Showing posts with label Historical Novel Society. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Historical Novel Society. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Photos From the HNS Conference in San Diego

 
We all chow down.
 
Nan snagging some celebrity autographs at the book signing.,
Diana Gabaldon and Margaret George

The historical costume pageant.

Jim and nan on an excurssion on the SS Californian.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Timely News

Daily Literary Advent Calendar from Speak Its Name

SpeakItsName.com
SpeakItsName.com  offers you a special story or other treat and a chance at a prize every day!

Just click on the advent calendar in the right hand column to find out what they are!  December 1 - 25.

I will have an excerpt from the first draft of Alehouse Tales as the offering on December 7, along with a free ebook as the prize.



Historical Novel  Society Conferemnce in San Diego June 2011

HNS Conference

Will I be there? I sure am going to try. I love San Diego! I grew up in Los Angeles. Of course, it was in Spanish hands then...

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Makes an Author's Heart Sing!

From Historical Novel Review Online
Historical Novel Society
http://www.historicalnovelsociety.org/hnr-online.htm

AN INVOLUNTARY KING
Nan Hawthorne, BookSurge, 2008, $27.99, pb, 648pp, 1419656694

Who knows how many worthy stories from the so-called Middle Ages have been lost to us? It’s a rich period, especially in England, where small nations and armies were constantly clashing and men and women could still be larger than life.

Young Lawrence, the hero of Nan Hawthorne’s sprawling historical novel An Involuntary King, yearns to be larger than life. When his father, the king, is cut down, the crown falls to Lawrence, and he vows to be worthy of it and of his young wife Josephine. But 8th-century Northumbria is a dangerous place for such vows—young Lawrence is soon tested on all sides, and the result is a rousing, involving tale of Saxon war and romance.

Although Hawthorne has done an evident amount of historical research (readers will take away a very pleasant sense of immersion in the medieval Saxon world), the main strength of An Involuntary King lies in its people. In addition to the central trio of Lawrence, Josephine, and the mercenary Elerde who in different ways threatens them both, there’s a huge cast of secondary characters, virtually all of whom are brought to life with colorful details and the author’s sound ear for dialog. Indeed, talk bubbles throughout this book, talk of high state affairs, the outpourings of the heart, and the joking prattle of old friends, and all of it works a kind of magic on the reader. Lawrence and Josephine’s world is one in which that reader will want to linger, and by the end of the book, many of its characters will feel like old friends.

The aforementioned mercenary Elerde won’t exactly feel like a friend, but his impression will be the strongest. He’s the novel’s most memorable creation, and Hawthorne would be well justified in giving him a book of his own some day.

-- Steve Donoghue