Showing posts with label Patricia Bracewell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patricia Bracewell. Show all posts

February 10, 2015

Spotlight + Giveaway: The Price of Blood by Patricia Bracewell



The Price of Blood (Emma of Normandy Trilogy #2)
Author: Patricia Bracewell
Genre: Historical Fiction
Release Date: February 10, 2015
Publisher: Viking

Description:

Menaced by Vikings and enemies at court, Queen Emma defends her children and her crown in a riveting medieval adventure

Readers first met Emma of Normandy in Patricia Bracewell’s gripping debut novel, Shadow on the Crown. Unwillingly thrust into marriage to England’s King Æthelred, Emma has given the king a son and heir, but theirs has never been a happy marriage. In The Price of Blood, Bracewell returns to 1006 when a beleaguered Æthelred, still haunted by his brother’s ghost, governs with an iron fist and a royal policy that embraces murder.

As tensions escalate and enmities solidify, Emma forges alliances to protect her young son from ambitious men—even from the man she loves. In the north there is treachery brewing, and when Viking armies ravage England, loyalties are shattered and no one is safe from the sword.
 

Rich with intrigue, compelling personalities, and fascinating detail about a little-known period in history, The Price of Blood will captivate fans of both historical fiction and fantasy novels such as George R. R. Martin’s Game of Thrones series. 

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/22571643-the-price-of-blood?ac=1

DID YOU KNOW? 
Patricia Bracewell offers little known facts about the Anglo-Saxons she learned  during her research for Shadow on the Crown and The Price of Blood. 

The first public schools in England were founded by Alfred the Great in the 9th c. 

•  Laws against stealing beehives were strict because they were so valuable. The wax was used for candles, the honey for sweetener and mead, and the bees pollinated a farmer’s crops. 

•  Trial By Ordeal was usually a hand plunged into boiling water; if it healed easily you were innocent. 

•  The 1st contemporaneous royal portrait of an English king was of Æthelstan in 953. 

•  Alfred the Great’s stepmother was also his brother’s wife. (Work it out.) 

•  The sons of a king – æthelings - were not allowed to marry until their father died. This did not prevent them from forming attachments and siring children.

•  The palace of Rohan in Tolkien’s LOTR is called Meduseld, from the Old English word for mead hall.

•  The 1st Anglo-Saxon king to unify England & make it stick was Edgar in 961. 

•  An Anglo-Saxon palace was more like a compound: a great hall surrounded by many buildings. 

•  10th century Lady of the Mercians, Æthelflaed, led campaigns against Viking invaders. 

•  Musical instruments included flutes & pipes elegantly carved of wood or the bones of birds. 

•  The earliest Anglo-Saxons built in wood, but the royal hall at Winchester from the time of King Alfred on was built of stone. 

•  The St. Brice’s Day Massacre of Danes ordered by King Æthelred II in 1002 may have spawned years of Viking payback. It was a bad decision. 

•  The 1st royal bride to be anointed queen of England was the mother of King Æthelred II in 973.  Her name was  Ælfthryth. The 2nd  bride to be anointed queen was Emma of Normandy, who married Æthelred in 1002. 

•  In 1008 King Æthelred built a massive fleet to protect England from Viking attacks. In 1009 the fleet was destroyed by fire & storm, and the Viking raids that followed were worse than  ever before.

•  The concept of ‘trial by jury’ dates to the Anglo-Saxons. 

•  A good 10th c leech (doctor) could set & bandage a broken skull. 

•  The original 5 Boroughs were not in New York City. They were in an area of northern England that, in the 11th century, was a kind of Viking republic. It included the shires of Lincoln, Stamford, Derby, Nottingham, and Leicester. 

•  Anglo-Saxon earthen banks at Wareham were so large that in 1940 they were used as  anti-tank ditches.

•  The 10th c. organ in Winchester’s Old Minster needed 70 men to operate it. 

•  Queens displayed their husband’s wealth & power by wearing gold & gems: royal spectacle. 

Check out all the other cool stuff including recipes, a playlist, and an interview with the author in this fun online book club kit! 
Patricia Bracewell grew up in California where she taught literature and composition before embarking upon her writing career. She has always been fascinated by English history, which led to her studying Anglo-Saxon history at Downing College, Cambridge University. She has two grown sons and lives with her husband in Oakland, California. 

Author Links:

Giveaway: (1) Hardcover copy of Prince of Blood - Open to US only!
 





  *A huge thank you to the awesome people at Viking Books for providing the giveaway prize!*


 

January 4, 2014

Author Interview + Giveaway: Shadow on the Crown by Patricia Bracewell

Hey everyone! Viking is celebrating the paperback release of Patricia Bracewell's historical fiction novel, Shadow on the Crown, and I had the privilege of interviewing her for the blog! I read and reviewed the book when it came out in hardcover, and I really liked it. You can read my review HERE. Check out the details of the book, the interview with Patricia, and don't forget to enter the giveaway at the bottom of the post!


Shadow on the Crown
Author: Patricia Bracewell
Genre: Historical Fiction
Release Date: December 31, 2013 (paperback)
Publisher: Penguin

Description:

In the year 1002 A.D., 15-year-old Emma, the daughter of a powerful Norman Duke, crosses the Narrow Sea to wed the much older Æthelred, King of England. The marriage is part of an alliance forged to keep the Danish king, Swein Forkbeard, from raiding the defenseless English shore villages. But Emma finds herself at once Queen of England and trapped in a loveless marriage.

Alone in England, Emma—clever and adventurous—is a virtual prisoner, friendless and widely distrusted by her new court. Prime amongst her enemies is Lady Elgiva, the ravishing daughter of Ælfhelm, ealdorman of Northumbria and chief among his king’s supporters. Elgiva, prophesied to one day be queen, will stop at nothing to see her rival dethroned. At the same time, Emma finds herself harboring a dangerous secret: a growing affection for a man who is not her husband. 

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18079794-shadow-on-the-crown



Praise for Shadow of the Crown:


“Bracewell’s portrayal of Emma, from mere child to beloved queen, is a real tour de force. Not merely are the characters fully fleshed out, but the story moves ahead apace…   Frankly, I can’t wait until the second installment of Emma’s life is published. A five star debut!” —Historical Novel Society

“The familiar themes of political rivalry, court scandal, and disputed lineage so often explored in historical fiction get a new cast of schemers and scoundrels set in a less familiar but no less dramatic period of English history. Readers of historical sagas and romances will embrace this rich narrative.” —Library Journal

enthralling debutBracewell delivers a highly entertaining addition to the historical fiction genre.  —Publishers Weekly

“Who could have known that the court of Aethelred the Unready was as full of intrigue, passion, and danger as anything in Tudor times?  A well-wrought journey back to those little known times, this novel entertains while it educates.” —Margaret George

“Richly embroidered with medieval atmosphere, Patricia Bracewell's SHADOW ON THE CROWN is a tour-de-force of storytelling as she resurrects Emma of Normandy, a young girl who is shipped off to a foreign land to be wedded and bedded by a king far older than she -- a man grappling with a murderous secret.  On every tension-fraught page, Bracewell transports us to a court so steeped in rivalry that as the young queen's situation grows more perilous, we sometimes hesitate to breathe.  A stellar achievement.” —Adrienne McDonnell, author of The Doctor and The Diva

Patricia Bracewell's Emma of Normandy shines like a hoard of Viking golda heroine for the ages.  Never have I read a more vivid, fascinating account of the end of the Dark Ages.  We smell the smoke in the mead halls, hear the clash of swords, dread the winds that bring Viking raiders to English shores.  Bracewell illuminates a world wreathed in mystery, carrying us deep into a world of mystics, warriors and kings poised on the brink of changes so vast few can comprehend them.  Through the magic of Bracewell's pen and her passion for meticulous research, we are plunged into this fascinating, dangerous world where sixteen year old Emma of Normandy is cast to fate by her brother, becoming both a Queen and more secretly, a hostage in a land that mistrusts her.  Emma's courage, resilience and determination in a situation that would crush lesser women awed me.  You will weep with Emma, fear for her and applaud her triumphs.  A woman whose spirit will not be vanquished, Emma of Normandy will live in your heart long after you finish the last page.” —Ella March Chase

“Bloody portents in the sky, a blizzard burying villages ravaged by the Danes, with these chilling strokes Patricia Bracewell opens SHADOW ON THE CROWN, brilliantly mirroring the brutal landscape of the court into which young Emma of Normandy comes as Aethelred’s wife and queen. Bracewell skillfully shapes this tale of a young queen determined to establish her authority over her enemies as a thriller rich in complex, passionate characters and vividly realized settings. From the moment I picked up the book it captivated me, calling me back and back again until I abandoned everything to finish it in a breathless rush. Brava!” – Emma Campion, author of The King’s Mistress

SHADOW ON THE CROWN drew me in from the first page and held me in its grip. It is a vivid and compelling tale of the perilous world of eleventh century England, a time of beauty and brutality, superstition and sorcery; a world of stark danger, seething passion, and shifting alliances, when kings held onto their thrones with sword in hand and armed men at their backs and women—even queens—had to struggle to wield power even over their own lives.” —Gillian Bagwell, author of The Darling Strumpet, The September Queen (U.K. title The King’s Mistress), and Venus in Winter 


1. What was your inspiration for writing SHADOW ON THE CROWN?

The immediate inspiration for the book was Emma of Normandy’s marriage to King Aethelred. I was intrigued by the thought of a young woman having to leave the world that was familiar to her, to be sent away from her own land to marry a much older man whose sons would have been about her age. How would she have felt? How would her stepchildren feel about her, especially those sons?

2. What kind of research did you have to do for the book?

I began by reading general histories about the period, about the Normans and the Anglo-Saxons. Then I focused on the biographical information on Aethelred and Emma. I live within walking distance of UC Berkeley, so I spent a lot of time in the stacks reading journals, poring over maps, digging up details about everything from street names in 11th century Winchester to Anglo-Saxon burhs. I have books on Viking ships, on Anglo-Saxon food, Anglo-Saxon poetry and Old English. I took a summer course on Anglo-Saxon history at Cambridge, and I visited all the places associated with Emma and all the museums associated with those places. Rouen and Fecamp in Normandy. In England, Winchester, Canterbury, London, Exeter and lots of places in between. In the book Emma makes a journey from Winchester to Exeter, so I worked out every stop she would make along the way and I went to each one – I made the journey in one day that would take her weeks, and I discovered a number of things that I could not have learned from my desk at home.

3. What made you choose to write about Emma of Normandy?

Emma was a remarkable woman. She was the only woman to ever marry two kings of England; she was the mother of two kings of England. At the height of her power she was the wealthiest woman in the kingdom. She’s the only 11th century woman that I know of who commissioned a book to be written about the historical events that she participated in, yet today she is not very well known. I decided that she would make a brilliant central character in a historical novel, and that I wanted to write that book.

4. How did you become a writer? Was there a person or situation that prompted you to start writing?

From the time I was a little girl, reading was my favorite activity. My mother used to have to order me to put my book down and go outside to play. I was particularly enchanted with Jo March in LITTLE WOMEN at a very impressionable age. Jo March wanted to be a writer, and I wanted to be Jo March. In college I majored in English, and I knew that I could write well – which does not necessarily translate into a writing career! First I was an English teacher, and sharing my love of books, reading and writing with my students was enough, for a while. Eventually, when my children came along, I started to spend my spare time, of which there was little, writing. Over 20 years I took writing classes and wrote articles, essays, short stories and two novels. Some of my shorter pieces made it into print. The two novels did not, but in writing them I learned a very great deal about how to write fiction. When my children went off to college, I started work on SHADOW ON THE CROWN. I’m an overnight success that took a lifetime.

5. What tips do you have for aspiring writers?

The real writing happens in the re-writing. Grind out the first draft, then go back and play with it, mold it, re-work it. Don’t be afraid to use the scalpel when something isn’t working.

6. What's next for you? 

The sequel to SHADOW ON THE CROWN is on my editor’s desk. There is still a great deal of work to do before it’s print-ready, though so I’ll be spending the next few months working with my editor on that. I’m already thinking about the third book in the trilogy, and some of my research for that will take place next autumn in England where I will spend two weeks as writer-in-residence at Gladstone’s Library in Wales. I’m pretty excited about that and very grateful to the Library for awarding me such a wonderful opportunity. 

Thanks for stopping by the blog and answering some of my questions Patricia!
Patricia Bracewell grew up in Los Angeles where her love of stories led to college degrees in Literature, a career as a high school English teacher, and a yearning to write. A lifelong fascination with the history of Britain and a chance, on-line reference to an unfamiliar English queen led to years of research, a summer course in Anglo-Saxon history at Cambridge University, and the penning of her debut novel Shadow on the Crown. The book was hailed as a magnificent work of historical fiction by England’s Daily Mail and an enthralling debut by Publishers Weekly.

Patricia lives with her husband in Oakland where she is completing the second book in her trilogy about the extraordinary queen, Emma of Normandy. (Taken from Goodreads)
 The awesome people at Penguin are providing (1) paperback copy for my giveaway! Open to US entries only (No P.O. Boxes)!
 
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February 17, 2013

Review, Guest Post & Giveaway: Shadow on the Crown by Patricia Bracewell!


Shadow on the Crown
Author: Patricia Bracewell
Genre: Romance/Historical Fiction
Release Date: February 7, 2013
Publisher: Viking Adult
Source: Publisher

Description:

A rich tale of power and forbidden love revolving around a young medieval queen.

In 1002, fifteen­-year-old Emma of Normandy crosses the Narrow Sea to wed the much older King Athelred of England, whom she meets for the first time at the church door. Thrust into an unfamiliar and treacherous court, with a husband who mistrusts her, stepsons who resent her and a bewitching rival who covets her crown, Emma must defend herself against her enemies and secure her status as queen by bearing a son.

Determined to outmaneuver her adversaries, Emma forges alliances with influential men at court and wins the affection of the English people. But her growing love for a man who is not her husband and the imminent threat of a Viking invasion jeopardize both her crown and her life.

Based on real events recorded in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Shadow on the Crown introduces readers to a fascinating, overlooked period of history and an unforgettable heroine whose quest to find her place in the world will resonate with modern readers.
  






Shadow on the Crown is a beautifully written novel set in the year 1002 that follows young Emma of Normandy as she is sent across the Narrow Sea from her home to wed the much older King Athelred of England. After being thrown into a new land and a new kingdom, she must deal with a husband who doesn't trust her, stepchildren who despise her, and another woman who will do anything to get her hands on the crown. Emma must learn to adapt to her new role as Queen and she makes alliances with men at court in order to win the love of her English people. Soon Emma finds herself falling in love with a man who is not her husband, the king, all while dealing with the dangerous threat of a Viking invasion that would threaten not only her role as Queen, but her life as well.

I don't normally read much historical fiction, but this book's description had me intrigued as it was set in medieval England and the surrounding area. I thought that a book with a strong female lead during that time would prove to be fascinating. Well, I was definitely not disappointed with this book. Emma proves to be a strong young woman who must mature and adapt to her new life quickly. She is brave, courageous, loyal, and self-assured - all great qualities for a Queen and as the novel's leading lady. The other characters weren't as rounded as she was, but they all provided the required situations and relational ties - both good and bad - that Emma needed in order to grow as a character. The setting was perfect and I thoroughly enjoyed reading about the time period as well as the varying locales found throughout the novel. The writing was what really got to me. The author has a magical way of writing that draws the reader into the scenario at hand - whatever it may be. I found myself easily imagining the story unfolding while I felt I was amongst the characters. I could shut my eyes and see what the author was describing, which is a marvelous trait that not all writers have. The writing itself was wonderful and had a solid plot and pace that felt natural. Overall, I loved this magnificent adventure back in time to witness the brave life of Emma and the opportunity to love her and root for her throughout the book. I very highly recommend this novel to fans of historical fiction as well as to readers who love a fantastic story told by a truly enchanting author.

 


  
Time Travel: Imagining Emma 
by Patricia Bracewell
On a sunny July day in 2007 I stood in front of the stony corpse of an 11th century ducal palace in Fecamp, Normandy. I was there as an independent scholar. That’s an eloquent way of saying I was a student, but I wasn’t enrolled in any university. So what was a former English Major with a minimal grasp of French supposed to be studying in a fishing village on Normandy’s Alabaster Coast?

I was conducting background research for my novel, Shadow on the Crown.

Having blithely disregarded the standard “write what you know” advice drummed into aspiring authors, I had decided to set my novel in the 11th century, about which, when I started the project, I knew precisely nothing. Mind you, by this time I’d researched the period feverishly, reading history texts and poring over translations of manuscripts written by guys with names like Dudo and Saxo. Now I had come to Normandy to explore at first hand the setting where my real-life heroine grew up.

This palace at Fecamp, I had determined, was where my story must begin.

In front of me, the favorite retreat of the early Norman dukes looked desolate, even in bright sunshine. Ivy crawled up the broken walls to meet leggy shrubs cascading from above. Three square, roofless towers guarded the outer ramparts, but there was not another soul in sight, much less an invading army. The only invader here was me as I slipped past the flimsy barricade strung across the entrance to take a closer look.

Thanks to my previous research I knew that I was seeing only a fraction of what would have been here a millennium ago. There would have been guesthouses, kitchens, stables, storerooms, an armory, animal pens, dovecots – all vanished now. Much of what remained was hidden by the debris of centuries where the ground had sloped upward to cover the lower walls.

In the great hall where William the Conqueror held a feast in 1067 to celebrate his victory at Hastings, a couple of good-sized trees stood in the spot where a huge central hearth would have been. Tree roots, shrubs, and broken stones filled what must have been a magnificent and elaborate chamber, and the silence around me was broken only by traffic noise and birdsong instead of the voices of servants and retainers.

Clambering up to stand in one of the square towers, I looked out through a narrow window embrasure cut into walls four feet thick. If the roof had been intact this tower room must have been dark and cold, even in July. I tried to imagine what it might have looked like once, its wooden roof beams intricately carved, walls plastered and whitened with lime wash and covered with embroidered hangings. I furnished it with beds, wooden coffers for storage, charcoal braziers for heat, and beeswax candles for light. I placed two young women in the room – sisters of the duke, and I imagined one of them peering out that tiny window slit.
If she looked to her right she would have seen the grounds of an abbey founded two hundred years before her birth. A newer church stood there now, and I had to make my way across a broad street to explore its interior. Inside, a docent showed me where a visiting angel had appeared in 990, leaving a footprint in the marble – a detail I had not found in any history book.

Later I made my way to a white, shingled beach below a chalk headland – the mirror image of Dover’s white cliffs. I imagined a fifteen-year-old girl surrounded by servants and family as she boarded a longship, its high prow pointed towards England and a royal wedding. 

Would my heroine have looked forward with eagerness to those cliffs across the water, or would she have gazed with longing at the headlands of her home? That was one question that would lie at the heart of my novel.

A friend once asked where I would go if I could journey anywhere I wished. I didn’t have to think very hard. I would travel to the past, I replied, back a thousand years; and I would stay just long enough to find out if I’d imagined any of it right. 
 
Thank you for stopping by the blog today and sharing a bit of insight into the creation of Emma, the main character in Shadow on the Crown, Patricia!


The publisher has included some of the interesting maps and lineage charts found in the book for your viewing pleasure!



  



Patricia Bracewell holds degrees in English Literature (B.A. Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, 1972; M.A. University of California at Santa Barbara, 1974) and has studied Anglo-Saxon History both as an undergrad in the U.S. and as an independent scholar in Britain (Cambridge Summer Study Program, Downing College, July, 2007). She was born and raised in California, where she taught high school literature and composition before embarking upon her writing career. She is a member of the International Society of Anglo-Saxonists and the Historical Novel Society, and she is a charter member of the S.F. Bay Area writers’ organization, Left Coast Writers©. She has travelled extensively in Europe, Asia and South America, both for research and for pleasure. She enjoys gardening, tennis and, of course, reading, and she is still a decent guitarist and folk singer, although her writing leaves her little time for practice. She has two sons and lives with her husband in the San Francisco Bay area.

Author Links:
  




 The publisher has generously offered up (1) hardcover copy of Shadow on the Crown for my giveaway. US entries only, no P.O. boxes.

 
a Rafflecopter giveaway