Tag Archives: historical fiction

#BookReview ‘Nat Tate: An American Artist 1928-1960’ by William Boyd #historical #art

A fictitious biography of a non-existent artist, this is an entertaining novella which I read in one sitting. Nat Tate: an American Artist 1928-1960 by William Boyd‪ has been on my to-read list forever. William Boyd‪What a stir it caused when it was published in 1998. The New York art world soon realised it had been set-up. The first edition appeared with endorsements from Gore Vidal and David Bowie but with hindsight the clues are there. Logan Mountstuart features as a friend of Tate and regular Boyd readers will recognise the protagonist of Boyd’s novel Any Human Heart published in 2002. So, a piece of mischief.
If you’ve read any art biography, or one of those weighty ‘exhibition books’ that accompany major art shows, the tone of this story will be familiar to you. Lots of references to famous artists, the process, the tortured creativity, the successes and setbacks – shown here by Tate’s reverence for American poet Hart Crane – the mentors, financial backers and agents. But there never was an artist called Nat Tate. The book features Tate’s art and photographs from his life but which originate for Boyd whose satire asks questions about the morals and values of the art world, as topical today as in 1998.
An enjoyable novella, beautifully-written in the style of the ‘art biography,’ a confirmation of Boyd’s flexibility and skill as a writer. A convincing hoax. Something different.

Here are my reviews of other books by William Boyd:-
ANY HUMAN HEART
LOVE IS BLIND
ORDINARY THUNDERSTORMS
SWEET CARESS
THE BLUE AFTERNOON
THE DREAMS OF BETHANY MELLMOTH
TRIO
WAITING FOR SUNRISE

… and try the first paragraph of ARMADILLO.

If you like this, try these:-
How to be Both’ by Ali Smith
The Girl in the Painting’ by Renita d’Silva
Life Class’ by Pat Barker

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview NAT TATE: AN AMERICAN ARTIST 1928-1960 by William Boydhttps://wp.me/p2ZHJe-6tQ via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- Suzanne Collins

#BookReview ‘The Good Death’ by @SD_Sykes #historical #mystery

The Good Death is fifth in the Oswald de Lacy historical mystery series by SD Sykes and it feels like the last. That is only my guess but there is a ‘rounding of the circle’ to the story, answering questions raised in the first novel. I read it quickly, and sort of guessed the mystery but not quite. SD SykesThe story is told in two timelines as Oswald in 1370 sits at the bedside of his mother, who is dying. She clutches to her breast a letter which she will not show him. Instead she demands he tell her the truth of what happened in 1349 when Oswald was an eighteen-year-old novice monk, prior to where Plague Land, first novel in this series, begins. Sent by his mentor in the infirmary, Brother Peter, to gather herbs in the woods, Oswald meets a terrified girl who runs from him into a fast-flowing river where she drowns. Oswald carries her body to the village and discovers that other young girls have disappeared, never seen again, but no one in authority will investigate. Plague is reported in neighbouring villages and everyone wants to stay close to home. Only the beautiful widow Maud Woodstock listens to Oswald’s concerns and, flattered by her attention, he decides to investigate.
Brief passages are spent at Somerhill Manor in 1370 – Oswald’s mother is dying but still manipulative, his wife is bored, a house guest is irritating and his sister is jealous of the time he spends with their mother – but the bulk of the story takes place in 1349. Oswald is forced to remember an incident in his past that he would rather forget, when as a teenager he becomes an enthusiastic investigator. He jumps to conclusions based on prejudice, generalisations and gossip, putting himself in danger, but finding each possible suspect is innocent. As his list of potential murderers gets shorter, the danger to Oswald – from the murder, and also from the approaching plague – increases. But what if the murderer is someone he doesn’t know or doesn’t consider a likely suspect.
This series has got better with every book and if this is the last, it will be a loss. Sykes tells Oswald’s story in a fast-moving engaging way that is rooted in its medieval time of violence, patriarchy, misogyny and forbidden passions.
Excellent.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK

Click the title to read my reviews of the first three books in this series:-
PLAGUE LAND #1 OSWALDDELACY
THE BUTCHER BIRD #2 OSWALDDELACY
CITY OF MASKS #3 OSWALDDELACY
THE BONE FIRE #4 OSWALDDELACY

If you like this, try:-
‘Moonlight and the Pearler’s Daughter’ by Lizzie Pook
‘Wakenhyrst’ by Michelle Paver
‘Heresy’ by SJ Parris

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview THE GOOD DEATH by @SD_Sykes https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-6xU via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- William Boyd‪

#BookReview ‘The Winter Garden’ by @NicolaCornick #historical

A timeslip novel that slips effortlessly between now and 1605, The Winter Garden by Nicola Cornick is an intriguing mixture of the Gunpowder Plot, garden history, archaeology and spookiness. Nicola CornickLucy, recovering from a viral illness that has forced her to give up her career as a professional violinist, is recuperating at Gunpowder Cottage, home of her absent Aunt Verity. Verity has commissioned a garden archaeologist to investigate links to the original house on the land, said to have belonged to Robert Catesby, one of the Gunpowder plotters, and his wife Catherine. Lucy, weak and depressed, is upset to find her bolthole is not as isolated as she expected. But she soon becomes pulled into the mystery of the garden and the story of the Catesbys. When Lucy gets the chills and sees the figure of a woman in a cloak and the outline of a beautiful winter garden full of snow and frost, she’s unsure if she is hallucinating and on medication that doesn’t agree with her. As Finn, the architect, and Johnny his assistant, explain more about their discoveries, Lucy finds herself pulled into the mystery and becomes a researcher of historical documents. More visions, and a dead bouquet left threateningly in her kitchen, add to the tension.
In both time narratives there is personal grief, loss and the togetherness of family and friends. Lucy is in limbo, emotional and full of indecision. Just like Catherine Catesby. Following the clues, Lucy regains her emotional strength as she asks difficult questions, faces opposition and rediscovers her bravery.
In 1605, Anne Catesby must pick up the pieces after the sudden deaths of her husband William, daughter-in-law Catherine and eldest grandson William. Her grieving son Robert, always a flighty, strong-willed boy, leaves his youngest son Robbie with his mother and disappears to London. Anne, already short of money because of fines imposed on Catholic families such as the Catesbys by King James I, struggles to live from day to day. And in the background is Anne’s brooding brother-in-law Thomas Tresham, Robert’s godfather, who is involved in the mysterious Order of the Knights Hospitallers of St John of Jerusalem. There are hints of lost treasure, which may, or may not, be buried in the garden.
I found the clues at times sketchy and unrealistic and the names of the various houses and estates added to this confusion, though Cornick is constrained at times by historical fact.
An unusual story which kept me returning to the book to read more. There’s a particularly strong cast of supporting characters including Lucy’s sister Cleo, Finn the architect with his dog Geoffrey, and brooding siblings Gabriel and Persis. The two timelines melt into each other as the mystery progresses and I didn’t, as is often the case with dual narrative novels, prefer one story to the other. Cornick is a wonderful novelist who tells a good fictional story built on strong historical foundations and doesn’t allow her historical knowledge to bully its way into the reader’s mind.

Read my reviews of these other novels by Nicola Cornick:-
THE FORGOTTEN SISTER
THE LAST DAUGHTER
THE OTHER GWYN GIRL

If you like this, try:-
‘Plague Land’ by SD Sykes #1OswalddeLacy
‘The Lady of the Ravens’ by Joanna Hickson #1QueensoftheTower
‘The French Lesson’ by Hallie Rubenhold

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview THE WINTER GARDEN by @NicolaCornick https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-6w1 via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- Patricia M Osborne

#BookReview ‘A Dangerous Business’ by Jane Smiley #historical #mystery

Gold Rush California 1851. In Monterey, young women are going missing. Assumed to be whores, the authorities take no notice. So two prostitutes Eliza and Jean decide to investigate the disappearances. The principal suspects are their clients. A Dangerous Business by Jane Smiley is a book I didn’t want to put down, not in the way a thriller makes you want to read one more page but with a curiosity about Eliza’s prospects. Jane SmileyInspired by Edgar Allen Poe’s fictional detective Dupin – which Jean insists is pronounced ‘DuPANN’ – they begin to look for clues, looking at their surroundings more cautiously than ever before. Eliza re-reads Poe, ‘What struck her the most about Dupin was that he could look at all sorts of injury and destruction and still keep thinking in what you might call a cold and logical way.’ At times they investigate more by instinct than clue, but Smiley keeps us interested in Eliza. She is the heart of the book. She tells the story as she seeks clues in between doing business with her clients.
Life in Monterey is free and wild. People come and go without notice, ships arrive and leave, ranchers build houses in wild country, which means plenty of customers for Eliza at Mrs Parks’ establishment. The two women are unsure how many other girls are presumed to have left town but are really dead. After they find a body hidden beneath bushes, Eliza suspects everyone. The friends explore remote tracks up the hillsides on rented horses and this experience is to prove useful.
Both women are taking in a pause in their lives, rootless, with no reason to return home, they are earning a living while deciding what to do next and where to go. Eliza swings between finding the occasional client attractive and then wondering if he is the murderer. Jean, who works in a brothel for the female trade, occasionally dresses as a man and passes convincingly on the street in her disguise. She toys with the idea of a life on the stage in San Francisco. Smiley is an expert at building character layer on layer. She is also good at letting the girls’ imaginations run wild though this is not a crime story with threat and danger around every corner.
More a historical mystery than a crime novel, A Dangerous Business is a different subject for Smiley. But at the heart of the novel are her observations of women’s lives, the experience of women on the edge of civilization in Gold Rush California and what it means to be a woman alone at this time.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK AT AMAZON

Click the title below to read my reviews of other novels by Jane Smiley:-
A THOUSAND ACRES
SOME LUCK [LAST HUNDRED YEARS #1]
EARLY WARNING [LAST HUNDRED YEARS #2]
GOLDEN AGE  [LAST HUNDRED YEARS #3]

If you like this, try:-
Frog Music’ by Emma Donoghue
The Dance Tree’ by Karen Millwood Hargrave
‘At The Edge of The Orchard’ by Tracy Chevalier

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview A DANGEROUS BUSINESS by Jane Smiley https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-6sa via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- Rory Clements

#BookReview ‘The Elopement’ by @AuthorTracyRees #historical

When society beauty Rowena Blythe elopes with an unsuitable artist’s assistant, the repercussions ripple throughout the household and the local community. The Elopement, like other novels by Tracy Rees, is packed with social comment. She shows that while society in 1897 was lived under strict class differences, people were more similar than they realised. Tracy ReesRees tells the story of three women who live in close proximity to each other in Highgate, North London. Housemaid Pansy Tilney works six days a week at Garrowgate Hall, home to the Blythe family and run with a rod of iron by the mistress, Maud Blythe. Rowena, the only daughter of the house, is intended for a suitable marriage if only Maud can find a suitable husband that Rowena will deem to accept. Rowena and her best friend Verity love nothing more than to gossip, especially about those they see as unfashionable, plain, weak or boring. One of their targets is single mother Olive Westfallan. The Westfallen family lives at the opposite side of Hampstead Heath to the Blythes. There is history between the two families as the patriarchs – Rowena and Olive’s fathers – fell out long ago. Olive, who is as rich if not richer than Rowena, pays no notice to gossip about her unusual circumstances. As a single unmarried woman, she adopted a daughter Clover and gave home to a ward, Angeline. She is a working mother, as head of her own charitable foundation she helps less fortunate people take a step up in life, through education, employment or financial aid. There are not two people more different than Rowena and Olive.
Rees brings the three women together in the most unusual of circumstances. Each is facing a life-changing decision and each is prevaricating. Rowena must choose a husband. Pansy must leave Garrowgate Hall and find new employment as the man she loves holds a secret unfulfilled passion for Rowena. Olive must consider whether to accept a marriage proposal from a man she likes, perhaps loves, but isn’t sure if she loves him enough or whether his attitude to life fits hers. These are dilemmas of the time, England on the cusp of the twentieth-century saw the cause of women evolving rapidly. Rees presents opportunities to her three characters, each must be brave in making their decision.
A novel about the solidarity, and also bitchiness, of women. Not all are as they seem. Some get what they want, others don’t know what they want. As the constraints of society’s expectations are loosened, new chances become available, to rich and poor alike. Rowena, who had it all, falls in love with an unsuitable man – an artist, foreign and poor ­– and pays the price for her impetuous decision.
I’ve loved every Tracy Rees novel I’ve read so far. The Elopement didn’t disappoint. It is in fact a sequel to Rees’s The Rose Garden [see below for a link to my review] but it isn’t necessary to read the first to enjoy The Elopement. Each woman must find a way to break free of the limitations of their sex and find a brighter future. So much more than a historical romance.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK

Click the title below to read my reviews of other novels by Tracy Rees:-
AMY SNOW
DARLING BLUE
THE HOUSE AT SILVERMOOR
THE ROSE GARDEN

If you like this, try:-
After Leaving Mr Mackenzie’ by Jean Rhys
The Walworth Beauty’ by Michèle Roberts
The Ninth Child’ by Sally Magnusson

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
THE ELOPEMENT by @AuthorTracyRees #bookreview https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-6p9 via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- William Trevor

#BookReview ‘The Cottingley Secret’ by Hazel Gaynor @HazelGaynor #historical #fairies

I won a signed paperback of The Cottingley Secret by Hazel Gaynor in a Twitter promotion on #NationalNorthernWritersDay and it’s been sitting on my to-read shelf for a while. I picked it up one weekend when searching for a comforting, absorbing read, and that’s what it is. Hazel GaynorTold in dual timeline, it is partly based on the true story of the two young girls who photographed fairies at the bottom of their garden, combined with a fictional imagining of a 21st century bookbinder who inherits a bookshop in Ireland. The story is slow to start and it’s a while before the fairy connection between the two strands is established. But hang in there.
In 1917, Frances Griffiths and her mother travel from South Africa to Cottingley, Yorkshire. They will stay with Frances’ aunt, uncle and cousin while her father goes off to fight the Great War. Frances soon settles into life with her older cousin Elsie and together the two play imaginary games. Until one day Frances sees fairies beside the beck at the back of the house, ‘…the first flash of emerald, then another of blue, then yellow, glimpsed out of the corner of my eye. Not dragonflies. Not butterflies. Something else.” After confiding in Elsie, Frances blurts out her secret to her mother who doesn’t believe her. None of the adults do. What follows is an innocent attempt to prove the adults wrong, an attempt which spirals out of control. Soon Mr Arthur Conan Doyle, creator of Sherlock Holmes, is involved and the possibility of confessing their secret becomes impossible.
In present day Ireland, Olivia Kavanagh arrives in her hometown of Howth on a sad journey. Her grandfather Pappy has died. Olivia feels helpless as she visits grandmother Nana, who suffers from dementia and lives in a local nursing home. But Pappy has left a letter and a surprise for Olivia. He has left her his secondhand bookshop, Something Old, and Bluebell Cottage. But Olivia lives and works in London as a rare book restorer and is due to marry fiancé Jack in a few weeks.
This is a novel about the need for hope at a time of upheaval and uncertainty, both in the midst of war in 1917 and for Olivia in the 21st century. ‘If we believe in fairies, perhaps we can believe in anything,’ says Frances’ mother. If they can believe in the end of the war, they can believe in the return of loved ones and the resumption of normal life.
As a childhood lover of Cicely Mary Barker’s Flower Fairies, I found this novel to be a wonderful read. Gaynor knits together the wonder of the fairies with the darker themes of world war, and the modern challenges facing Olivia who is lost but doesn’t know it.

Read my reviews of these other novels by Hazel Gaynor:-
THE BIRD IN THE BAMBOO CAGE
THE LAST LIFEBOAT … and try the #FirstPara of THE LAST LIFEBOAT.

If you like this, try:-
The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock’ by Imogen Hermes Gowar
The Good People’ by Hannah Kent
The Ninth Child’ by Sally Magnusson

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview THE COTTINGLEY SECRET by Hazel Gaynor @HazelGaynor https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-6nz via @SandraDanby

#BookReview ‘A Daughter’s Courage’ by Renita D’Silva @RenitaDSilva #historical #India

A Daughter’s Courage by Renita D’Silva is the story of four girls, in India and England, separated by a hundred years. D’Silva explores how actions have consequences not only instant but generations later, not just for the person concerned but also for people unknown. What happens to Lucy and Gowri in the 1920s impacts on the contemporary lives of Kavya and Sue, one newly-widowed and feeling adrift, the other a failed Bollywood actress. Renita D'SilvaTwo girls at the beginning of the twentieth century. One rich one poor, a continent apart and in circumstances so remote from each other. Both are trapped by their circumstances. Both are mavericks who want more than their parents plan, dreaming of a life different from the one that society expects.
Gowri is the older daughter of a poor tenant farmer in India in 1924. She loves school and plans to be a teacher. But her only brother is ill and when an amazing opportunity presents itself, her parents choose her brother’s life and in exchange Gowri becomes a devadasi, a woman dedicated for life to a local temple and the goddess Yellamma. Her hopes and dreams are nothing.
In England in 1927, Lucy flirts at parties but longs to travel with her best friend. But when Ann falls in love and marries, Lucy’s dreams are abandoned. Lucy, who ‘doesn’t want to tread the path chalked out for her. She doesn’t want to follow the crowd,’ seeks a different kind of adventure. When things go wrong, Lucy marries a stranger and travels to his coffee plantation in India. With her husband James polite but cold, she obsesses over the mistakes she has made. The lives of Lucy and Gowri change forever when they are brought together as a tiger roams the woodlands.
What a fascinating read this is. A trifle slow to get going, and occasionally repetitive, I soon didn’t want to put it down. I was intrigued more by the daily lives of Gowri and Lucy and their dilemmas, than the contemporary women, but what kept me reading was the puzzle of how all four women are connected. As Kavya discovers previously-hidden letters and Lucy finds startling photographs of India, a news story hits the headlines in India. A long-forgotten temple has been discovered by a rampaging elephant, its history and ownership are in doubt.
A beautiful story of heartbreak and family, set in the fragrant and beautiful landscape of India where abuse and exploitation can be hidden in plain view.

Read my reviews of these other novels by Renita D’Silva:-
A MOTHER’S SECRET
BENEATH AN INDIAN SKY
THE GIRL IN THE PAINTING
THE ORPHAN’S GIFT
THE SECRET KEEPER
THE SPICE MAKER’S SECRET
THE WAR CHILD

If you like this, try:-
Devotion’ by Hannah Kent
Pigeon Pie’ by Nancy Mitford
Things Bright and Beautiful’ by Anbara Salam

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview A DAUGHTER’S COURAGE by Renita D’Silva  @RenitaDSilva https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-6jB via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- Joanna Trollope

#BookReview ‘Molly & the Captain’ by Anthony Quinn #historical #art

Three timelines, three studies of artist families. Molly & the Captain by Anthony Quinn is the story of one painting via three families across three centuries. It starts in Georgian Bath with the artist William Merrymount and his two daughters. His portrait of the two girls, ‘Molly & the Captain,’ intrigues through the centuries and ends up in North London in the current time. Anthony QuinnEach of the three parts stands alone, the connections revealing themselves in the final pages. In 1758, Merrymount is a renowned artist. His elder daughter Laura is a promising student and it is she who tells the family’s story through letters to her cousin. When her emotionally brittle sister Molly falls in love with the man Laura had thought to marry, their lives change. Things are not as they appear, secrets are well-hidden even within their household and Laura discovers facts she perhaps would prefer to remain unknown.
In 1889, artist Paul Stransom makes a living painting pictures of his local area, preferring to paint landscapes in parks rather than portraits. Tempted to venture abroad, perhaps to Normandy where colleagues are having success, his plans change when in Kensington Gardens he sees a mother and two young daughters, all dressed in white. When he approaches them, they disappear. Meanwhile his sister Maggie is faced with choosing to marry a man with the means to support her, or the poor man she loves.
In modern-day North London, artist Nell is preparing for an exhibition, a retrospective of her work which should bring long-overdue recognition. Her actress daughter Billie meets a young musician who she is to work with in a film. Horrified by the squat where Robbie lives, Billie suggests her mother take him into her house to replace the lodgers currently moving out of her loft. The consequences impact on all their lives.
This is a book about families, love and loyalty, about how creativity impinges on the privacy of family members and how the conflicts of success are just as difficult to deal with now as in Georgian times. Life – romance, loyalty, self-sacrifice, betrayal, opportunities, failure – always seem to get in the way.
It took me longer to read than I expected although it is not a particularly long book. The pace is slow, Quinn takes times to describe his settings with characteristic care of detail. Essentially this is a gentle mystery, a question runs throughout the three sections: what happened to the painting ‘Molly & the Captain’?
The ending has a wonderful, but gentle, twist. A thoughtful read and one I expect to gain more from on re-reading.

Read my reviews of these other novels also by Anthony Quinn:-
CURTAIN CALL
FREYA
HALF OF THE HUMAN RACE
OUR FRIENDS IN BERLIN
THE RESCUE MAN
THE STREETS

If you like this, try:-
‘The Doll Factory’ by Elizabeth Macneal
The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock’ by Imogen Hermes Gowar
The Ballroom’ by Anna Hope

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview MOLLY & THE CAPTAIN by Anthony Quinn https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-6if via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- Renita D'Silva

#BookReview ‘The Whereabouts of Eneas McNulty’ by Sebastian Barry #historical

Written in 1998, The Whereabouts of Eneas McNulty is the earliest of the books by Irish writer Sebastian Barry I’ve read so far. I came to him with A Long Long Way, shortlisted for the 2005 Booker Prize. What I didn’t realise until recently is that many of his novels are connected by their characters, all related distantly to each other. Sebastian BarryThe Whereabouts of Eneas McNulty is the sad story of a dislocated young man forced to leave Sligo, threatened with murder, blacklisted because he worked as a police officer for the Royal Irish Constabulary. When Irish independence occurs at around 100 pages, Eneas realises that following the murders he witnessed, murders by Irishmen of Irishmen in the cause of this independence, he must be either an outcast or a wanderer. And wherever he goes, he must go alone without the girl he loves. Viv, the enigmatic, beautiful, carefree girl he met on the beach.
Eneas is a simple man who makes his own way in life, looking for support from no one, but naïve in the decisions he takes and friends he makes. His banishment is symbolic of the ferocious Irish political turmoil of the early 20th century. Periodically he tries to return to his family – his parents, two brothers and sister – hoping time has healed the political separations but finding his name is still on a kill list. So he drifts, finding for work, not proud, turning his hand to what is available. “And he thinks back a little over his life and where he was born and he wonders did he make such a hames and a hash of it after all? Didn’t he just live the life given him and no more side to him than a field-mouse as God’s plough bears down to crush his nest?”
The timeline stutters through events in Eneas’ life, taking a long time over small passages of time but flashing through momentous landmarks. Wars start and end. Decades pass with barely a mention. But the language is a delight.
Eneas, an innocent in the world of early 20th century Irish politics, is afraid. There is ‘no aspirin for his fear.’ The novel is suffused in Irish history with mentions of Irish warrior hero Cú Chulainn and local Sligo landmarks such as Maeve’s Cairn at the peak of Knocknarea.
This is a novel to be read slowly and absorbed. Race through it and you will miss its beauty.

Read my reviews of these other novels by Sebastian Barry:-
A LONG LONG WAY
DAYS WITHOUT END #1DAYSWITHOUTEND
A THOUSAND MOONS #2DAYSWITHOUTEND
OLD GOD’S TIME

If you like this, try:-
The Irish Inheritance’ by MJ Lee
Love is Blind’ by William Boyd
The Heart’s Invisible Furies’ by John Boyne

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview THE WHEREABOUTS OF ENEAS MCNULTY by Sebastian Barry https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-6aU via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- Anthony Quinn

#BookReview ‘The Queen’s Lady’ by Joanna Hickson @joannahickson #historicalfiction

The Queen’s Lady by Joanna Hickson is a delightful read about a key woman behind the scenes of the Tudor crown, trusted and loved by two queens. Second in the ‘Queens of the Tower’ series, it follows Lady Joan Guildford nee Vaux who we first met in The Lady of the Ravens. Joan is now lady-in-waiting to Queen Elizabeth, wife of Henry VII and mother of Prince Arthur and Prince Henry. Joanna HicksonIt is 1502 and the story starts as Arthur, Prince of Wales, marries Princess Katherine of Aragon. There are worries for Arthur’s health and when a messenger knocks on the door late one night, he brings a request that ‘Mother Guildford’ should rush to the side of the Queen. Loyalties change overnight and friendships disappear. The storyline of the Tudors is well-known but this book shows the history from the point of view of courtiers, the way the court worked and the fragility of such positions in the gift of the king. After Arthur’s death, followed quickly by that of his queen, Henry VII becomes insular and paranoid, he listens to new advisors and fears those closest to him are treacherous. Joan’s husband Richard is accused of fraud and, despite Joan’s history as governess to countless princes and princesses, the family lose their position at court.
When reading some historical novels, I find myself questioning the history and noticing the heavy use of historical fact. Hickson’s writing is a delight, she conjures the period with a light touch. Joan is present at a series of critical events of the period – the meeting with the French king at the Field of the Cloth of Gold, the coronation of Henry VIII and marriage to Katherine of Aragon, Princess Mary’s journey to Scotland and marriage to King James, and the journey to France with Princess Margaret to marry Louis XII.
There is romance, hardship, fear, grief and new love. The ravens are still there but are not central to this story, as they were the first. It’s not clear if this is simply the sequel to the first Joan Vaux book, or whether Hickson will continue with a third.
Joan Guildford died in 1538 at the age of 75, eighteen years after the ending of this novel. So plenty more years for Hickson to imagine the life of this fascinating woman.
Don’t miss it.

Here’s my review of the first in this series, THE LADY OF THE RAVENS #1QUEENSOFTHETOWER
And another book by Joanna Hickson:-
THE HOUSE OF SEYMOUR

If you like this, try:-
Winter Pilgrims’ by Toby Clements
The Forgotten Sister’ by Nicola Cornick
Cecily’ by Annie Garthwaite

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview THE QUEEN’S LADY by Joanna Hickson @joannahickson https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-63w via @SandraDanby