Category Archives: History Behind the Books

The Inspiration for Mistress of the Wind

I’ve always loved fairy tales and when I was at university, doing research for a history paper on the witch hunts of the 17th Century, I came across a really interesting (but totally unrelated :)) journal full of articles on the meanings of fairy tales. It was fantastic, and mind-blowing.

I suddenly saw the subversion in the tales. Even with the whitewashing that went on in the Victorian era to make fairy tales moral tales and warnings, especially to girls, to be good, and obedient and incurious, I realized one could read a subtext to the tale.

I then went on to read books on the interpretation of fairy tales by Jungian psychologist Marie-Louise Van Franz and others, and books like Clarissa Estes’s Women Who Run With the Wolves, and I found an even deeper love for the tales. Or rather, I finally understood why I loved them so much. I think I’d subconsciously understood the deeper layers, but now I could trace those layers better.

I started thinking about writing a book based on one of my favorite fairy tales, East of the Sun, West of the Moon, and ended up weaving some other myths through the tale, to have the story that is Mistress of the Wind. But I really enjoyed the fact that at its heart, I’ve kept it as a story on a number of levels, just like the original.

It can be about a woman who meets an enchanted prince, falls in love with him and then, when a combination of the circumstances of his enchantment and her actions cause him to be taken from her, she goes on a long search to find and rescue him, getting help from people along the way. Or it could be about a woman coming into her power, and mastering the facets of her personality and understanding her faults and her strengths so that she is able to take on anything that is thrown at her with a clear idea of her worth, and it could be both those things at once. And I don’t push the second interpretation on the reader. Some readers have ‘got’ it straight away, and I totally, totally love that.

The challenge with Mistress of the Wind, given I wanted to remain true to the original fairy tale, was to give Astrid a good reason to go against Bjorn’s request to see him as a man, which is the catalyst for her having to go on her quest.

The consequences of her doing so are huge, to both her and Bjorn, and I really had to create a compelling situation for her to act against his wishes. If she doesn’t do it, however, the story is over, they win and everyone lives happily ever after.

Unfortunately for them, they have to work a little harder for their happy ending than that.

I used a number of motivations.

The first was genuine curiosity. Astrid wants to see Bjorn as a man. Of course she does. He is her lover and which of us wouldn’t want to know what the person we love looks like? Her mother’s fear of what he is also spurs that. She wants to be able to reassure her mother that the man she has chosen is not a monster.

Bjorn himself has some responsibility. He could have taken Astrid to his palace and left her alone. But by involving her, drawing her into the complexities of the curse and forming the strong bond that he does with her, he blunts the importance of her never seeing him as a man to her. Of course, the loneliness and waste it would be to not spend time together would be acute, which is why he does as he does, but it is one of those damned if you do, damned if you don’t things.

Astrid’s personality plays a roles as well. She knows she is worthy of respect, if not love, just for being who she is, and so she has fought against her father’s attempts to beat her down and break her. That makes it extremely hard for her to accept some of the conditions that are set on her behaviour by her lover.

While she fights against the literal, and figurative, burying of her personality and her need to be free, by her imprisonment in the heart of a mountain, she tries to accommodate his need for her to never see him as a man, to stay inside, to stay in the dark, but it is eating away at her.

Even though Bjorn, her lover, tells her that the conditions of his enchantment are the only things making him hold her back, she sees what he cannot, that his enchanter is merely delaying the end. That the evil queen has no intention of letting him win, and if he does, she will have nothing to lose by reneging on their agreement.

Astrid only breaks the enchantment conditions out of concern for his life – what do the rules mean if he is dead, after all? – but she has also seen it for the slow death it is. She is proactive, and she wants to do. To fight rather than wait at someone else’s pleasure, for something she is sure will not be granted, no matter if she and Bjorn follow the conditions or not. The consequences of that act drive the second part of the book, where Astrid has to confront her faults and her power, and decide how to control them.

Writing Mistress of the Wind was both a joy and a challenge, and I hope you enjoy it as much as I enjoyed writing it.

Virtual Book Tour for Daughter of the Sky

Daughter of the Sky Tour Banner FINALI’m so excited to announce that my virtual book tour for Daughter of the Sky is now confirmed. Please join me as I visit the reviews sites below, or read what they thought of Daughter of the Sky. I’ll be doing a few interviews and guest posts, and there will be giveaways. I look forward to seeing you in cyberspace!

VIRTUAL BOOK TOUR SCHEDULE

Monday, April 8
Review at Reflections of a Book Addict
Review at The Adventures of an Intrepid Reader

Tuesday, April 9
Review at The Reading Reviewer
Review, Interview & Giveaway at Oh, for the Hook of a Book!

Thursday, April 11
Guest Post at The Reading Reviewer
Feature & Giveaway at Passages to the Past

Friday, April 12
Review at CelticLady’s Reviews
Guest Post at A Bookish Libraria

Monday, April 15
Review at Bitches with Books

Tuesday, April 16
Review at Turning the Pages
Review & Giveaway at Broken Teepee

Thursday, April 18
Review at A Bookish Affair

Friday, April 19
Review & Giveaway at Unabridged Chick
Guest Post & Giveaway at A Bookish Affair

History Behind The Emperor’s Conspiracy

The plot around which The Emperor’s Conspiracy is set is true. Napoleon did try to cause an economic collapse in England by smuggling out all of its gold. There are several letters by him to his brother and his officials, outlining the plan, and the French port of Gravelines did exist—a small town set up by the French for accepting the smuggled guineas.

For those readers interested in learning more about the economics of Napoleon’s plan you can read Eli F. Heckscher’s The Continental System: An Economic Interpretation, which was published in 1918.

For more details on the actual smuggling, and information on Gravelines, and where and how many smugglers hid the guineas, letters, and newspapers they were smuggling across to France, I found a lot of useful information in The Historical Journal 50, 2 (2007) article “Napoleon and the ‘City of Smugglers,’ 1810–1814” by Gavin Daly.

In this book, I take the reader both to the dangerous back streets and rookeries of London and to the glittering balls of the ton. To learn more about the darker side of Regency London, I highly recommend The Regency Underworld by Donald A. Low. For me, the stark contrast between the stews and the elegant streets of Mayfair is too interesting to pass up, and I enjoyed melding the two worlds together in the character of Charlotte Raven.

History Behind Dangerous Sanctuary

St. Paul’s Cathedral dominates London’s skyline today with its massive dome, but in 1525 it looked very different (see image here). Its spire was one of the highest in Europe.

Because much of the roof was made of wood, the cathedral burned down during the fire of London in 1666, after which plans were drawn up for the cathedral as we know it today.

When I was researching In a Treacherous Court — the first book in my series featuring Susanna Horenbout and John Parker — I learned about the ceremony Henry VIII arranged after the death of Richard de la Pole and the capture of King Francis I of France in battle at Pavia. The story of In a Treacherous Court ends before the ceremony, and the action starts again in Keeper of the King’s Secrets afterward. So choosing the St. Paul’s celebration was perfect for a short story that bridges the two books.

Geoffrey Pole is the sympathetic villain of the story, and I chose him because he seemed to be a man who was very emotional, even unstable. When his brother Reginald verbally attacked Henry VIII for seeking to divorce Katherine of Aragon, and Henry reacted by lashing out at the Pole family, it was Geoffrey who was questioned in the Tower of London, and asked to give information on his family that would help to convict them. During this time, in October and November 1538, Geoffrey seemed to teeter on the verge of mental collapse, and the testimony that was either forced or coerced from him convicted and led to the execution of most of his family. He was the only one released, and seems to have lived the rest of his life a broken man.

When thinking of someone who would be rash enough and hot-headed enough to want to strike out at the King over the celebration of Richard de la Pole’s death, Geoffrey Pole sprang readily to mind.

For those interested in hearing a version of the Te Deum, which is sung by the choir in this story (and was really sung at the Mass Henry attended in St. Paul’s Cathedral to celebrate the death of de la Pole and the capture of Francis I at Pavia) you can click on this link The recording is seven minutes long.

History Behind Keeper of the King’s Secrets

The second book in my Tudor-set series is KEEPER OF THE KING’S SECRETS (1st Edition released on April 3rd, 2012 | 2nd Edition released 12 June 2023). In Keeper, Susanna Horenbout and her betrothed, John Parker, have to find the famous jewel known as the Mirror of Naples before anyone else, or England might just go to war with France. When I was researching the first book in the series, IN A TREACHEROUS COURT, I stumbled across mention of the Mirror of Naples, and was so intrigued by it I decided it just had to be part of KEEPER OF THE KING’S SECRETS.

The jewel is described as being as large as a full-sized finger with a large pear-shaped pearl hanging from it. It was worth the equivalent of £4,500,000.

Henry VIII’s sister Mary was given the jewel as part of the French Crown Jewels when she became Queen of France.

When her husband Louis died, she was sequestered in a nunnery for a few months so everyone could be sure she was not pregnant with the king’s child. Henry sent his best friend, Charles Brandon, to fetch her back to England when it was clear she wasn’t expecting the next King of France. But here’s the twist. When she agreed to marry Louis, who was years older than her, she asked Henry to promise that once she was widowed, she could choose her own husband, that he wouldn’t use her as a political pawn again.

Henry promised.

Mary had always had her eye on Charles Brandon. She’d been in love with him for a long time. And she didn’t quite believe her brother would keep his word. So when Brandon arrived at the French nunnery to fetch her, she talked him into marrying her.

As she suspected, Henry had had other plans for his little sister, and they didn’t include his best friend, even though he loved Brandon as a brother. The nobles weren’t happy either. With Henry’s children not exactly thick on the ground, they felt Brandon had stolen a valuable State asset by marrying Mary, and they demanded he be beheaded for treason.

Mary hadn’t returned the Mirror of Naples to Francis I, the new king of France, and she handed it over to Henry instead, as a peace offering. Henry was mollified by the sparkly gift, made all the sweeter by being French property, which he knew would drive Francis I mad, and all was (mostly) forgiven.

I’ve always thought well of Mary for thumbing her nose at two of the most powerful men on the planet, both who saw her as a political pawn.

The history I’ve given above of how the Mirror of Naples came to be in Henry’s possession all happened a good few years before KEEPER OF THE KING’S SECRETS is set. My angle on the story was I wondered what would the French do in a situation like this? What if someone powerful in Henry’s court had a good reason to work with the French to get the Mirror of Naples back to them, and what if someone else really powerful caught wind of the secret deal, and thought to use it to get rid of a rival?

The answers to those questions are in KEEPER OF THE KING’S SECRETS 🙂 . I loved writing it, and especially loved my French bad boy, Jean, who is a nasty piece of work, but you can’t help remembering the Mirror of Naples is theirs. They’re just trying to get it back.

History Behind In a Treacherous Court

Throughout history there have been many women who have made an impact on the world around them, but unless you dig, quite often mainstream history does not mention them. When I came across a reference to a Flemish artist, Susanna Horenbout, daughter of one of the most eminent and talented illuminators and painters of his day, Gerard Horenbout, and how she was sent to the court of Henry VIII, most likely to work as a court painter, I was intrigued. The more I discovered, the more intrigued I became, and I ended up writing a historical fiction series with Susanna as the main character.

In order to learn about the training Susanna would have had, I read books on the art of illumination and painting in the Renaissance; how it was done, and what tools and paints were used. And one of the things I discovered was that the Ghent School of Illumination–the style of illumination Susanna would have learnt, was a very literal school. They tried to render images exactly as they would look in real life, with no creative license or artistic impressions. But not only were they painstakingly accurate in their images, they also liked to inject some whimsy into their work. Cats would walk across the writing on page, people would play jokes on each other in the painting.

I loved that. And I used it in shaping who Susanna was as a person. She is sharp-eyed and direct, just like the style she trained in, but there is a playfulness about her in her work and in herself. But of course, that isn’t all there is to it. Because Susanna is a woman, working in a field almost entirely dominated by men, and her employers are almost all men. There is no question things would have been hard for her, in making her way both professionally and socially.

I used that in how I shaped her character, too. She is used to being insulted, and she bears it well, but it wears her down. She also has no expectations for a normal life. She can’t live without her art, and she understands she will have to make personal sacrifices because of that, because she could never be a conventional wife.

As it happens, Susanna did find happiness, despite the various problems she faced, and I loved that I could write a strong love story through the series with her and Parker, one of Henry VIII’s courtiers, and still be completely true to events. Her marriage to John Parker is how art historians realised she came to England before the rest of her family, because it precedes their arrival.

IN A TREACHEROUS COURT is my fictional version of why Susanna was sent ahead of her brother, what happened to her, and how she met and became involved with John Parker. And while I may land her in extremely hot water, and plunge her deep in the pool of international intrigue, where I can, and far more often than even I thought possible, much of my plot is based on fact. For me, the saddest thing is that aside from a brass plaque found in All Saint’s Church in Fulham, London, which is most likely Susanna’s work, nothing else of what she worked on has survived. The tragedy is that although Albrecht Dürer praised her work highly when she was only eighteen, and on her death several Italian master painters eulogized her as an exceptional illuminator, none of her paintings and illuminations remain.

RULES OF BEHAVIOUR

I couldn’t use the language of the time in IN A TREACHEROUS COURT (it would be like reading a book in pre-Shakespearean English), but I wanted to set the scene, give readers a taste of the cadence and poetry of the speech of the time and some context to the rules and mores of behaviour under which my characters would have lived. My solution was to use quotes from THE COURTIER, an Italian book on courtly manners written by Count Baldessar Castillo around the time IN A TREACHEROUS COURT is set, which was translated into English by Sir Thomas Hoby a number of years later. The book is in four parts, and the first part is really the ‘quick guide’ or cheat sheet for the rest of the book, containing the main dos and don’ts on how to behave at court. It was great fun choosing a rule for a courtier and a rule for a lady in waiting for the start of each chapter.

As I mention above, Susanna Horenbout was trained as an artist and illuminator in her father’s studio in Ghent (in modern day Belgium), and art historians are sure she was sent over to Henry’s court ahead of her father and brother. John Parker, the other main protagonist, was one of Henry VIII’s ‘new men’, courtiers who were not noblemen, but in the meritocracy Henry was trying to establish, loyalty, and usefulness, could definitely overcome a lack of blue blood. They are both outsiders, but talented enough, and intelligent enough, to find a place for themselves in the world they find themselves in.

The Count Castillo’s advice on the fitting and proper behaviour for those who wanted to advance at court just worked so well. Where I could, I tried to match up the quotes (sometimes tongue-in-cheek) to what was happening in the scenes of that chapter. Some of my favourites include:

The Chiefe Conditions And Qualities In A Courtier: Not to be a babbler, brauler, or chatter, nor lavish of his tunge.

Of The Chief Conditions And Qualityes In A Waytyng Gentylwoman: To shape him that is oversaucie wyth her, or that hath small respecte in hys talke, suche an answere, that he maye well understande she is offended wyth hym. (LOVE this one! :))

The Chiefe Conditions And Qualities In A Courtier: To be handesome and clenly in his apparaile.

Of The Chief Conditions And Qualityes In A Waytyng Gentylwoman: To be heedefull and remembre that men may with lesse jeopardy show to be in love, then women.

The Chiefe Conditions And Qualities In A Courtier: His love towarde women, not to be sensuall or fleshlie, but honest and godly, and more ruled with reason, then appetyte: and to love better the beawtye of the minde, then of the bodie.

Of The Chief Conditions And Qualityes In A Waytyng Gentylwoman: Not to be lyghte of creditt that she is beloved, thoughe a man commune familierlye with her of love.

As you can tell, the Count Castillo had some great advice for the men and women of court.

Adventures in Europe

Blue Mosque IstanbulI’m back from a really amazing trip to Europe and if you’d like to see what I’ve been up to, as well as put yourself in the draw for some holiday goodies I picked up, along with a $10 amazon gift voucher, hop on over to my latest post at Magical Musings. The giveaway ends on Friday, January 18th.

I visited the Isle of Man, London, the Lake District, Scotland, London again, and then Istanbul. It was a fabulous journey and I was able to get some great photos and research in while I was at it.

Visit to Ellenbrook Library, Saturday October 13th

I’m going to be visiting Ellenbrook Library this coming Saturday, and giving a very informal, friendly chat about my books, what inspired me to write them, and answering any questions readers and budding authors may have. There is also an advance reading copy of my latest novel, due for release on November 27th, to be won. If you live in Perth, Western Australia and can make it there, I look forward to seeing you. For more information, and how to attend, please see the Ellenbrook Library event page on their website.

Keeper of the King’s Secrets: Pre-release giveaway with a LOT of sparkle

I’ve having a huge giveaway on my group blog, Magical Musings, in celebration of the release of Keeper of the King’s Secrets. There are two copies of Keeper of the King’s Secrets up for grabs, as well as some really lovely earrings, so hop on over and comment to be included in the draw. The blog post is open to entries until next Friday, so spread the word.

Talking about Dangerous Sanctuary, a Susanna and Parker short story

I’m over at my group blog, Magical Musings, analyzing the opening scene of Dangerous Sanctuary, a short story set between IN A TREACHEROUS COURT and KEEPER OF THE KING’S SECRETS, which is due to be published by Gallery Books in a couple of months in ebook format. Joining me is YA author Gabi Stevens, and we share the different ways we approached our opening scenes. There is a copy of one of Gabi’s books and one of mine up for grabs to two lucky commenters.