27 March 2026
Historical Fiction Spotlight: Escape of the Grand Duchess, by Susan Appleyard
26 March 2026
Blog Tour Spotlight: The Queen’s Maid: Anne Boleyn in France Series: The Anne Boleyn Chronicles, by Rozsa Gaston
She arrives at the Palace of Tournelles, home of ageing King Louis and his new English wife, Mary Tudor, sister of King Henry VIII. As Anne speaks French, her main role is to serve as translator for Queen Mary.
Anne’s sister Mary is also at the French court, and Anne soon learns that not everyone is pleased about the union between the French king and his young queen.
The king’s cousin-in-law, Louise of Savoy, is desperate for Queen Mary not to fall pregnant, so that her son Francis will ascend the throne.
And with Louise and the English queen pulling Anne in two different directions, it will not be possible to appease everyone.
Can Anne successfully navigate the familial politics at the French royal court? Will she make her mark as one of the queen’s maids?
Or could her divided loyalties prove to be her undoing…?
‘Wonderfully detailed and entirely enjoyable. This is a young Anne in whom I absolutely believe, and who does much to explain the woman she’d become.’ – Sarah Gristwood, author of Game of Queens
24 March 2026
Book Launch Guest Post by Eleanor Swift Hook : The Turncoat’s Revenge (Lord's Learning Book 3)
1628: A savage year for England—a year that sees the nation embroiled in three wars.
Just across the sea, Europe devours itself in a conflagration that started a decade before and is to burn ferociously for two more decades until it becomes a byword for brutality, devastation and death. The Thirty Years War. In terms of proportionate population loss, it would be more destructive than the two orld Wars of the Twentieth Century.
England was drawn into this maelstrom courtesy of the English princess Elizabeth, heir to the throne of England, and her husband the Elector Palatine, who have been at the heart of the conflagration since it began. English outrage at Elizabeth losing both her Bohemian crown and her status as Electress Palatine, brought donations of money and volunteer canon fodder. But even with English support and Elizabeth’s uncle, the King of Denmark, throwing the might of his army on the scales, it isn’t going well.
But in 1628 England is also at war with Spain.
Why?
State policy?
Or hurt feelings?
The Spanish Court snubbed King Charles and his favourite, the Duke of Buckingham, five years before when they travelled to Madrid in disguise, in a quixotic attempt to woo the Spanish Infanta. A slight Buckingham, at least, has not forgotten, and he is a man to bear grudges.
Whatever the motivation, the Spanish king is kin to the Emperor and the two are united in their desire for a Catholic Habsburg hegemony of all Europe. So yes, statecraft might argue that war against the Emperor made war against Spain a sensible choice, and by and large the English were pleased to support this war.
Spain having been the traditional enemy of England since before the Armada and memories of that Elizabethan success and ancestral pride originally fuelled enthusiasm in the breasts of true-born Englishmen! But such success was not to be repeated in this generation. An attempt to capture Cadiz, in a naval expedition organised by the Duke of Buckingham, failed completely with a third of the fleet being lost.
Well, even though King Charles recently married a French Princess and the French have been active allies in the anti-Habsburg Palatinate cause, England is now at war with France!
Yet only a short time ago they had been bosom pals.
Indeed, they had been such close friends that the English king agreed to provide ships to help the French king put down rebellion by his Protestant Huguenot subjects. This caused outrage amongst the English people and a horrified Parliament had objected to the notion of English forces attacking fellow Protestants. In the end it was the ships alone and not their crews which were provided.
It didn’t help Anglo/French relations that Buckingham was suspected of trying to seduce the Queen of France under the nose of her husband whilst on a diplomatic visit, and had been refused permission to return to the country as a result.
Amity with France collapsed altogether when it became clear the French had made a secret treaty with Spain, seemed to be abandoning the Protestant cause in the Empire—and were building their own navy.
So was it state policy or more of Buckingham's slighted pride that sent his man Walter Montague to France as a secret agent, to encourage and foment a Huguenot rebellion, with the promise of English support? Though how such support could be forthcoming was unclear. There was no money for third war. Least of all one with scant benefit to England’s national interests.
In the end, the promised support for a Protestant uprising in La Rochelle came in the form of an expeditionary force commanded by Buckingham personally in the summer of 1627. The intent was to seize the fortress town of Saint-Martin-de-Rรฉ which controlled the approach to La Rochelle, thus opening a sea route to the beleaguered city.
It was another disaster, a fiasco, foundering as badly as the Cadiz debacle—if not more so. The Isle-de-Rรฉ became ‘the Ill Array’ on English lips. Buckingham, already despised for his monopoly farms and the excessive influence he had over the king, carried the full weight of blame for the extent of its failure in the popular mind, and was hated and derided in equal measure.
So now here we are.
It is 1628 and England is embroiled in three wars.
Buckingham is licking his wounds and raising a new fleet against the French, to redeem his honour and win back the love of the nation. But it’s not going to plan. England has had enough of war and more than enough of Buckingham himself. Monopoly farms, military catastrophe and incompetence are not the only charges set against him. Rumours that he poisoned King James have been taken seriously at the highest levels. Twice now, Parliament has tried to impeach Buckingham, and been prevented from doing so by the king dismissing it. This time, though, Parliament is bringing forward a Petition of Right addressing its grievances, and taking aim at the Royal favourite, which it insists must be agreed by the king if he wants to secure ongoing finance for his three wars. And Parliament holds the purse strings.
England in 1628: A stage set for tragedy, onto which our players must stride.
A young mercenary turned privateer, condemned for treason, but driven by an overriding ambition, and a nobleman’s daughter, in the service of the English heir, the exiled Queen of Bohemia, seeking to protect her mistress and herself from the machinations of an overpowerful enemy. Each must play out their part against the blood drenched backdrop of war, politics, intrigue—and murder…
Eleanor Swift Hook
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17 March 2026
Blog Tour Gues Post; Inspiration Behind The ‘Soldier Spy’ Trilogy, by Rosemary Hayes
16 March 2026
Book Launch Spotlight: Achilles's Wife: A Novel of Greek Myth Retelling (Trojan Threads) by Judith Starkston
Unique, fascinating, and restores a long-lost voice to the story the Trojan War." -Margaret George, NYT bestselling author of The Memoirs of Cleopatra
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About the AuthorJudith Starkston writes historical fantasy set in the Bronze Age of the Greeks and Hittites. Her five novels bring women to the fore—whether the Trojan War captive Briseis or a remarkable Hittite queen whom history forgot, even though she ruled over one of the greatest empires of the ancient world. Judith has spent too much time reading about and exploring the remains of the ancient world. She has degrees in classics from the University of California, Santa Cruz and Cornell. She lives in Davis, California with her husband and a rambunctious garden. Find Judith on Facebook, and Instagram @judith_starkston
15 March 2026
Book Launch Guest Post: The Boleyn Curse: An enchanting, historical novel packed with secrets, from Alexandra Walsh
She was the mother of Anne Boleyn, one of the most famous queen consorts in British history. Her elder daughter, Mary, was Henry VIII’s mistress; her son, George, fell from grace alongside his sister. Wife of Thomas Boleyn, sister of Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk, daughter of the Earl of Surrey – Elizabeth Boleyn stood at the centre of Tudor power.
And yet, despite her proximity to one of England’s most notorious dynasties, Elizabeth’s story has vanished. So too has commentary on her role as a mother who witnessed one of the most violent spectacles of the Tudor age: the moment her own brother, Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk, sentenced two of her children to death on behalf of the king.
How would you endure such horror: as a mother, a sister, a human being?
It is cruelty unimaginable and yet Elizabeth Boleyn had no choice but to survive it. This courage in the face of catastrophe lies at the emotional heart of The Boleyn Curse: the strength of a woman forced to bear the unbearable.
Did that strength come from her own mother, the indomitable Elizabeth Tilney? Or was it forged over a lifetime of surviving the turbulent currents of the Tudor court?
Born of formidable women
Elizabeth was born Elizabeth Howard, daughter of Thomas Howard, Earl of Surrey (later 2nd Duke of Norfolk), and his first wife, Elizabeth Tilney.
Tilney herself was remarkable: twice married, widowed in the Wars of the Roses and once a lady-in-waiting to Elizabeth Woodville. She understood both the glitter and danger of court life, lessons she would pass down to her daughters.
When Richard III seized the throne, the Howards aligned with him, following him into battle when Henry Tudor challenged him for the crown at Bosworth. There, Elizabeth’s grandfather was killed and her father imprisoned. In response, her mother fled with her children to sanctuary in a Benedictine priory on the Isle of Sheppey.
It is a striking image: a mother guiding her children through political catastrophe, teaching endurance as much as obedience. The lineage of maternal strength would shape Elizabeth profoundly.
Marriage and ambition
Around 1499, Elizabeth married Thomas Boleyn, heir to a prosperous Kentish family with connections to the Irish earldom of Ormond. It was an astute match: old nobility joined to new ambition.
A surviving letter suggests that in the first years of their marriage Elizabeth bore Thomas several children. Two young sons, Thomas and Henry, died in infancy, but Mary, Anne and George survived, becoming the centre of Elizabeth and Thomas’s world.
Aristocratic babies were often nursed by wet nurses, but mothers remained closely involved. It would have been Elizabeth’s duty to supervise the nursery, to choose attendants and to ensure the moral and religious education of her children; the first stage in shaping the next generation for court life and advantageous marriages.
Elizabeth would have drawn on the lessons taught by her own mother as she taught manners, etiquette, languages (especially French), music, embroidery, piety and courtly conduct.
For women like Elizabeth, motherhood was inseparable from legacy. She and Thomas undoubtedly loved their children, but they also recognised opportunity. When the chance arose for Anne to attend the court of Margaret of Austria, Duchess of Savoy in Mechelen, they grasped it. Mary too was sent to France, and George was encouraged into court service.
Elizabeth’s own marriage had been arranged by her father, and it was her responsibility, alongside Thomas, to secure suitable matches for their children. Mary married Sir William Carey, a cousin of the king who held the positions of Gentleman of the Privy Chamber and Esquire of the Body of the King. George made a strong dynastic match with Jane Parker, daughter of Henry Parker, 10th Baron Morley. It was through her great-grandmother, Margaret Beauchamp of Blesto, that Jane, like William Carey, could claim a distant kinship to Henry VIII. None of them could have imagined that their middle child would one day wed a king.
Silence and grief
After the executions of her children, Elizabeth withdrew from court, grieving and unwell.
She had outlived Anne and George but the sources do not record her sorrow. There are no letters, no recorded lament – simply silence. A devastating void where her grief should echo through the centuries.
Elizabeth died two years after her children in April 1538 near Baynard’s Castle in London and was buried in the Howard vault at St Mary’s Church, Lambeth, now the Garden Museum.
Before history turned the Boleyn name into scandal, Elizabeth was simply a mother trying to raise children safely in an unsafe world. None of them could have expected their lives, their names and the horror of her children’s death would continue to horrify hundreds of years later.
10 March 2026
Book Launch Guest Post: Desiderius Erasmus: The Folly or Far Sightedness of Renaissance Europe's Greatest Mind, by Amy McElroy
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