Chuyển đến nội dung chính

Jane Seymour, The Haunted Queen

I recently finished my NetGalley copy of Alison Weir's fabulous new novel JANE SEYMOUR: THE HAUNTED QUEEN.  Wow, what a fantastic story.  I've always thought of Jane Seymour as a mousy, quiet woman.  A woman who was the antithesis of Anne Boleyn.  The calm after the storm.  Well, this book throws all my preconceived ideas out the window.  I have no doubt she was the calm after the storm that was Anne Boleyn, but she was no shrinking violet, either.  The Jane Seymour portrayed by Alison Weir (one of THE BEST historical novelist I've ever read), is a calm, but highly intelligent young woman.  One who happened to catch the eye of Henry.  The only woman who was able to give him the son and heir he required and craved.  She was full of life and joy, but the title tells it all.  She was haunted.  There is an element of the supernatural in this book.  She is haunted by a dark figure; she feels partly responsible for the death of ...

The Secret

BLOOD DIVIDE

02_Blood Divide Cover
Publication Date: January 27, 2015 Lion Fiction Paperback; 352p ISBN: 978-1782640899
Genre:
 Historical Fiction Add to GR Button


   Gripping, visceral, and accessible historical fiction. The Battle of Flodden in September 1513 was one of the bloodiest battles ever fought on British soil, in which James IV, King of Scots, and virtually the whole of his nobility and gentry were annihilated in an afternoon along with 15,000 soldiers. Five centuries later, the slaughter still occupies a core position in the Scottish nationalist debate and in the pantheon of heroic failures. This novel puts you in the heart of the action; youíll feel the sweat and the fear, the curtain of red mist. The narrative covers April through September 1513, focusing around a handful of key characters: John Heron, Bastard of Ford, swaggering, violent, and disreputable, the black sheep of a good English family; Sir Thomas Howard, leader of the English forces and skilled strategist; Alexander, 3rd Lord Hume, leader of the Scots, bold but impetuous; Isabella Hoppringle, Abbess of Coldstream, hub of a web of influential women throughout the Scottish borders, a woman of significant influence and charisma. Laced with dark humor and fascinating period detail, Blood Divide reminder readers that political intrigue and human folly are timeless.

Buy the Book

Amazon Barnes & Noble Kregel Publications

About the Author03_John Sadler Author

John Sadler is an experienced military historian, a fellow of the Royal Historical Society, and the author of more than two dozen books. He is also a much traveled battlefield tour guide covering most major conflicts in the UK, Europe, and North Africa. For more information please visit John Sadler's website.

Blood Divide: A Novel of Flodden Field Blog Tour Schedule

Monday, January 26Review at Ageless Pages ReviewsSpotlight & Giveaway at Let Them Read Books
  Tuesday, January 27Review at Flashlight Commentary
  Wednesday, January 28Spotlight & Giveaway at Historical Fiction Connection
  Friday, January 30Spotlight at Layered Pages
  Sunday, February 1Spotlight & Giveaway at Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus More
  Monday, February 2Review at Book Lovers Paradise
  Tuesday, February 3Spotlight & Giveaway at Words and Peace
  Thursday, February 5Interview and Review at A Virtual Hobby Store and Coffee Haus
  Saturday, February 6Review at Book Nerd
  Monday, February 9Review at Just One More Chapter
 Tuesday, February 10Review at Broken TeepeeSpotlight at Historical Fiction Obsession
 Wednesday, February 11Review at Forever AshleyReview at The Mad ReviewerSpotlight at CelticLady's Reviews
  Thursday, February 12Interview at Books and Benches
Friday, February 13Spotlight at Caroline Wilson Writes

 photo 6462c21d-0620-42ff-b190-3fd807234753.png




 I WAS SUPPOSED TO WRITE A REVIEW, HOWEVER, I JUST RECEIVED THE BOOK AND HAVEN'T HAD AN OPPORTUNITY TO FINISH.  AS SOON AS I HAVE I WILL POST MY REVIEW ON THIS BLOG AND ON AMAZON, GOODREADS, AND BN.   IN THE MEANTIME,   WE HAVE A GUEST POST FROM MR. JOHN SADLER, AUTHOR OF BLOOD DIVIDE.

Flodden Blog – Death of the King

On a blustery afternoon in late summer five hundred years ago this September 9th the largest army Scotland had ever deployed against England lined Branxton Edge in North Northumberland. In the shallow valley before them stood an English force under the Earl of Surrey, his eldest surviving son Thomas Howard the Lord Admiral with the gentry and commons of the north. Everyone had been here before. Since the days of Edward III the Northern English had been expected to fend for themselves against Scottish aggression triggered by English attacks on Scotland’s ally France, dancing to the tune of the ‘Auld Alliance’. 

It would be a very brave man indeed who, looking up at the ridge as the squally showers abated and a fitful, wind-laced light shone through the grayness, did not quail. The long lines of Scottish pikes, arranged in the new, fashionable continental manner must have truly seemed like Birnam Wood. Perhaps as many as thirty thousand men crowned the high ground, their eighteen foot staves rearing like a steel tipped avalanche, ready to deluge the far fewer English below, to sweep them aside and clear the road to Scotland. Howard’s masterly flank march humbugging the Scottish king and placing his underfed forces between the Scots and the Tweed had been a masterstroke but it could still end in disaster.

Amongst the gaudy silk splendour of the massed Scottish banners, firefly bright against the damp ochre of Northumbrian earth, flew the proud flag of King James IV. Since acceding to a vacant throne after the convenient murder of his unloved father James had ruled for quarter of a century.  His reign had been marked by increasing stability and centralisation, firm and efficient government, prosperity and growth. The King was truly a fit renaissance prince with a wide sprawl of interests including, perhaps alarmingly for his courtiers, dentistry. He had built a state of the art navy, fit to rival that of his brother in law Henry VIII. James had indeed accomplished much.

He wanted more. He needed to put his hitherto remote realm into the cockpit of European power politics, to strut the wider stage, to be heard despite the tumult of unceasing wars between France and the Empire. Henry VIII had very similar ideas and, courtesy of his parsimonious father, a full treasury.  James, above all, wanted to prove himself in the crucible of kingship – the battlefield. It was by his will that these two great armies now confronted each other; the Scots artillery train, one of the most formidable in Europe about to begin the battle.

The King of Scotland has been roundly condemned for the disaster which followed. His heavy guns, attempting to fire downhill, were raked by lighter, better handled English field pieces. With the counter battery fire working so well for the home side, the massive Scots pike columns were soon feeling the effect. James’ half-trained levies were not prepared for such fearful attrition and the King, true to prevailing Swiss doctrine, launched an immediate attack. 

At first all went well, the flimsy English right under Edmund Howard was swept aside by Home and Huntly’s division. Home’s opposite number, the English warden Lord Dacre, threw his border riders in to stem the rot and the fight ended in stalemate. The central Scots’ phalanx, with the King’s massive division on their right stormed down the slope, seemingly unstoppable. But James was an amateur; he had failed to reconnoitre the ground, an error no Swiss general would have allowed. The rush was spoilt by wet ground and the battle became a footslogger’s struggle with the English bill proving vastly superior. 

By the dismal close of the wet afternoon, as light thickened the body of King James IV lay unnoticed amongst piles of dead and dying, hacked by English blades. He would not be taking his place on the wider stage.    

Why write about this? Twice I’ve written non-fiction accounts of Flodden. Such writing is inevitably constrained by the known historical facts. These are contained within primary sources which, for the battle, are very sketchy. I have lived in Northumberland for all of my life and have enjoyed a lifelong fascination with the area, it’s unique and compelling landscapes, a long and, it has to be said, bloody history, forged in the cauldron of three centuries of bitter warfare with the Scots. 

My objective in turning to fiction was to attempt to bring the era to life, to explore character in a way that history simply doesn’t allow. All of the four narrators in the book are based on real individuals. Two are public figures in the sense that far more is known of their lives than the other two, Heron and Isabella, both of whom appear only as footnotes. These two are pivotal, each is known to the other and both are significant ‘players’ in the events of the campaign. Heron is a writer’s gift, a homespun D’Artagnan. No plaster saint to be sure, outlaw, killer, thief and (probably) spy. His world is one of violence and anarchy to a degree we can barely comprehend. Individual actions are conditioned by the survival reflex, untrammeled by any veneers of civilized restraint. At the same time they were free and unconstrained in a way we equally cannot grasp. 

Besides, I enjoy sex and violence!                

Nhận xét

Bài đăng phổ biến từ blog này

Jane Seymour, The Haunted Queen

I recently finished my NetGalley copy of Alison Weir's fabulous new novel JANE SEYMOUR: THE HAUNTED QUEEN.  Wow, what a fantastic story.  I've always thought of Jane Seymour as a mousy, quiet woman.  A woman who was the antithesis of Anne Boleyn.  The calm after the storm.  Well, this book throws all my preconceived ideas out the window.  I have no doubt she was the calm after the storm that was Anne Boleyn, but she was no shrinking violet, either.  The Jane Seymour portrayed by Alison Weir (one of THE BEST historical novelist I've ever read), is a calm, but highly intelligent young woman.  One who happened to catch the eye of Henry.  The only woman who was able to give him the son and heir he required and craved.  She was full of life and joy, but the title tells it all.  She was haunted.  There is an element of the supernatural in this book.  She is haunted by a dark figure; she feels partly responsible for the death of ...

AVELYNN

Avelynn by Marissa Campbell Publication Date: September 8, 2015 St. Martin's Press Formats: eBook, Paperback, Hardcover Pages: 320 ISBN13: 978-1250063939 Genre: Historical Fiction/Romance      One extraordinary Saxon noblewoman and one fearless Viking warrior find passion and danger in this dazzling and sensuous debut. Marissa Campbell's debut novel is a winning combination of romance, history, and adventure sure to appeal to fans of Diana Gabaldon. It is 869. For eighteen years, Avelynn, the beautiful and secretly pagan daughter of the Eadlorman of Somerset has lived in an environment of love and acceptance. She hasn't yet found a man to make her heart race, but her father has not pressured her to get married. Until now. With whispers of war threatening their land, her father forces Avelynn into a betrothal with Demas, a man who only covets her wealth and status. The dreaded marriage looming, she turns to her faith, searching for answers in an ancient ritual along t...

ROMA AMOR: A NOVEL OF CALIGULA's ROME by Sherry Christie

Roma Amor: A Novel of Caligula's Rome by Sherry Christie Publication Date: April 15, 2016 Bexley House Books Paperback; 496 Pages Genre: Historical Fiction      READ EXCERPT .  Marcus Carinna hears a voice whisper, "Your turn," as he rides past his family tomb. An unseen presence also startles the Germanic priestess Aurima, whom he is bringing to Rome. But hardheaded Romans scoff at ghosts, and Marcus can't believe it's a warning from his brother, who killed himself three years earlier. 37 AD: To great acclaim, 25-year-old Caligula Caesar has become Rome's new master. No one is more pleased than Senator Titus Carinna, who helped him succeed to the throne. It's a shame the Senator's older son--Caligula's closest friend--committed suicide after being charged with treason. But that still leaves Marcus, his second son. Headstrong and hot-tempered, Marcus would rather prove his courage by leading legions against Rome's enemies than take his br...

Free $100