Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus More


Earlier this month I reviewed Susan Higginbotham’s latest novel, The Queen of Last Hopes. Now it is my great pleasure to introduce to you, one of the queens of historical fiction herself, Susan Higginbotham.

Margaret of Anjou

One of the periods of history that has intrigued me for some time is that of the Wars of the Roses, the collective name given to the series of civil wars that rocked England during the fifteenth century. Naturally, when I began to read—and to write—historical fiction, I soon gravitated toward this era.
As I read more and more Wars of the Roses novels, I began to notice that certain characters were almost always treated in the same manner, whether or not there was any historical basis for their characterizations, and that others were generally either idealized or demonized. One of the characters almost always demonized was Margaret of Anjou, queen to Henry VI. In novel after novel, she’s a sexually promiscuous, insanely vengeful, power-hungry harpy, with no redeeming characteristics except for courage, if she’s allowed even that much.
Popular history has been scarcely kinder to Margaret. In Paul Murray Kendall’s still-influential biography of Richard III, for instance, Margaret (like Elizabeth Woodville, another bête noire of Kendall) is the Evil Queen of fairy tale, as cruel, vicious, and depraved as her enemy Richard, Duke of York (like his son Richard), is selfless, principled, and upright. Any rumor about Margaret that reflects poorly upon her is accepted at face value; any time her motives are in question, the worst are attributed to her.
As I read further, though, I found that some modern historians, less inclined than Kendall to see historical figures, and especially historical women, in terms of black or white, had dug beneath the caricature to reveal a different Margaret, one who like the men of her times had to deal with problems to which there were no simple or satisfactory solutions. Thanks to them, I could at last see Margaret the human being, not Margaret the stereotype—and when I did, I wanted to tell the story of a woman I came deeply to admire.
Neither saint nor she-wolf, the historical Margaret of Anjou was faced with an ineffectual and sometimes mentally ill husband, conflicting claims to the throne, a war with her native France that had begun decades before she was born and that ended in humiliation and disgrace for the English, feuding nobles, and her difficulty in giving her husband a royal heir. Any one of these problems would have been daunting: Margaret had to cope with all of them. It was her courage and tenacity in doing so, even when her cause appeared hopeless, which inspired me to make her the subject of my new novel, The Queen of Last Hopes.

About the Author:
I am the author of two historical novels set in fourteenth-century England: The Traitor’s Wife: A Novel of the Reign of Edward II and Hugh and Bess. Both were reissued in 2009 by Sourcebooks.
My third novel, The Stolen Crown, is set during the Wars of the Roses. It features Henry Stafford, Duke of Buckingham, and his wife, Katherine Woodville, as narrators. My fourth novel, The Queen of Last Hopes, features Margaret of Anjou, queen to Henry VI, and is set mainly in the earlier years of the Wars of the Roses. It was released in January 2011. I’m now working on a novel set during Tudor times.
See Susan Higginbothams Website.

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Copyright 2007-2010: All the posts within this blog were originally posted by Teddy Rose and should not be reproduced without express written permission.

Guest Post: Shelley Munro, Author of The Spurned Viscountess

Posted by Teddyrose@1 on November 16, 2010
Posted in Guest Author  | 5 Comments

I would like to welcome Shelley Munro, author of the ebook,The Spurned Viscountess.  She is going to tell us about how she got her ebook published from start to finish.

An EBook: From Inception to Finished Product  by Shelley Munro

Hi, my name is Shelley Munro and I write romance for Carina Press, Ellora’s Cave, Samhain Publishing and Liquid Silver Books. I’d like to thank Teddy for having me to visit So Many Precious Books, So Little Time today to talk about writing and my latest release, The Spurned Viscountess.

The Spark of an Idea:

I originally wrote the very first scene of The Spurned Viscountess as a writing exercise for the Auckland Chapter of Romance Writers of New Zealand. I can’t remember what the topic for the exercise was now, but I wrote about a man who had lost his memory. His family told him he was Viscount Hastings, but the man didn’t believe them. He recalled nothing of his childhood years or any of the time before he met his wife in Italy. His “newly found family” expect him to go through with an arranged marriage. Lucien doesn’t wish to marry again, but he wants a reason to stay at the castle while he investigates the murder of his first wife.

I really liked my finished scene and started to think about where the story would go. I added all my favorite elements from historicals including smugglers, a gothic element, a scarred hero and a heroine in peril plus a creepy castle. The Spurned Viscountess is the end result.

The Writing:

For me this is the most enjoyable part—day after day of putting my butt on a chair and just writing. I’m not a plotter. I start my stories with a germ of an idea, let it percolate and work out my character conflicts. The rest of the plot unfolds as I write. There might be the odd time that I flounder, but mostly it all turns out in the end.

Once the manuscript is complete, I try to let it sit for a while, although this isn’t always possible. I polish the manuscript, sometimes working with critique partners and at other times alone.

The Submission Process:

I choose the publisher I think will suit my story best after studying their guidelines, their blogs and taking note of any particular genres a publisher is interested in acquiring. When I was looking for a publisher for The Spurned Viscountess, Carina Press put out a call for historicals. Perfect timing for me. I checked the guidelines and formatted my manuscript accordingly then emailed it plus a synopsis and query letter to Carina Press. Then begins the waiting…

There’s a lot of waiting in the publishing business. We writers wait months and sometimes years to receive a yes or a no answer to our submissions.

The Decision:

In my case with The Spurned Viscountess, I waited five weeks for a decision. The good news came in the form of an email from Angela James, telling me Carina Press wanted to offer for The Spurned Viscountess. Color me excited. I was thrilled to accept the offer and become a Carina Press author.

The Edits:

I hooked up with my wonderful editor Deborah Nemeth and started working on edits almost straight away. With Carina Press we go through three rounds of edits, two with our editor and one with the eagle eye of a copy editor.

I’ve heard people say e-published books are poorly edited. Let me say this couldn’t be farther from the truth. I worked long and hard on my edits and I’m thrilled with the final result.

The Cover:

We complete cover sheets, specifying our likes, dislikes, suggestions and character details. The talented cover artists take this sheet and transform it into an appropriate cover. I fell in love with the cover for The Spurned Countess the moment I saw it. I think it portrays my story and characters perfectly.

[Insert cover here]

Publication Day:

I received my offer to publish in May and my book came out at Carina Press on 20 September. That’s a pretty quick turnaround, especially with edits and all the other work in between. Things work quickly in the e-world.

For the two months before release date and since, I’ve been working on promo, updating my website, writing blog posts and organizing tour dates at blogs.

I love e-publishing. I like the freedom of writing wherever my muse takes me and the speed at which things happen. With the increasing availability of e-readers, e-books are big business and definitely a growth industry. While other parts of the publishing industry are floundering, readers are embracing technology and taking their books with them wherever they go during the day. I’m certainly proud to be part of the e-world.

If you have any questions about the writing journey with an e-publisher please ask and I’ll do my best to answer.

Copyright 2007-2010: All the posts within this blog were originally posted by Teddy Rose and should not be reproduced without express written permission.

I grew up in St. Paul Minnesota, but my Aunt and Uncle had a cabin on Madeline Island.  You had to take a ferry from Duluth, on Lake Superior, to get there.  It was a long drive from the city but such a beautiful and tranquil place.  I enjoyed summer weekends there swimming and playing with my cousins.  The water was quite cold, but we didn’t mind on hot summer days.  

After being offered a review copy of Safe From the Sea (see my review here), I invited Peter Geye to do a guest post to tell you more about one of the Great Lakes, Lake Superior.  Welcome To So Many Precious Books, Peter!

Up On the North Shore by Peter Geyre

Lake Superior is to a Minnesota boy what the mountains are to a kid from Colorado, what the seaside is to lobsterman’s son up in Maine. At least it is to this Minnesota boy. It’s our natural wonder, the place on the map next to which we live.
Starting in Duluth and bearing east/northeast, the North Shore winds about one hundred and fifty miles up to the Canadian border. It’s a landscape full of rivers and streams, of incalculable forests, of small towns and ports. There have been days driving along the shore that I’ve counted no less than a hundred whitetail deer foraging in the ditch. I’ve seen bear and moose and wolf, all along the roadside like spectators at a parade. I’ve seen six- or seven-foot breakers rolling onto the shore, heard late-winter ice-floes booming like gunshot. The average water temperature of the big lake they call Gitchi Gummi is only forty degrees, and though it’s been warming lately, the temperature stays pretty constant. In other words, it’s usually as cold as a glass of ice water.
I’ve always believed that Lake Superior possesses a secret, some truth kept by the cold and unfathomable water. Who can say why?
When I was a kid we used to rent cabins or pitch our tent in the state parks along the North Shore. Some of my earliest memories are of those trips. I remember one summer we rented a cabin near Splitrock lighthouse. The cabin was on a cove, atop a craggy bunch of rocks. The lodge had a rowboat you could rent to putter around the cove, and one warm afternoon my father and I went out for an adventure. I remember not being far off shore, and being able to look into the water and see the bottom of the lake. It didn’t look far, looked like I’d be in water no deeper than my waist if I jumped over the gunwale for a swim. I asked my dad if could I do it. I asked him knowing it’d be cold. He must have judged the water to be not so deep himself, because he said sure. So over I went.
We indeed misjudged the depth, and I was in over my head. I kicked for the surface and reached for my dad’s outstretched hand and he pulled me back into the little rowboat. He made sure I was okay and we laughed about it and no doubt he tousled my wet hair and said, Geez, he was sorry about that.
Though I’ve tried many times to describe the feeling of being in that water, I’ve never come close. It took my breath away, literally, like someone had hit me on the back with a canoe paddle. It was painful in the most mysterious of ways. And it’s a perfect example of the secret the water holds, or the one I imagine it does.
I knew when I set out to write Safe from the Sea that I wanted to convey that secret, knew that the scene of the wreck of the ore boat Ragnarok and the survivors’ nightmare would depend on my ability to translate the feeling from memory to the page. And I’m not exaggerating to say that I sometimes found myself getting that seized-up, hit-by-a-paddle sensation while I wrote those scenes. In fact, I needed the feeling, knew if I didn’t have it, I wasn’t getting the scene right.
The North Shore elicits so many mysterious feelings in me, and I tried to translate many of them in my book. The story of jumping from the rowboat could be told with a half-dozen different principles, for a half-dozen different scenes. And I hope readers of Safe from the Sea will see the shore in all her wild beauty. Those miles of road, of trees and wilderness, the wind off the lake, all of it’s as important as any of the human characters. And they’re all beholden to it. 
Peter Geye received his MFA from the University of New Orleans and his PHD from Western Michigan University, where he was editor of Third Coast. He was born and raised in Minneapolis and continues to live there with his wife and three children. This is his first novel. ”  

Thanks to Caitlin Hamilton Summie of Unbridled Books, I am giving away one copy of Safe From the Sea.  Trust me, you want this book!
To Enter:
Leave a comment on my review of Safe From the Sea and then tell me that you did it here.  Be sure to leave your email address, so I can contact you if you win.
Extra Entries:  Earn one extra entry for each of the following (please leave a separate comment for each).
Old or new follower of this blog.
Old or new follower on Twitter (teddyrose1).
Be my friend on Facebook (Teddy Rose).
Be my friend on Goodreads (Teddy).
+1 for each comment on a book review I have done.
+1 for clicking to give free food at The Animal Rescue Site (tell me you did it).
+1 for clicking to give free books at The Literacy Site (tell me you did it).

That’s 8 or more possible entries!

Sorry, the giveaway is only open US and Canadian residents only.
The winner’s mailing address: NO P.O. Boxes.
Only one entry per household/IP address
 
Winners will be subject to the one copy per household rule, which means that if you win the same title in two or more contests, you will receive only one copy of the book.
 

This giveaway will end on Saturday, October 23rd,11:59 P.M. E.S.T. The winners will be notified by email. Winners must respond within TWO days or will be disqualified.

Copyright 2007-2010: All the posts within this blog were originally posted by Teddy Rose and should not be reproduced without express written permission.