Monday, May 31, 2010

The New Robin Hood - What Did You Think?

Have you seen the Russell Crowe film Robin Hood yet?  Did you like it?  Was it what you expected?  Was it faithful to the era?  Was the history on track?  What did you like best and least about it?

We have invited some writers of medieval historical fiction to weigh in on the new Robin Hood.  We would love to have your reviews as well.  If you have already published one, we would like to reprint it.  If you have not and want to, just drop us a note at hawthorne@nanhawthorne.com .

You are of course welcome to post your comments here. .

My own review is forthcoming.  Hint: I liked it.  And the scene towards the end when King John is making his decree, could you hear it?  The crowd was quietly chanting, "Sequel! Sequel! Sequel!"

Please also take the poll in the sidebar.

Friday, May 21, 2010

How Does a Book Change You?



The Game of Kings (Lymond Chronicles, 1)
How can a book transform a reader into a new person, as so many books I have read have done? It is palpable, this change, this growth, and you know somehow at the finish of a book that there has been some molecular change in you, and that you will never be the person you were before.

Of course, in some cases a book calls to some inner being and draws it out, setting you on a path you will follow for some time, if not all your life. Though not a book, the British series, The Adventures of Robin Hood, starring Richard Greene and Alan Wheatley , accomplished my transformation when I was about six or seven years old. I don't recall any interest in the Middle Ages before that, but once I reflected in the series something elemental and part of me, I was irrevocably changed. I quite literally never was the same again. Perhaps the series did not change me but simply pulled something out, something already part of my DNA. I don't know where that would have been born, but that's a topic for anther conversation.  Somehow the influence has continued to have an impact, not only in favorite subjects, but my personality, my values. I have gone on with my life with an everpresent WWRHD? way of dealing with the world.

That series, and books like Elizabeth Linington's The Proud Man, which tuned me in as did The Fighting Prince of Donegal, a Disney movie, turned my steps, already on the road, in a particular direction, i.e. Ireland. But so many other books have had more subtle, more, shall we say, visceral effects. The one that comes to mind most forcefully for me is a relatively recently read series, Dorothy Dunnett's Lymond Chronicles. The first volume alone, The Game of Kings, left me stunned, breathless, blown away by the complexity of the main character, the emotional impact of his journey. How did it change me? It added what I might call a vivid new thread in the weave of my psyche. Just having met Lymond makes me a more richly complex person. Nor is this particular transformation complete. This book, this series will go on sculpting me anew.

I could probably more easily count the books that have not had at least some transformative impact on that weave that is the innermost me. The particular thread is different with each. Ruth Sims' The Phoenix, Brandy Purdy's The Confession of Piers Gaveston, Morgan Llywelyn's The Lion of Ireland are just three of the books where the sense of molecular shift was most pronounced. It is like having had these characters in my head and heart made me more than one person. The same goes for Sharon Kay Penman's Welsh novels, Here Be Dragons, Falls the Shadow and The Reckoning, where it feels like several souls now crowd together within me. The Heaven Tree trilogy by Edith Pargeter, though not my favorite books, had moments in them that froze me for a time.

I wish I could articulate this with more precision, but perhaps you will help me? I would like to hear from you, either directly or, preferably, in the Comments to this post, whether you have had this sense of being jarred into a new reality by certain books, and how you might express what I have tried to.

And of course, I want to hear what books did this to you, why and how.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

C'mon, Nan... Give!

OK, OK, OK -- it ain't easy to see what the images from that yarn painting are supposed to be.. and the larger the magnification the more obscure they are. I appreciate notes from Bernard Cornwell, Susan Higginbotham and Helen Hollick expressing pleasure to have been included in the "painting" but I suspect they were being generous.


So here are detailed explanations of the images nd the books they represent.


Hopefully you can see the numbers... there is an extra 6 - ignore it.

1.  This is a black king chesspiece, honoring the chess theme of Dorothy Dunnett's Lymond sries and intended to represent the final volume, Checkmate.
2.  A white pawn,, for Dunnett's Pawn in Frankincense.
3.  A lemon flying through the air.  In The Toss of a Lemon, the father asks the midwife to throw a lemon out the window at the precise moment of his children's births so he can create an astrology chart.
4.  Two images from Margaret George's Helen of Troy: in the foreground, a sacred snake biting its own tale, and behind it the Trojan horse.
5.  A red and white rose to honor both families in Susan Higginbotham's Wars of the Roses novel, The Stolen Crown.
6.  A Russian orthodox church dome in honor of Lymond's stay in Ivan the Terrible's empire in Dunnett's The Ringed Castle.
7.  Jesamiah Acorne's lethal blue hair ribbon in Helen Hollick's pirate adventures starting with Sea Witch.
8.  A globe  representing the search for Prester John's kingdom in Umberto Eco's Baudolino.
9.  My own novel in progress.  a shield with an upside-down duck on it.  You will have to read the novel when it comes out to see what that was all about!
10.  A scafffold and headsma's ax, one of several from Brandy Purdy's The Boleyn Wife, published in England as The Tudor Wife by Emily Purdy.
11.  A Napoleon ic Imperial Eagle from any of the Bernard Cornwell Richard Sharpe's  Adventure Series, in particular Sharpe's Eagle.  It was this image in gold I started this yarn painting with.
12. A shoe, from one of the stories in The Collected Stories of Isaac Bashevis Singer.
13. Three men and a woman in a canoe with affectionate reference to the main characters from Kathleen O'Neal and W. Michael Gear's People of the Lakes.  They are, left to right, Black Skull, Green Spider - a contrary, sitting backwardsand holding up a mask - Pearl and Otter. 

You can see the color image on this post.

HTH.


Monday, May 17, 2010

Can You Identify the Books?

I like to do what I call "yarn paintings" of images suggested by books I am listening to, whether on the library for the blind's cassettes or downloads, my Kindle 2, or my husband reading to me. 
The one below is my latest.  I included a few books I had read recently but had not put into another yarn painting.  Click on the image for a larger view or visit the image and a black and white key on my Flickr pages to it to see if you identified all the books in the list below.




Key:

1. Checkmate, Dorothy Dunnet
2. Pawn in Frankincense, Dorothy Dunnet
3. The Toss of a Lemon, Padna Viswanathan
4.Helen of Troy, Margaret George
5.The Stolen Crown, Susan Higginbotham
6. The Ringed Castle, Dorothy Dunnet
7. Sea Witch series, Helen Hollick
8.Baudolino, Umberto Eco
9. My own current work in progress
10. The Boleyn Wife, Brandy Purdy
11. Richard Sharpe's Adventures series, Bernard Cornwell
12. Collected Stories of I. B. Singer, I. B. Singer
13.People of the Lakes, Kathleen O'Neal Gear and W. Michael Gear

Have fun... and get your book on the next yarn painting!

Monday, May 10, 2010

I'm a Recorded Songwriter!




I never thought when I was fifteen and listening to Donovan that someday I would be a songwriter with a recorded song!

As of today, I am just that.  Druidsong, a marvelous Celtic artist, has recorded my song "The Ballad of Rory McGuinness" which I wrote about 43 uears ago to be a song "by" my novel's Shannon O'Neill about an event that takes place in the course of the novel, An Involuntary King: A Tale of Anglo Saxon England - see right.

The current lyrics are more recent, and the melody has been arranged by Druidsong for his own performance.  The song will be on his upcoming album, due out sometime in June.  I, of course, will gleefully play the track on my Celtic radio station, Radio Dé Danann!

In the meantime you can listen to and purchase a download of this ballad at http://druidsong.bandcamp.com/ .

This just might be one of my top ten most exciting moments of my life!

Then if after you have heard the song, you want to know what really happened to Rory, buy my book!  It's available on Amazon.com, Kindle and on Smashwords.  It is also available for the print impaired reader in text and Braille output formats at BookShare.org.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Audio Conversation with Author Margaret George

Margaret George, author of such beloved historical novels as:
was a guest on AccessibleWoerld.org's  monthly historical fiction discussion to talk about her novel Helen of Troy and to answer our questions about this book, our May reading assignment.

Below is an audio recordingf that quite marvelous discussion.

Let's Read Historical Novels meets at 9 PM Eastern/6 PM Pacific on the first Tuesday of each month. You can find a list of our books and both a link to the chatroom -- you'll need a microphone -- and a sampling of the other time zones. In most the chat is actually on the first Wednesday of the month. The site is designed to be accessible for people with vision imapirment, but as with all such things, not just for people with disabilities. Anyone and everyone who can access the audio is more than welcome to join us.



June's book is Louis L'Amour's The Walking Drum.
AccessibleWorld.org has audio chats on a wide variety of subjects.  Its book groups include A World View of History, the Romance Novels group, the Mystery Novels group, a science fiction group, and others.  Join for some the brightest and most engaged discussions on the Internet.