Tuesday, May 5, 2009

HT News

It's almost release date for Twilight of Avalon and Anna Elliott has been interviewed over at News and Random Musings about Historical Novels.and also by fellow author Michelle Moran.

Over at Blogs.com, Michelle Moran was invited to guest post and her list is the Top 10 History Blogs by Authors of Historical Fiction. How many of them are you reading?


Award time!


Lana from A Hoyden's Look at Literature has bestowed the I Love Your Blog award on us!

Thank you so much Lana! We really appreciate it.

Monday, May 4, 2009

The HT Seasons

HT SEASONS

The Seasons are a month long event held at Historical Tapestry every month of June. It spotlights an historical fiction author and includes book reviews, thematic guest posts, giveaways and interesting discussions. Below you can find the index for the past events:

Daphne du Maurier (2012)
Anya Seton (2010)
Jean Plaidy (2009)
Georgette Heyer (2008)

Why I Love Writing About the Renaissance

C W Gortner is the author of The Last Queen, which is being released in paperback on May 5. We are very pleased to be the first stop on his blog tour to celebrate that release.


The Renaissance was a brutal, splendid, quixotic era. The art, music, architecture, and people who populated this diverse time have enthralled me since childhood. Whether it’s a painting by Leonardo da Vinci, the terrors of Henry VIII; Juana of Castile’s haunting struggle, or the opalescent chateaux of François I, if it took place in the Renaissance I’m hooked.

Writing about the Renaissance isn’t something I chose; I actually feel as if it found me. Growing up in southern Spain during the final years of Franco’s reign, television was not a significant element of my life (we had few channels and sparse programming). Books, on the other hand, abounded in my world, and many of those books were about people who lived, fought, loved and died in the Renaissance. I grew up with Elizabeth I declaring she had the stomach of a king; with Queen Isabel’s crusade to unite Spain; Catherine de Medici and her mad sons; the Borgia princes, the Este sisters, Imperial Habsburgs, Martin Luther, the popes, the revolts of the Low Countries, and the narcissistic Valois. These people and events became as familiar to me as my own history; their vicissitudes and triumphs as real as anything going on around me. As a boy, I’d read about them and find out reading wasn’t enough: I wanted to embody their personas, live as they did. The abyss of the centuries separating us seemed to dissolve when I wrote; and thus writing became my time machine for traveling into the past. Once I started, I never wanted to stop.

Renaissance life could be incredibly opulent and incredibly cruel. Death was always a threat; but unlike people of today, the Renaissance seemed much more aware of it and thus lived all the more for it. Today, we have forgotten or neglected on many levels our vital link to nature, our part in a scheme that is much larger than us. The Renaissance re-discovered the paganism and wisdom of the ancient world and reshaped it for a time that was awakening from the shackles of medieval repression; and its celebration of the world’s beauty, of life and nature and all its gifts, infused its people with a robust vitality. Writing about their lives and their world requires dedicated research in order for me to bring this complex time alive, but the effort is always worth it. I don’t share or condone many of the Renaissance’s more unsavory aspects, such as the oppression of women and gay people, the cruelty to animals and religious fervor, the classicism, prejudices, xenophobia, warfare and racism that are all part of the time; but I do celebrate its incredible achievements, for it was a time whose beauty and contradictions will never be seen again.

Check back here over the next few days for further information, and at the following stops on his blog tour over the next few weeks:

Monday, May 4, '09 - Historical Tapestry
Tuesday, May 5, '09
- A Bookish Mom
Tuesday, May5, '09 - The Burton Review
Wednesday, May 6, '09 - A Bookish Mom
Wednesday, May 6, 09 - Passages to the Past

Thursday, May 7, '09 - Savvy Verse & Wit
Friday, May 8, '09 - Savvy Verse & Wit

Monday, May 11, '09 - Ramya's Bookshelf
Tuesday, May 12, '09 - A Girl Walks into a Bookstore

Wednesday, May 13, '09 - Introducing Writers! Radio Show Podcast with Kim Smith
Wednesday, May 13, '09 - Medieval Bookworm
Thursday, May 14, '09 - Jo-Jo Loves to Read
Friday, May 15, '09 - Bookgirl's Nightstand
Friday, May 15, '09 - Medieval Bookworm
Monday, May 18, '09 - Jenn's Bookshelf
Monday, May 18, '09 - Jo-Jo Loves to Read
Tuesday, May 19, '09
- Sam's Book Blog
Tuesday, May 19, '09 - The Bluestocking Society
Wednesday, May 20, '09 - Popin's Lair
Wednesday, May 20, '09 - The Epic Rat
Thursday, May 21, '09 - Marta's Meanderings
Thursday, May 21, '09 - The Epic Rat
Friday, May 22, '09 - The Book Connection
Monday, May 25, '09 - Book Addiction
Tuesday, May 26, '09 - The Book Faery Reviews
Wednesday, May 27, '09
- Cafe of Dreams
Thursday, May 28 - Cafe of Dreams
Friday, May 29 - A Book Lover



Sunday, May 3, 2009

HT News

Arleigh from Historical-fiction.com has been on a roll lately with great giveaways. Her current giveaway is another. By answering one question, you have the chance to win all three of Karleen Koen's books - Through a Glass Darkly, Now Face to Face, and Dark Angels.

In preparation for her upcoming September release, Cleopatra's Daughter, Michelle Moran has launched a new website for the book. On her blog, Michelle has given us some details of some of the exciting things that are going to happen around release date.

Over at Historical Novel Review, Mirella Patzer has interviewed Australian author Margaret Tanner. I met Margaret at an event earlier this year, and it was interesting to listen to talk to her about her books. You can read the interview here.

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Why I Love Arthurian Fiction

We are very pleased this week to bring you a new post in our Why I Love series, this time from debut author Anna Elliott. Anna's book, Twilight of Avalon: A Novel of Trystan and Isolde is released on 5 May.


In the Spring of 2007, I woke up from a very vivid dream of telling my mother that I was going to write a book about the daughter of Modred, son of Arthur and the great villain of the Arthurian cycle of tales. I'd been writing historical fiction and sending books around to agents and editors, always coming close to being published but never actually getting a book sold. I was four months pregnant with my first baby at the time, and had been starting to think that as much as I loved writing, maybe a professional career wasn't going to happen for me--or at least not for some time.

Something about this dream, though, just wouldn't let me go. I had been an English major in college with a focus on Medieval literature and history, and had fallen in love with the Arthurian world and the Arthur legends then. I started to do some preliminary research, reading books that explored the possibility of a real, historical Arthur--who if he existed at all would, scholars agreed, have been a 5th century British warlord, possibly one who made a victorious stand against the Saxon tribes invading Britain at the time--a far cry from the king of Camelot who's come down to us in the tales.

At the same time, though, I was reminded of why I'd fallen in love with the Arthur stories in the first place. The world of the legends is a recognizably historical one, part of our own past--and yet it's also a world that has the wonderful potential for magic and enchantment. So as I was reading, I started to build my own version of that world in my head--one that was a blending of legend and late 5th century British history, truth and tale.

In my dream, I'd known only that the main character of my book was going to be Modred's daughter. It was only when I was looking over name lists trying to decide on one for my heroine that the name "Isolde" leaped off the page at me and made me turn back to the story of Trystan and Isolde. The Trystan and Isolde legend is a later addition to the Arthurian cycle, very much grounded in a courtly, chivalric, 13th century world. And yet it, too, has its roots in earlier legends and traditions that still echo faintly in the story as it has come down to us today. I started to wonder what those earliest traditions might have been, what the story might have looked like at its first inception during the chaos and violence of Dark Age Britain, the "real" Arthurian age.

That was how the story started to frame itself in my mind as a trilogy: Twilight of Avalon, Dark Moon of Avalon, and Sunrise of Avalon. Three books that would weave together the scraps we knew of 5th century British history with the earliest versions of both the Arthurian and the Trystan and Isolde tales.

From the first, I'd known that my story was going to be a kind of sequel to the Arthur tales, a chance to explore what might have happened after the battle of Camlann, after Arthur was wounded and carried away to be healed on the mist shrouded Isle of Avalon. And that idea, too, held tremendous appeal for me, in that it gave me a chance to see a different side of the Arthurian story.

I think one of the most captivating, the most moving aspects of the Arthur stories is their ability to show us the highest potentials for human nobility, human honor and courage. And yet the story always ends in tragedy, with the battle of Camlann where Arthur falls, betrayed by all those he loved best.

His legend though, still lives, still gives us an ideal to strive for. That was the feeling that stayed with me in reading the original Arthur stories--and the feeling I wanted the characters in my trilogy to have, as well. The title of my book is Twilight of Avalon, because in many ways it's set at a turning point, the end of the age defined by Arthur the king. But I wanted my Trystan and Isolde to be able to hold onto the ideals of the Arthurian world, even if that world was forever gone. Because even in the wake of tragedy, life goes on--and there's always the possibility that someday those ideals will end in victory instead of defeat. For me, that was one of the joys of writing Twilight of Avalon: to know that this time, in my small corner of the great Arthurian tapestry, the story didn't have to end at Camlann.

Thank you so much for guest posting for us today Anna. You can find out more about Anna and her book on her website at www.annaelliottbooks.com

Friday, May 1, 2009

HT News

Are you on Facebook? Did you know that you can see what we are up to here at Historical Tapestry while you are over there through Networked Blogs? Check out our page here.

That's not what I was actually meaning to post about tonight, but I was reminded of it when Jen from Literate Housewife posted about the May book of the month for the Historical Fiction Lovers book club which is hosted on Facebook. I haven't managed to read any of them yet, but this month the book is The Firemaster's Mistress which I read a few years ago now and really enjoyed.

Further update on the release date for The Endless Forest. Rosina Lippi, who writes as Sara Donati, has now confirmed a definite release date which is 26 January 2010. We also have a first look at the cover art for the final book in the Into the Wilderness series.