30 August 2025
Strange Ways To Die in the Tudor Ages, by Emily Bush and Carrie Ingram-Gettins
29 August 2025
Henry VIII's Controversial Aunt, Honor Lisle: Her Life, Letters and influence on The Tudor Court, by Amy Licence
Amy Licence is an historian of women's lives in the medieval and early modern period, from Queens to commoners. Her particular interest lies in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth century, in gender relations, Queenship and identity, rites of passage, pilgrimage, female orthodoxy and rebellion, superstition, magic, fertility and childbirth. She is also a fan of Modernism and Post-Impressionism, particularly Woolf and the Bloomsbury Group, Picasso and Cubism. Amy has written for The Guardian, the BBC Website, The English Review, The London Magazine, The Times Literary Supplement and is a regular contributor to the New Statesman and The Huffington Post. She is frequently interviewed for BBC radio and in a BBC documentary on The White Queen. You can follow Amy on Twitter @PrufrocksPeach and her facebook page In Bed With the Tudors. Her website is www.amylicence.weebly.com28 August 2025
Historical Fiction Spotlight: Boudicca's Daughter: the dazzling new novel from Elodie Harper
But what of the woman who grew up in her shadow? The woman who has her mother's looks and cunning but a spirit all of her own?
The woman whose desperate bid for survival will take her from Britain's sacred marshlands to the glittering façades of Nero's Roman Empire…
Born to a legend. Forced to fight. Determined to succeed. Meet Solina. Boudicca's Daughter:
'Boudicca's Daughter is Elodie Harper's masterpiece.' Costanza Casati, bestselling author of Babylonia
'A beautiful, breathtaking novel... pre-order it immediately!' Jennifer Saint, Sunday Times bestselling author of Ariadne
'One of the best books I have ever read.' Bea Fitzgerald, Sunday Times bestselling author of Girl, Goddess, Queen.
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About the author
Elodie Harper is a journalist and prize winning short story writer. Her story 'Wild Swimming' won the 2016 Bazaar of Bad Dreams short story competition, judged by Stephen King. She is currently a reporter at ITV News Anglia in the East of England. Elodie is the author of The Wolf Den, the first in a trilogy of novels set in ancient Pompeii. Find out more at https://www.elodieharper.com/ and find Elodie on Twitter @Elodie_Harper and Bluesky @elodieharper.bsky.social26 August 2025
New Book Review: Daughter of the Stones: An enchanting timeslip novel from Alexandra Walsh
It took me a few chapters to appreciate the clever parallels between past and present worlds, but once spotted they add a symmetry to the narratives unlike any I’ve seen.
In her author’s notes Alexandra Walsh says this is the book she’s been wanting to write for some years, and that shines through in her compelling storylines.
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Alexandra Walsh is a bestselling author of the dual timeline women’s fiction. Her books range from the 15th and 16th centuries to the Victorian era and are inspired by the hidden voices of women that have been lost over the centuries. The Marquess House Saga offers an alternative view of the Tudor and early Stuart eras, while The Wind Chime and The Music Makers explore different aspects of Victorian society. Formerly, a journalist for over 25 years, writing for many national newspapers and magazines; Alexandra also worked in the TV and film industries as an associate producer, director, script writer and mentor for the MA Screen Writing course at the prestigious London Film School. She is a member of The Society of Authors and The Historical Writers Association. For updates and more information visit her website: www.alexandrawalsh.com and follow her on Facebook, Twitter @purplemermaid25 and Bluesky @purplemermaid25.bsky.social
21 August 2025
Historical Fiction Spotlight: Daughter of the Stones: An enchanting timeslip novel from Alexandra Walsh
In Iron Age Britain, Cordelia is the third daughter of chief Lear Bladudsunu and a gifted shaman. But she is left grief-stricken when betrayal, ambition and patriarchal power threaten everything she holds dear.
Linked across the centuries, Caitlin and Cordelia each face devastating choices. As Cordelia fights to protect her people from destruction, Caitlin finds herself drawn deeper into the mysteries of the past.
As the veil thins between past and present, can Caitlin unravel the truth of her own heritage in time to heal old wounds and unite her fractured family?
'A fabulously intricate tapestry of a story, rich in historical detail.' Eva Glyn
'Alexandra Walsh weaves a perfectly crafted dual timeline tale that will enthral and delight the reader from the first words until the very last sparkling moment.' Elena Collins
'I absolutely loved this beautifully written and characterful novel.’ Carol McGrath
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Alexandra Walsh is a bestselling author of the dual timeline women’s fiction. Her books range from the 15th and 16th centuries to the Victorian era and are inspired by the hidden voices of women that have been lost over the centuries. The Marquess House Saga offers an alternative view of the Tudor and early Stuart eras, while The Wind Chime and The Music Makers explore different aspects of Victorian society. Formerly, a journalist for over 25 years, writing for many national newspapers and magazines; Alexandra also worked in the TV and film industries as an associate producer, director, script writer and mentor for the MA Screen Writing course at the prestigious London Film School. She is a member of The Society of Authors and The Historical Writers Association. For updates and more information visit her website: www.alexandrawalsh.com and follow her on Facebook, Twitter @purplemermaid25 and Bluesky @purplemermaid25.bsky.social
Blog Tour: Daughter of Mercia, A haunting Anglo-Saxon dual time novel (Dr Anna Petersen Mysteries, book #1) by Julia Ibbotson
19 August 2025
Special Guest Post By Wendy J. Dunn, Author of Shades of Yellow
I first acted on this desire in 2010. A dear friend, who has been an important part of my life since our teenage years, was battling breast cancer. Feeling helpless about her situation, I started my novel about writing a novel with the idea I could donate some royalties to breast cancer research (something I still want to do).
Fast track to around three years ago, when I was wondering what I should write next. Going through my files, I re-discovered that first chapter and my roughed-out novel plan. I decided I wanted to take up the challenge of writing this book. Because I didn’t want to think about COVID or the world it has birthed, I thought, why not keep the story set in 2010?
I always write first drafts for myself. That is when I allow myself to experiment and play around with ideas. When I arrive at later drafts, it often feels like writing is a collaborative project. I don’t believe writers can do their best work in a vacuum of isolation. I am fortunate to have critical friends who I can go to for feedback about my work. Of course, I am always in the driver’s seat. I take full responsibility for all the decisions made in writing Shades of Yellow.
The days of writing Shades of Yellow became months and then one year and then two, until I had a manuscript I wanted published. Of course, it is never as simple as that. I sought out my critical friends (aka – beta readers) for my manuscript and took on their feedback. From the end of 2023 and through the early months of 2024, I sent the manuscript to literary agents and publishers – and collected a lot of interest in and encouragement for my novel, but no takers. I went overseas and visited the Tower of London, Oxford, Cumnor, Wytham, and other places visited by Lucy, my character, in Shades of Yellow.
Writing is the thread I hold on to emerge from the journey of writing, reborn once more. I have discovered the truth of Kundera’s words: ‘the writing of a novel takes up a whole era in a writer’s life, and when the labour is done he is no longer the person he was at the start’ (2005, p. 61).
For me, that is very true. Writing each of my novels has made me grow in humanity — and my understanding of myself.
And with every mountain climb conquered, another one beckons. Writing is my life adventure.
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About the Author
Wendy J. Dunn is an award-winning Australian writer fascinated by Tudor history – so much so she was not surprised to discover a family connection to the Tudors, not long after the publication of her first Anne Boleyn novel, which narrated the Anne Boleyn story through the eyes of Sir Thomas Wyatt, the elder. Her family tree reveals the intriguing fact that one of her ancestral families – possibly over three generations – had purchased land from both the Boleyn and Wyatt families to build up their own holdings. It seems very likely Wendy’s ancestors knew the Wyatts and Boleyns personally. Find out more at www.wendyjdunn.com and find Wendy on Facebook, Instagram and Bluesky @wendyjdunn.bsky.social17 August 2025
Eating with the Tudors: Food and Recipes, by Brigitte Webster
About the Author
15 August 2025
Book Launch Guest Post: Shades of Yellow: Who better to write about a betrayed woman than a woman betrayed? By Wendy J. Dunn
‘Our city dames know well enough the ointment or distilled water of it adds to beauty or at least restores it when lost. The flowers are held to be more effectual than the leaves and the roots of little use. An ointment being made with them taketh away spots and wrinkles of the skin, sunburnings and freckles and promotes beauty; they remedy all infirmities of the head coming of heat and wind, as vertigo, false apparitions, phrensies, falling sickess, palsies, convulsions, cramps, pains in the nerves, and the roots ease pains in the back and bladder. The leaves are good in wounds and the flowers take away trembling. Because they strengthen the brains and nerves and remedy palsies, the Greeks gave them the name Paralysio. The flowers preserved or conserved and a quantity the size of a nutmeg taken every morning is a sufficient dose for inward diseases, but for wounds, spots, wrinkles and sunburnings an ointment is made of the leaves and hog’s lard’
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About the Author
Wendy J. Dunn is an award-winning Australian writer fascinated by Tudor history – so much so she was not surprised to discover a family connection to the Tudors, not long after the publication of her first Anne Boleyn novel, which narrated the Anne Boleyn story through the eyes of Sir Thomas Wyatt, the elder. Her family tree reveals the intriguing fact that one of her ancestral families – possibly over three generations – had purchased land from both the Boleyn and Wyatt families to build up their own holdings. It seems very likely Wendy’s ancestors knew the Wyatts and Boleyns personally. Find out more at www.wendyjdunn.com and find Wendy on Facebook, Instagram and Bluesky @wendyjdunn.bsky.social13 August 2025
Book Review: The Girl from the War Room by Catherine Law
12 August 2025
Special Guest Post by John Pilkington, Author of A Reluctant Assassin (Will Revill Thrillers Book 1)
London, Autumn, 1589: In the turbulent year following the near-disaster of the Spanish Armada, ex-artillery captain Will Revill is summoned by the Queen’s Vice-Chamberlain and spymaster Sir Thomas Heneage. Revill is given a secret mission: to travel to the Surrey manor of Sir Abel Stanbury – and kill him.
Looking at the various aspects of Tudor life I’ve explored in previous mystery series, I realised I’d barely touched on the military (though one or two characters are ex-soldiers). So, on the lookout for a new protagonist to feature in a forthcoming trilogy of novels, I stumbled on Will Revill: a captain of artillery, scarred both mentally and physically by his service in the war in the Low Countries. I was interested to explore the dilemma of a man who does not want to take human life again, but is brought to it by force of circumstance.
Elizabeth the 1st disliked wars, reportedly saying that they had such unpredictable outcomes. Yet at times she felt she had little choice but to intervene in other people’s conflicts (notably in France and in the Netherlands), during the seemingly endless struggle between the forces of Protestantism and Catholicism for mastery of Europe.
Eventually, with the growing threat from Spain, the superpower of the day, she signed the Treaty of Nonsuch in 1585 and committed troops to Holland to assist the Dutch rebels in the desperate struggle against their Spanish overlords. The war would drag on for decades, bringing England itself close to invasion and, some would say, to within a hair’s breadth of becoming a Spanish province. The first book in my trilogy is set in 1589: the year after the notorious Armada.
Like other protagonists of mine, Will Revill is an outsider: a university drop-out from a farming family in Devon (disclosure: I live in Devon and once worked on a farm). For better or worse, like other restless men he has ended up in the army, taking ship for the Low Countries with the Earl of Leicester’s forces, and eventually involved in such brutal engagements as the siege of Bergen op Zoom. Instead of a cavalry soldier or infantryman, however, I wanted an officer of a different stamp - which led me to the artillery.
In fact, this (sometimes overlooked) aspect of Tudor warfare had always interested me. Now I had to embark in detail on a new area of research: the gunnery of the Elizabethan era, to the point where I knew my cannons and demi-cannons from my culverins, demi-culverins, falconets, sakers and robinets; what size of ball each carried, and how much powder was needed to fire it. It was intriguing to learn about, for example, the equipment used by a gunnery crew, the number of horses required to haul a siege gun across country and the sheer, back-breaking work needed to get it into position and make it ready.
Who knew that the largest gun of all, the basilisk, could throw a ball weighing sixty pounds – but needed sixty pounds of powder just to fire it? Or that, if a gun’s barrel was not allowed sufficient time to cool after firing a few shots, it could explode, likely killing and/or maiming its entire crew? Not me, but I’m learning. Most illuminating of all, perhaps, was the video I saw on Facebook showing how a cannon of the period was loaded, aimed, fired, then cleaned, cooled and reloaded: an often dangerous and unpredictable business.
The first Will Revill thriller, A Reluctant Assassin, sees Revill undertake a murky ‘dirty-ops’ mission which he loathes but is forced into - hence the title (no spoilers on how it turns out!). For his second book he is back in military service - with a twist of course. The third and last book, A RELUCTANT HERO, sees Revill find peace at last - but not without a final struggle.
The gunners of Elizabeth’s army are at times an underrated force. I hope to shed a little light on their world, its trials and dangers – and tell some intriguing tales in the process.
John Pilkington
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About the Author
An author for over thirty years, John Pilkington has written plays for radio and theatre as well as television scripts for a BBC soap, but now concentrates mainly on historical fiction set in the Tudor and Stuart eras. He has published over twenty books including the Thomas the Falconer Mysteries, the Marbeck spy series and the Justice Belstrang Mysteries (all pub. By Sharpe Books). He is also the author of a children’s series, the Elizabethan Mysteries (Usborne) and two Restoration tales featuring actress-turned-sleuth Betsy Brand (Joffe Books). His recent mystery The Tivoli Murders (Sharpe) marked a brief venture into the dazzling world of the Victorian Music Hall. His new book Yorick: A Jester’s Tale (Sharpe) is a departure into speculative fiction, telling the Secret History of the famous ‘mad rogue’ whose skull features in Shakespeare’s Hamlet. Born in the north-west of England, he now lives in a Devon village with his partner, and has a son who is a psychologist and musician. Learn more by visiting his website at www.johnpilkington.co.uk or find him on Twitter @_JohnPilkington and Bluesky @johnpilkington.bsky.social
11 August 2025
Historical Fiction Spotlight: Naming the Dead (Alexander Baxby Mysteries Book 2) by Karen Haden
10 August 2025
Special Guest Post by Helene Harrison, Author of The Many Faces of Anne Boleyn: Interpreting Image and Perception
The Many Faces of Anne Boleyn: Is Modern a Problem?
Thank you for inviting me to your blog again, Tony. Today, I’d like to talk about where the real Anne Boleyn might sit within the screen portrayals of her, and the dangers of modernising historical figures like Anne.
My favourite portrayal of Anne Boleyn on screen is Genevieve Bujold in Anne of the Thousand Days, though she wasn’t the first on-screen Anne I saw – that was Natalie Dormer in The Tudors. Genevieve Bujold demonstrates all of the fire and passion that sources say Anne had. Stephanie Russo says that Bujold’s Anne is ‘an Anne for the 1960s women’s liberation movement: she has self-determination, intelligence, agency, and ambition’. (1) These are qualities which we know the real Anne had. An example is where Anne and Henry are talking having taken a break from riding and Anne says:
‘I’ve heard what your courtiers say, and I’ve seen what you are. You’re spoiled and vengeful and bloody. Your poetry is sour, and your music is worse. You make love as you eat, with a good deal of noise and no subtlety.’ (2)
Her passion shines through, and her runaway mouth which would eventually be used against her. The only fault I’ve really been able to find with Bujold’s Anne Boleyn is that she is a little lacking in political acumen and her role in the annulment case and Reformation appears downplayed – the focus is very much on the relationship between Henry and Anne, the sunshine and storms of how that played out.
However, we do get this political involvement in Claire Foy’s interpretation in Wolf Hall. It is also note-worthy that Foy’s performance the only interpretation of Anne I’ve seen or am aware of with a French lilt in her voice, which it is possible the real Anne Boleyn had. Foy’s Anne isn’t a sympathetic portrayal because we are seeing her through Cromwell’s eyes, but we really get a sense of her political agency and influence over the king, even though her religious beliefs are barely alluded to. She confronts Cromwell with her power and influence:
‘Since my coronation there is a new England. And it can’t subsist without me. I’m warning you, make terms with me, Cromwell. Before my child is born.’ (3)
Comparing the two quotes, from Anne of the Thousand Days and Wolf Hall, Bujold’s Anne is almost mocking Henry, it’s quite comedic on screen but shows how Anne’s mouth could run away with her while Foy’s Anne is deadly serious, almost threatening, believing that her son would give her unrivalled power and influence over the king.
For me, the real Anne Boleyn probably lies somewhere between Genevieve Bujold’s passionate interpretation and Claire Foy’s politically minded Anne, though I will always have a soft spot for Natalie Dormer in The Tudors as the first on-screen Anne Boleyn that I saw, and which sparked my interest in her and the period more generally, and with Dormer we certainly get more of Anne’s religious beliefs and her tenacity in standing up for her beliefs.
But these modern screen interpretations can cause problems. It is impossible to make a dramatic interpretation of Anne without imposing our own beliefs onto it. We also benefit from hindsight, knowing how Anne Boleyn would meet her end, and can insert hints into earlier portions of these adaptations, alluding to what’s to come.
Anne is often described as a ‘modern’ woman or a ‘feminist’, ahead of her times. But it isn’t fair to label people who lived 500 years ago as modern because they wouldn’t understand, and might well be horrified, at the society in which we live today. In many ways, Anne was traditional in what she wanted – she wanted to marry and have children. She was better educated than many of her social status at the time and that did set her apart and was a part of what drew the king to her in the first place. But she was very much a woman of the sixteenth century, and we have to be careful not to put our own modern beliefs, prejudices, and feelings onto a society that, as much as we study it and research it, can still be very difficult for us to understand and comprehend.
History is about uncovering the reality of people, events, and movements, as far as we can, whether good or bad. Events like Anne’s fall and execution should make you feel uncomfortable, angry, upset, indignant. Sometimes it is easy to forget that these events and lives aren’t just stories. They were real people and, when we research them, we owe them the justice of telling the truth. If there is no evidence, don’t relate something as fact. Anne of the Thousand Days, Wolf Hall, and The Tudors are all dramas, made primarily for entertainment. That is just one element of Anne Boleyn’s story.
Anne is a great example of where the present is taking over the past and we need to strip that back, go to the contemporary sources to find out what really happened. Examining interpretations over time as I do in The Many Faces of Anne Boleyn: Interpreting Image and Perception can help us to strip back what’s been added over time and bring out what we know about the real Anne Boleyn.
Helene Harrison
References:
(1) Russo, Stephanie, The Afterlife of Anne Boleyn: Representations of Anne Boleyn in Fiction and on the Screen (2020) p.273.
(2) Anne of the Thousand Days (1969).
(3) Wolf Hall, episode 5 (2015).
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About the Author
Helene Harrison studied at the University of Northumbria in Newcastle, achieving both a BA and MA in History before going on to complete an MSc in Library Management. Her passion for Tudor history started when studying for A Levels and completing a module on Tudor rebellions. Her master’s dissertation focused on portrayals of Anne Boleyn through the centuries, from contemporary letters to modern TV and film adaptations. Now she writes two blogs, one Tudor history and one book-related, and works in the university library of her alma mater. In her spare time, she loves visiting royal palaces and snuggling up with a book or embroidery project. Her books are ‘Elizabethan Rebellions: Conspiracy, Intrigue and Treason’ (2023), ‘Tudor Executions: From Nobility to the Block’ (2024) and ‘The Many Faces of Anne Boleyn: Interpreting Image and Perception’ (2025), all published by Pen and Sword. Find out more at Helene's website www.tudorblogger.com and Substack – https://tudorblogger.substack.com/ and find Helene on Facebook and Twitter @tudorblogger as well as BlueSky @tudorblogger.bsky.social
























