A rich tale of power and forbidden love revolving around a young medieval queen
Set in England when Vikings are on the brink of invasion,
this is an epic tale of seduction, war, and unrequited love
from an outstanding new voice in historical fiction
Trilogies. Some people love them, devouring
them voraciously and then looking around eagerly for more. Others find them
annoying, perhaps considering them an irritating trend or maybe a tactic by an
author to pad a perfectly adequate book with enough filler that it can be
released in three separate volumes, thereby earning piles of money (hah!) for
its avaricious author.
Frankly, when I decided to write a trilogy
about Emma of Normandy, I had no ulterior motives. I was simply trying to
figure out the best way to tell what I hoped would be a gripping tale.
Emma lived well into her sixties, perhaps
even into her seventies (we’re not certain of her birth year). Either way, she
lived a very long life. I decided at the outset that I had no wish to write a
novel that would cover her entire lifespan, mostly because I didn’t know how to
do it without diluting the drama inherent in her story. I knew from my research
that there were two distinct periods of Emma’s life that were fraught with conflict:
Sixteen or so years in the first quarter of the 11th century when
she first arrived in England as the adolescent bride of King Æthelred, and
another nine-year span much later in her life when she was probably about fifty
years old. All of these years were marked by massive unrest and political
upheaval in England, but it was the earlier period that really intrigued me. I
wanted to explore the difficulties that Emma would face as a young, foreign
queen; I wanted to imagine the turmoil of that time – not from the point of
view of a king or a warrior, but from the point of view of a woman.
Because the women obviously were there, although
their experiences have gone largely unrecorded. I hoped to explore what Emma must have lived
through and to stay very close to her, writing a story that would reflect the
turbulent history that she witnessed and the emotions she must have
experienced. It seemed to me that I could only do that if I whittled those
sixteen years down into more manageable chunks.
So I divided them into three. The first
book, Shadow on the Crown, spans only
three years, but the Anglo-Saxon
Chronicle entries of that time are chock full of dire events that needed
explaining, dramatizing, and re-imagining, not just through Emma’s eyes but
also from the viewpoints of a few select characters who I included to broaden
the story. Once written, the book was no easy sell. A debut author isn’t likely to find a
publishing house willing to take on a book that goes beyond a certain word
count – that’s just a fact of publishing life. And so that first manuscript –
infinitely shorter than if I had written a tome covering sixty years instead of
three – had to be cut even more.
Now that the second book, The Price of Blood, is completed and in
the pipeline toward publication, I can reveal that it begins about a year after
the final events in Shadow on the Crown,
and that it covers a further seven years of Emma’s story. Frankly, this sequel
doesn’t end where I originally intended. A certain character tried very hard to
wrest control of the plot line and make it all about her. I had to fight her
every step of the way, and I ended up adding scenes just to get her to behave. That’s
called revision and it, too, is a
fact of publishing life.
Patricia Bracewell
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About the Author
Patricia Bracewell was born and raised in Los Angeles and majored in English Literature.A Masters Degree was followed by a California teacher’s credential and she taught high school English. Eventually moving to the San Francisco Bay Area, she met and married a Canadian and now has two sons.
Her passion for writing began with short stories before she fulfilled a long ambition when she discovered an English queen whose name was unfamiliar. Intrigued, Patricia began research, including journeys to England and France - and wrote the novel that became Shadow on the Crown. The first book in a trilogy, Patricia has now completed the second, The Price of Blood. She will be the Writer-In-Residence at Gladstone's Library in Hawarden, Wales this year from 27 October to 10 November, participating in Gladstone's weekend Hearth Festival as well as conducting a day-long Fiction Writing Workshop. Find out more at http://www.patriciabracewell.com/ and find her on Twitter
@patbracewell and Facebook.









