, Richard Fermer , to work for. He has a good head for numbers and he must do the books and take inventory. He is good at what he does, but it bores him. The one shining light in his new life is Joanna, Master Fermer's daughter. He knows that it would not be possible to marry her, yet he dreams of a life with her.


One day Master Fermer told Will that he would be going to Court with him to conduct business. He meets King Henry and while the king and other royalty bowl, Will cracks a joke. With that, Henry scoops up Will to be his royal fool.


Will witnesses everything at court. The six wives, Henry's mood swings, everything. He become King Henry's companion and confidante and stand by him through it all. However, he still pines for Joanna through the years.


I could go on and on about this wonderful book but I wouldn't want to give you any spoilers. This book was first published in 1959. It is now being re-published by Source Books and is coming out this month. Though it was out in 1959, I didn't find it dated by today's standards.


My only small complaint is that I would have liked it a bit longer. Some of King Henry's six wives are barely touched upon.


Margaret Campbell Barnes envelopes the reader into the pages of her book. It is a compelling read and captures the period and Will Somers well. This book is hard to put down! Highly recommended!


4.5/5


Thanks to Danielle L. Jackson for a ARC of this wonderful book.


Saturday, April 4, 2009

HT News - An Echo in the Bone

We've seen the cover for the upcoming book in the Outlander series (An Echo in the Bone), we know the release date (September 22), and now we have the back cover blurb! I for one can not wait to get my hands on it!

Jamie Fraser, erstwhile Jacobite and reluctant rebel, knows three things about the American rebellion: The Americans will win, unlikely as that seems in 1777; being on the winning side is no guarantee of survival; and he’d rather die than face his illegitimate son—a young lieutenant in the British army—across the barrel of a gun.

His time-traveling wife, Claire, knows that the Americans will win, but not what the ultimate price may be. That price won’t include Jamie’s life or happiness, though—not if she has anything to say about it.

And in the relative safety of the 20th century, their daughter Brianna and her husband, Roger, watch the unfolding of her parents story in the past—a past that may be sneaking up behind their own family.

Friday, April 3, 2009

HT News

David S Brody, author of Cabal of the Westford Knight, has a fascinating guest post up at CW Gortner's blog, Historical Boys. There is also a giveaway.

Another guest post, this time from David H Jones, author of Two Brothers: One North, One South, over at Michelle Moran's History Buff. Check out the details here.

Arleigh from historical-fiction.com has a giveaway of Karen Harper's new book, Mistress Shakespeare. You can get all the entry details by clicking here.

Erika Mailman has announced that she is holding a giveaway of her book The Witches Trinity in conjunction with Jennifer from Literate Housewife. In a few days there will be an interview with Erika as well. Full details here.

Michele from A Reader's Respite is giving away a copy of The King's Fool by Margaret Campbell Barnes, which has just been rereleased by Sourcebooks.


Do you like reading about Irish history? Frank Delaney has been interviewed at Eye on Books about his latest book, Shannon. There is this handy dandy embedded player to enable you to listen even from our blog, although I haven't tried to do this before, so we will see how it goes shall we!



Snobbery With Violence - Marion Chesney



When a marriage proposal appears imminent for the beautiful - if rebellious - Lady Rose Summer, her father wants to know if her suitor's intentions are honorable. He calls on Captain Harry Cathcart, the impoverished younger son of a baron, to do some intelligence work on the would-be fiance, Sir Geoffrey Blandon.After his success in uncovering Geoffrey's dishonorable motives, Harry fashions a career out of "fixing" things for wealthy aristocrats. So when the Marquess of Hedley finds one of his guests dead at a lavish house party, he knows just the man to call.But when Harry is caught between his client's desire
for discretion and his suspicion that murder may indeed have been committed, he enlists the help of Superintendent Kerridge of the Scotland Yard and Lady Rose, also a guest at Lord Hedley's.

I really do enjoy cosy mysteries and I prefer historical to contemporary so it was with great expectation that I started this Snobbery with Violence, an Edwardian murder mystery.

I must say that I enjoyed it very much and I almost laughed aloud at times. Lady Rose Summer was almost unbelievable at times, as she was much focused in the women's rights movement and the equality of rights between the lower and upper classes but at the same time, she seemed unaware of the proper behaviour to live in polite society and without proper knowledge of what being of the lower classes might entail.

The story starts with Lady Rose being pursued by a gentleman who is taking its time with the marriage proposal, Lady Rose's father hires Captain Cathcart to discover which are the man's intentions and unfortunately those were less than honourable. I understand Rose's anger at him and wanting to shame him publicly but it seemed odd that she did not know the double standard would actually make her an outcast while his sins would be quickly forgotten.

Rose and Captain Harry meet again when he is hired once more by her father to stop a visit from the king to their estate. It has come to the Earl's attention that the king wants to try his luck with Rose now that she is a fallen woman. Harry comes up with the idea of blowing up a bridge on the estate and blaming it on the bolshevists, which effectively scares the royal guest to be.

Due to her reputation, Rose is then invited to a house party on a strange fake castle where Lord Hedley has decided to gather those girls whose season was a failure and helping them find husbands. Not that Rose wants a husband of course. And here is where the mystery really starts. One the guest is found dead of what seems to be arsenic poisoning and the police are called to investigate but progresses little as the influences of the upper classes manage to call off the inquest. Rose immediately decides she must investigate and since Harry had been invited by Lord Hedley to try to solve the investigation discreetly there is nothing more obvious than bringing those two together.

This is a light and fun read and I think Chesney strong point is the characters she creates. Becket, who is Harry's man, and Daisy, a former chorus girl who becomes Rose's lady's maid are interesting characters and so is Inspector Kerridge. The police detective who keeps trying to solve the murders and mysteries he comes across only to see his actions stopped by the upper classes. The book is full of information about the distinctions between classes and about women’s role in society. I did like Harry and Rose although Rose did sometimes sound a bit TSTL and too socially awkward to truly be real. They are attracted to each other but spend most of the book in denial or misunderstanding each other's intentions.

The mystery ends up being solved by both of them after investigating everyone’s history and possible motives and Rose cannot resist a final confrontation with danger. A nice and entertaining read!

Grade: 4/5

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

HT News

Over at Historical Novel Review, there is a new interview with Gabrielle de Montserrat, heroine of Catherine Delors excellent book, Mistress of the Revolution. There will also be an excerpt and a giveaway. Ana and I both really liked this book, and so are pleased to see it getting some well deserved attention.

Kate Furnivall has posted just a small snippet about her next book. Once again, she will be spending time in Russia, but this time set during the reign of Tsar Nicholas II. I will be reading it for sure!

Congrats to CW Gortner. His book, The Last Queen has been nominated the inaugural Heathrow Travel Product Awards in the Travel Read: Fiction category. To quote the awards website, "the awards are your chance to recognise and vote for the products that help make your journey better, and you could win the award winners in our exclusive prize draw." The winners are decided by a public vote at the above website.

Guest Post by Susan Higginbotham

1st April is release date for a new edition of The Traitor's Wife by Susan Higginbotham, and to help celebrate we have a guest post from Susan, and also will be hosting a giveaway! Details of the giveaway will be posted on Monday of next week. Thanks Susan, for guest posting for us.


Over here in the United States, another season of “The Tudors” will soon be starting. If the past two seasons are any indication, we’ll see lots of sex, a few beheadings, treachery, and betrayal. Its myriad inaccuracies aside, “The Tudors” is a vastly entertaining show, and I’ll be planted in my wing chair faithfully each week, Boswell the cairn terrier sitting on my lap, watching it.


But in a few weeks, “The Tudors” will have run its course for the year, and you’ll need another source to get your share of human beings at their worst and even at their best. You could always pick up a novel about the Tudors—I suppose you might be able to find one or two if you look hard enough—but might I suggest the Plantagenets? Even more specifically, might I suggest the reign of Edward II? Though he had five fewer wives than Henry—one did quite enough damage—his reign was eventful enough to suit any Tudor fan.


Edward II was very much unlike his mighty, warlike father, Edward I. He wasn’t a coward, a weakling, or a fop—to the contrary, he fought sturdily at Bannockburn and in his father’s wars, and he was an outdoorsman who enjoyed vigorous physical activity such as rowing, swimming, and digging ditches. But he lacked his father’s gift for commanding the respect of his nobles, and one of his most attractive qualities—his unswerving loyalty to those he loved—proved to be his undoing.


There were two great favorites in Edward II’s life: Piers Gaveston and Hugh le Despenser the younger. The men are usually portrayed as being Edward II’s lovers, but at this juncture, we can’t know this for sure. What we do know for certain is that Edward cared for them deeply and showered them with favors, to the immense annoyance of the rest of the nobility—and of Edward’s queen, Isabella.


Thanks to Christopher Marlowe’s famous play Edward the Second, Gaveston has become by far the better known of Edward II’s favorites. Yet it was the lesser known Hugh who in many ways is the more colorful of the two men. It was Hugh—who had a brief and quite successful career as a pirate—whose greed for land and power, fueled by an accommodating king, would bring the reign to its final, tragic crisis.


Hugh also had a wife, Edward II’s favorite niece, Eleanor de Clare. She doesn’t even appear in Marlowe’s play, yet her life was a dramatic one. A lady-in-waiting to Queen Isabella, she was also a sister-in-law of Piers Gaveston. She was twice imprisoned in the Tower of London. She was accused of stealing from the crown. One of the richest women in England, for a time she was penniless, stripped of all of her great estates. In the last few years of her life, two men waged a legal battle in the papal courts as to which one was her husband. She was also an eyewitness to her uncle’s tragic reign and to its aftermath—and it is mostly through her eyes that I chose to tell its story in The Traitor’s Wife. I believe you’ll find it an interesting one.


And you’ll never have to worry about Jonathan Rhys-Meyers showing up in a fat suit.



***Release details***

The Traitor's Wife is being released by Sourcebooks on 1 April. For more details, including details of the follow up to this book, Hugh and Bess, which is being released in August, visit Susan's website.