15 August 2019

Book Review: Richard II: A True King's Fall, by Kathryn Warner


Available on Amazon UK and Amazon US

Where the famous portrait on Henry VIII makes him seem powerful, the familiar image of Richard II in Westminster Abbey (see book cover) achieves quite the opposite. I'd always thought he looks sad - and was unsurprised to discover a contemporary chronicler described him as 'pensive'.

Kathryn Warner, as an acknowledged expert on Richard II, has crammed her book with a wealth of fascinating details, yet the image of Richard which emerges is one of an unhappy life. Her choice of ' A True King's Fall' as her title is significant.

He inherited a kingdom ravaged by the plague and simmering with rebellion. The Scots tested his borders to the north and the old noble families of England jockeyed for power and influence, making it impossible to Richard to be certain who he could trust.

This book reveals more truth than I expected in Shakespeare's unflattering portrayal of Richard. Many accounts hint at his mental health problems, and he proved an ineffective king, yet undeserving of his lonely death by starvation - or responsibility for the Wars of the Roses.

Tony Riches

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About the Author

Kathryn Warner grew up in the Lake District in the north-west of England, and gained a BA and an MA with Distinction in medieval history and literature from the University of Manchester. She is a specialist in the history of the fourteenth century and has been researching and writing about Edward II's reign since 2004, and have run a blog about him since December 2005. Future projects include biographies of Edward III's queen Philippa of Hainault, their son John of Gaunt, Edward I's five daughters, and a joint biography of the medieval Despenser family. Find out more at Kathryn's blog and find her on Twitter @RoyneAlianore

See Also:

Blood Roses: The Houses of Lancaster and York before the Wars of the Roses, by Kathryn Warner

14 August 2019

The Ultimate Chess Novel: Queen Sacrifice



Two kings are fighting for their lives, and the stakes 
have never been higher.

10th Century Wales is a country divided, with the kingdom of the south becoming Saxon and the north violently defending the old ways. The inevitable civil war is brutal and savage in this tale of divided loyalty and revenge, treachery and love. The bishops of Wales struggle to keep the faith while knights and warlords turn events to advantage and the lives of ordinary people are changed forever by the conflict. 

Queen Sacrifice is a tale of love and sacrifice, soldiers and spies, heroes and assassins, who meet in the war to end all wars. The tale is perfect for fans of George R R Martin. The narrative also follows every move in the queen sacrifice game, known as ‘The Game of the Century’ between Donald Byrne and 13-year-old Bobby Fischer on October 17th, 1956.

Praise for Queen Sacrifice:

'Queen Sacrifice stands in quality and complexity with any novel of the genre. Look out George R.R. Martin, Tony Riches is coming for you!’ – Rabid Reader Reviews

'A fast-paced read for those who love history and chess' - Black & White Magazine

Cover of Chess Review, December 1956.

13 August 2019

Historical Fiction Spotlight: Honora and Arthur - the Last Plantagenets: Love and loss in Tudor times, by Joanne McShane


Available on Amazon UK and Amazon US

At the age of 18, Honora Grenville is swept off her feet by Arthur Plantagenet, the handsome, illegitimate uncle of Henry VIII. Honora has spent an idyllic childhood in early-16th-century Cornwall, the pampered daughter of a wealthy and influential landowner.

On the threshold of adult life, she is ready for adventure. Since childhood, her dreams have been of a white knight who will whisk her away to live in far-off palaces and to wear fine clothes. Now, in Arthur Plantagenet, it seems that her dreams are about to come true.

Alas, it is not to be. Henry VIII orders Arthur to marry Elizabeth Dudley Grey, Viscountess Lisle, and poor Honora is cast into an abyss of despair. Whilst still trying to put Arthur from her mind, she reluctantly marries John Basset, a Devonshire widower twenty-four years her senior.

After thirteen years of what turns out to be a tranquil and fruitful marriage, John Basset dies and Arthur Plantagenet, also recently widowed, re-enters Honora's life. The passion, which has never died for either of them, is rekindled in an instant. They get married and she leaves Devon, to begin her new life as part of the court of Henry VIII where she is set to become a grand lady. 

Unfortunately, Henry's court is a place of intrigue and his reign is turning into a reign of terror. When King Henry orders Arthur to take on the role of Governor at Calais, the couple find themselves at the centre of the fast-changing and tumultuous political climate of the English Reformation.

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About the Author

Joanne McShane spent her childhood on a sheep and cattle farm in Tasmania, Australia. After marrying and raising a family in Tasmania she moved to Wales in 2003 and still lives there, close to the Herefordshire border. A keen historian, she became fascinated by her own family history and by the lives of her ancestors - some of whom she discovered to be very colourful indeed. This led her to begin writing. Honora and Arthur - The Last Plantagenets is her first published book. You can find Joanne on Facebook and Twitter @JoanneMcShane17

12 August 2019

Guest Interview with John Drake, Author of Traitor of Treasure Island


New on Amazon UK and Amazon US

I'm pleased to welcome author John Drake to The Writing Desk"

Tell us about your latest book.

My latest is Traitor of Treasure Island a book for adults, which pretends that Stevenson’s ‘Treasure Island’ was a pack of lies, mischievously written by Jim Hawkins: a thoroughly naughty boy who spent Sundays, not in church but among the whores of Bristol, and later grew into Sir James ‘Slippery Jim’ Hawkins, perpetual member of parliament for Trelawney West.

Thus my book reveals ‘the truth hidden for 170 years!’   as given in the journal of Dr Livesey, surgeon to the Treasure Island expedition. There’s romance, buried treasure, storm and adventure, deadly perils, John Silver’s beautiful wife Selena (once a plantation slave) and Long John himself revealed as a far better man than anyone ever knew.

What is your preferred writing routine?

I get up at 05.00 hours (yes, that’s 5 am) and I am at the computer, typing by 05.30.  Then I work non-stop apart from cups of tea, until 12.30. Then I devote the rest of the day to life.   I do that as routine.  What I do not do is wait for inspiration to fall upon me out of the clouds.  It’s a job.  It’s hard work,  but fortunately I love it.

What advice do you have for new writers?

First of all, good luck to you, God bless you and may you prosper.   Go for it heart, soul, mind and strength.   Write about what you know, which means either something from your own personal experience, or something that you have researched long and hard.

If you’re not writing from experience, then research is vital as the source of ideas, and the means by which you will never have to wonder what to write next.  Then add the values that you love, the things that move you to tears, the things that make you angry, and the things that make you laugh. Then, when you’ve finished the piece, set it aside for a week, and go back and polish it. Then do the same again until you know that it’s the best you can possibly deliver.  Do all that and never, never, never give up.

What have you found to be the best way to raise awareness of your books?

Honesty is not only morally righteous, but is invincible. So I have to admit that I have no ‘cunning plan, my Lord’ to raise awareness of my work.   But I do know that if a writer wants to be known to the reading public then he or she must be already famous, as some celebs are who chose to write.  If not, then someone must pay for an expensive publicity campaign with adverts on  TV, radio, busses, bill-boards, London Underground etc. There is no ‘yellow brick road’, or if there is I have never found it.

Tell us something unexpected you discovered during your research

The fact that buried treasure is a nonsense.  It never happened.  Pirates were violent, young, feckless men who lived short, dangerous lives.  The famous Blackbeard, had a career of just eighteen months before the Royal Navy caught him and killed him.  So pirates did not plan for retirement and when they got money they blew it on women, drink, food, gambling and fun.

When the money ran out they went back to sea and got some more, until they got caught.  They did not plan for retirement.  They did not bury their treasure.  They did not leave maps.  So buried treasure is purely a fictional device, but a damn good one, and well done Robert Louis Stevenson for making it famous.

I can’t really answer that question, because I never worry over scenes in the way that the question supposes.   I think that this is because of the writing method that I use.  Thus I write historical adventure fiction, and do extensive research before I start writing.  This means that the only problem I get when writing is worrying how I can fit into each chapter, all the things that I want to say.  After that, the process of writing each scene is a craft work,  like that of a cooper making a barrel.   It’s a technical matter,  so I do not wring my hands in torment,  nor do I agonise over words, nor suffer for my art,  and then finally bugger off and make a cup of tea.  I just make the barrel.

What are you planning to write next?

How long have you got?  The ideas are queuing up in my mind with the characters shouting to be let out.  It could be any of the following: a young-adult book with elves, hobgoblins and a charismatic witch;  or a detective story in 1st Century Roman Britannia; or a Hornblower-style Georgian navy adventure;  or even science fiction.   If only I had the time because ars longa vita brevis: the art is long but life is short.

John Drake
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About the Author

John Drake trained as a biochemist to post-doctorate research level before realizing he was no good at science. His working career was in the television department of ICI until 1999 when he became a full-time writer. John's hobby is muzzle-loading shooting, and his interests are British history and British politics (as a spectator), plus newspapers, TV news, and current affairs. He is married with a son and two grandchildren. Find out more at https://www.fantasticfiction.com/d/john-drake/

Historical Fiction Spotlight: Katharina Fortitude, by Margaret Skea


New on Amazon UK and Amazon US

Eagerly-awaited conclusion to Katharina Deliverance - Runner-up in the Historical Novel Society New Novel Award 2018. 

‘We are none of us perfect, and a streak of stubbornness is what is needed in dealing with a household such as yours, Kat… and with Martin.’ 

Wittenberg 1525. The unexpected marriage of Martin Luther to Katharina von Bora has no fairytale ending.

A sign of apostasy to their enemies, and a source of consternation to their friends, it sends shock waves throughout Europe. 

Yet, as they face persecution, poverty, war, plague and family tragedy, Katharina’s resilience and strength of character shines through. 

While this book can be read as a standalone, it is also the powerful conclusion to her story, begun in Katharina: Deliverance.

'Beautifully written and meticulously researched - historical fiction at its best.' BooksPlease

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About the Author

Margaret Skea grew up in Ulster at the height of the 'Troubles', but now lives with her husband in the Scottish Borders. You can find more details, including why chocolate is vital to her creative process, on her website www.margaretskea.com  and follow Magaret on Twitter @margaretskea1

9 August 2019

Historical Fiction Spotlight: The King's Commoner: The rise and fall of Cardinal Wolsey (The Tudor Saga Series Book 2) by David Field


New on Amazon UK and Amazon US

Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, Lord Chancellor of England and Archbishop of York owes his favoured status to the most volatile monarch that the nation has ever known.

In an age when a man can be a royal favourite one day, and consigned to an unspeakable death the next, Wolsey walks the tightrope above his many enemies.

Chief among these is the bullying Duke of Norfolk, scion of a noble family who bitterly resents the preferment of a butcher’s son to positions of power and influence that he regards as his by birth.

Norfolk sees his chance when Wolsey fails King Henry VIII in his attempt to secure the annulment of his marriage to Katherine of Aragon, so Anne Boleyn can be made Queen.

In the maelstrom of Tudor politics, Wolsey learns the hard way that loyalty and ability will not protect a fallen favourite from the sting of royal wrath…

The King’s Commoner is the second thrilling historical adventure novel in the Tudor Saga Series, chronicling the rise and fall of one of England’s most powerful royal families.

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About the Author

David Field was born in post-war Nottingham, and educated at Nottingham High School. After obtaining a Law degree he became a career-long criminal law practitioner and academic, emigrating in 1989 to Australia, where he still lives. Combining his two great loves of History and the English language he began writing historical novels as an escape from the realities of life in the criminal law, but did not begin to publish them until close to full time retirement, when digital publishing offered a viable alternative to literary agencies, print publishers and rejection slips. Now blessed with all the time in the world, his former hobby has become a full time occupation as he enjoys life in rural New South Wales with his wife, sons and grandchildren to keep him firmly grounded in the reality of the contemporary world. Find out more at david's website https://davidfieldauthor.com/ and find him on Facebook and Twitter

8 August 2019

Historical Fiction Spotlight: The Spider's Web (The Elizabeth of England Chronicles Book 7) by Gemma Lawrence


New on Amazon UK and Amazon US

Summer 1579: Wounded and shamed by Robin's betrayal, Elizabeth Tudor, Queen of England welcomes a new suitor to her court: the Duc of Anjou. Love is in the air, but so is treason.

As one man courts the Queen, others plan to destroy her. A web of intrigue, plots, spies and plans of assassination and invasion unfold, as Elizabeth's foes work to depose her, and place her cousin, Mary Queen of Scots, upon her throne.

Elizabeth must battle spies and secrets in order to survive, and on the horizon of the future the sails of the mighty Armada are coming into sight...

The Spider's Web is book seven in The Elizabeth of England Chronicles by Gema Lawrence. 

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About the Author

Gemma Lawrence is an independently published author living in Cornwall in the UK. She studied literature at university says, 'I write mainly Historical Fiction, with an emphasis on the Tudor and Medieval periods and have a particular passion for women of history who inspire me'. Her first book in the Elizabeth of England Chronicles series is The Bastard Princess (The Elizabeth of England Chronicles Book 1).Gemma can be found on Twitter @TudorTweep.

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