Showing posts with label Tudor era. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tudor era. Show all posts

15 November 2016

Odd Jobs: Clowns, Jesters, and Fools in Medieval and Tudor England


 Even in medieval times, people needed entertainment.  And court entertainers, fools, jesters, jugglers, minstrels, led a life much different from both their royal “employers” and the run of the mill populace.

Of course, to have a position as a court fool was the height of luxury.  There were also freelance entertainers, including fools, who not only provided amusement, they also might do acrobatics and play instruments.  They might be hired by taverns or brothels, by cities for participation in public pageants, or they might be part of a touring company that would travel between noble households, “singing for their supper.”  Indeed, many more were itinerant entertainers than permanent residents.

Indeed, “fol” may not have been a full-time position, as Henry III’s payments to “John the Fol,” named him also a forester and huntsman, but the court fool was a particularly privileged position, for in making fun, he could say things that other people couldn’t.  One of history’s favorite tales is of the defeat of the French fleet by the English fleet at the Battle of Sluys in 1340.  No one could summon the courage to tell the French king, Phillippe VI, the news.  Finally, the court jester told him the English sailors were cowards, because they “don't even have the guts to jump into the water like our brave French.”


This portrait of Henry VIII and his family shows "Jane the Fool" in the archway on the left and "Wil Somer" in the archway on the right, suggesting they were considered members of the family.
Of course, kings were not always so amused when a royal fool overstepped his bounds.  It was reported in a letter from the ambassador to England from the Holy Roman Empire, that Henry VIII had “nearly murdered his own fool, a simple and innocent man.”  The crime?  Speaking well of the king’s first wife, Catherine of Aragon, and her daughter Mary, while disparaging Anne Boleyn and her “bastard” daughter.

The Tudor and Elizabethan eras were considered a “Golden Age” of folly and most of the Tudor kings and queens record regular payments and expenses for court fools.  By this time, we begin to have more information about these people, partly because having one’s personal fool was no longer limited to royalty.  Several prominent men of the time, such as Cardinal Wolsey and Sir Thomas More also had their own fools.

It does seem as if there were two distinct types of court fools:  the “artificial” fool and the “natural” fool, but the records don’t always allow us to clearly distinguish one from the other.


Richard Tarlton
An artificial fool is what most of us think of when we think of a jester.  This is a person of sharp wit, able to say amusing things on demand.  A medieval standup comedian, if you will.  Like so many things about the world past, we don’t have detailed information so we don’t know much what was so amusing about them.  (No one kept detailed notes on the fool’s scripts.)


A “natural” fool is one that is intellectually or developmentally disabled or even mentally ill.  This person might be dressed up and laughed at, kept somewhat like a pet as a part of the family.  Certainly, this seems like unimaginable cruelty to us today.  But some of the financial records, which indicate payments to a fool’s “keeper,” suggest that they realized these men (or women) were not capable of caring for themselves.  And as members of a royal household, they were fed and clothed, not left to wander the streets alone.

Even distinguishing which fools were natural and which artificial is a challenge.  “Patch,” Cardinal Wolsey’s fool, was so honored that when Cardinal Wolsey fell from Henry VIII’s favor, he gifted the king with his fool, perhaps to be certain that the man was provided for.

The king’s records show that Patch had several “keepers,” and the fact that he could, literally, be given away suggests he might be a “natural” fool, kept like a pet for amusement, but also needing “keepers,” unable to take care of himself.

More famous, however, were the actors who took to the stage.  Richard Tarlton, said to be Queen Elizabeth’s favorite fool, was an actor, a dancer, a fencer, a musician, and a man famous for his witty banter.  He was said to have studied “natural” fools in order to enhance his stage performance.


William Kempe on right, doing a jig.
Many of our impressions of the medieval fool come from Shakespeare, who created memorable characters in “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” “King Lear,” and other plays.  Two prominent comic actors played many of these signature roles:  William Kempe and Robert Armin.

Kempe played such roles as Dogberry in “Much Ado About Nothing,” Bottom in “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” and he was famous for his “jigs,” a combination of dance and physical comedy, often performed by a troupe of dancers.

Armin succeeded Kempe as a member of the Chamberlain’s Men.  His style was less physical comedy and more comedic wit.  Hence, the roles of Feste in “Twelfth Night,” and Touchstone in “As You Like It” are considered his.  These are more acerbic, philosopher-fools, though as an actor he was not limited to these parts.

Truly by this time, there was money to be made by making people laugh.   

John Southworth’s FOOLS AND JESTERS AT THE ENGLISH COURT, Sutton Publishing, 1998, 2003, was the source of much of the information in this piece.

After many years in public relations, advertising and marketing, Blythe Gifford started writing seriously after a corporate layoff. Ten years and one layoff later, she became an overnight success when she sold her first book to the Harlequin Historical line.  Since then, she has published eleven romances set in England and on the Scottish Borders.  RUMORS AT COURT, a Royal Wedding story, will be released in May, 2017, from the Harlequin Historical line.  For more information, visit www.blythegifford.com
 

 


Author photo Jennifer Girard

 


24 February 2013

Guest Blog: Blythe Gifford

Welcome back one of our own, Blythe Gifford, who has been blogging with Unusual Historicals since 2009.  Her new trilogy from the Harlequin Historical line, The Brunson Clan, concludes this month with TAKEN BY THE BORDER REBEL.  Set on the Scottish Borders during the early Tudor era, it centers on a family of Border Reivers and in this book, Black Rob, oldest and now head of the clan, meets his match:  a woman from the family that is the clan’s blood enemy.

Here's the blurb:

TORMENTED BY HER INNOCENCE

As leader of his clan, Black Rob Brunson has earned every dark syllable of his name. But, having taken hostage his enemy’s daughter in a fierce act of rebellion, he is tormented by feelings of guilt and torn apart with the growing need to protect her—and seduce her!

Stella Storwick feels Rob’s disdain from the first. Then slowly she starts to see behind his eyes to a man in turmoil. Something he has no words for, something that can only be captured in a heart-wrenching kiss....


Lovers from warring clans.  Captor/captive.  Romeo and Juliet.  What’s unusual here?

There are many classic elements to the story.  That’s why people read romance!  But I do write unusual settings and time periods.  The Borders setting, the early Tudor time period, and the incorporation of real historical characters combine to give this story a twist.  Oh, and I talk about catching salmon in 16th century Scotland!

Salmon fishing in Tudor Scotland?
Did you know that salmon and other “red fish” were highly regulated at that time?  There is documentation over several hundred years of Scottish laws, some forbidding the sale of salmon to England.  These fish were even the subject of some clauses of international treaties!  Yet when I tried to discover how the trade actually worked, even my academic experts didn’t know.  No, this is not a book about the salmon trade.  Fishing enters the story in a much more personal context, but I love discovering these unfamiliar parts of history.  The print here (from a much later period) is of “leistering” salmon, which was going out at night and spearing them by torchlight.
Did you have any special challenges with this book?

I’m basically a pantser, not a plotter.  I rework a book through many drafts and change every time.  Often, I go back to layer in backstory or motivation for something that changed later in the story.  I was worried that I would get to book three and need to change something that was already set in stone in books one or two.  But I had a piece of advice from a fellow writer who said, leave things as open ended as possible.  I did, and it all worked out.

What in particular did you leave open ended?
The hero’s character, for one thing!  Black Rob appeared in the first two books and so had a pretty well developed persona by this time.  I made him the strong, silent type, partly so I wouldn’t back myself into a corner.  When it came time to write his story, I had to discover what lay behind the facade.  He turned out to be a much more interesting character than I had known.

And what about the heroine?
I had briefly introduced her, seen at a distance, in the first book, RETURN OF THE BORDER WARRIOR.  I even had Black Rob keep his attention on her a little too long!  Stella Storwick is one of the more unusual characters I have written.  Something that happened to her as a child makes everyone treat her as special and different.  They give her deference and treat her with awe.  It sounds like an ideal life, until you have to live it.  And I was astounded to discover what she and Rob ultimately had in common.

You’ve got a free bonus starting this week, too, right?
Starting tomorrow, February 25, I’ll have a free, online read available on the Harlequin website (www.harlequin.com)  Wee Mary, one of the secondary characters from CAPTIVE OF THE BORDER LORD, gets her own happy ending in TEMPTED BY THE BORDER CAPTAIN.  The story will be run as a serial, in twenty installments of a couple of pages each day.  This was a writing challenge, but one I enjoyed.  In the shorter length, I write a lighter story than my full-length fiction.  “Fun and flirty,” my editor called it, but she also said “very romantic.”  If you’ve never tried my work, this might be an easy way to start.

Oh, and one more thing!  I'll have a post here on Unusual Historicals on Tuesday on the Scandalous Affairs of Queen Margaret of Scotland.  She is appears off-stage in CAPTIVE OF THE BORDER LORD and on-stage in TEMPTED BY THE BORDER CAPTAIN. She was the sister of Henry VIII of England and you can see the family resemblance!
TAKEN BY THE BORDER REBEL, was released in print in North America February 19.  Electronic and UK editions will be available March 1. 

One lucky reader who comments on today’s blog will be randomly selected to win a signed copy of RETURN OF THE BORDER WARRIOR, CAPTIVE OF THE BORDER LORD, or TAKEN BY THE BORDER REBEL.  Your choice!  

Blythe Gifford has been known for medieval romances featuring characters born on the wrong side of the royal blanket. Now, she’s written a Harlequin Historical trilogy set on the turbulent Scottish Borders of the early Tudor era.  The books are RETURN OF THE BORDER WARRIOR, November 2012, CAPTIVE OF THE BORDER LORD, January 2013, and TAKEN BY THE BORDER REBEL in March 2013.  The Chicago Tribune has called her work "the perfect balance between history and romance."  Visit her at www.blythegifford.com, www.facebook.com/BlytheGifford, www.pinterest.com/BlytheGifford or on Twitter @BlytheGifford. 


Author photo by Jennifer Girard.  Cover Art Copyright © 2013 by Harlequin Enterprises Limited.  Permission to reproduce text granted by Harlequin Books S.A. Cover art used by arrangement with Harlequin Enterprises Limited. All rights reserved. ® and ™ are trademarks owned by Harlequin Enterprises Limited or its affiliated companies, used under license.



21 January 2013

Myths & Misconceptions: The Six Fingers of Anne Boleyn

(Yes, it should be the 11 fingers of Anne Boleyn. But six sounds better. It's a theme.)

Anne Boleyn and her 10 fingers
The Tudor era is chock full of historical urban legends—Henry VIII writing Greensleeves, Katherine Howard dying "the wife of Culpepper", the list goes on—but one of the strangest is the myth that Anne Boleyn had a sixth finger on one hand. Even today you can find this legend listed as fact on the web and in popular trivia; it's only recently that the Wiki page on polydactyly was updated to list Anne's sixth finger as "rumored" and "likely not the truth". Where did such an odd legend come from? Is there any evidence it could have been true?

The tale of the sixth finger goes back to Nicolas Sander, a Catholic priest who wrote the anti-Protestant chronicle The Rise and Growth of the Anglican Schism in 1585, half a century after Anne's death. To say he was biased is an understatement; his account includes all sorts of wild allegations, including the claim that not only was Anne sleeping with her brother George, but that she was actually King Henry's daughter! His physical description of Anne begins like so:
Anne Boleyn was rather tall of stature, with black hair and an oval face of a sallow complexion, as if troubled with jaundice. She had a projecting tooth under the upper lip, and on her right hand six fingers.
Sander was the first to publish this rumor, but he did not invent it—Margaret More Roper (daughter of the executed Sir Thomas More), who lived in Anne's lifetime and had even more reason to hate her, lamented in one of her letters all the grief and trouble caused by the King "all for the love of a brown girl with a wen on her throat and an extra finger". Margaret died in 1544, just 8 years after Anne, so the story was around either during Anne's reign or in the years just after her death.

Margaret Roper:
not Anne's BFF
The first biography of Anne Boleyn was written by George Wyatt, grandson of Anne's former suitor Sir Thomas Wyatt, in the late 1500s. He was a fervent Protestant, and by the time of his book Anne had become a martyr in Protestant England; so where Sander did his best to demonize her, Wyatt did his best to canonize her. (This can be surmised by the full title of his biography, Extracts from the Life of the Virtuous, Christian, and Renowned Queen Anne Boleigne.) His description admits a flaw on one finger:
There was found indeed, upon the side of her nail upon one of her fingers, some little show of a nail, which yet was so small, by the report of those that have seen her, that with the tip of one of her other fingers might be and usually was hidden without any least blemish.
So on one side we've got an extra finger, and on the other side we've got a wonky fingernail. Which is more likely to be the truth?

In Tudor England, physical abnormality was believed to be evidence of inherent depravity. Henry VIII was notoriously phobic about corruption and disease; it's almost impossible to believe he would have chosen a "defective" woman to bear his coveted royal heir. A lumpy nail could be overlooked in the throes of infatuation—an entire extra finger, not so much. And if he had, it would have been much more widely gossiped about than one mention in a private letter. Eustace Chapuys, who gleefully reported all the juiciest gossip about Anne, never once mentioned an extra or misshapen finger; if she'd had one, he would have delighted in describing it. And when Anne's skeleton was exhumed and studied in 1876, there was no mention of any extra or deformed fingers; in fact, her hands were described as "delicate and well-shaped […] with tapering fingers".

So did Anne Boleyn have a sixth finger? Signs point to no. It's much more likely she had a wart on one finger, or possibly a clubbed nail or knob of overgrowth (onychogryphosis)—unsightly enough to be hidden with her famous bell sleeves, but not enough to be considered an actual deformity. If you're trying to portray someone as the witchiest witch who ever witched, though, an unnatural number of appendages makes a great start, especially when added to a laundry list of defects (including a mannish Adam's Apple, keratosic skin, and that whole incest thing). This bit of Tudor lore has likely persisted for so long simply because it's so weird—to the Tudor mind it made perfect sense, but to the modern mind it seems an odd way to slander someone. Because fortunately, in these educated times, we've evolved past the prejudice of using physical differences to make villains seem more evil.



Oh wait.


sources:
Sander, Nicolas - The Rise and Growth of the Anglican Schism
Weir, Alison - The Six Wives of Henry VIII
Wyatt, George - The Life of Queen Anne Boleigne

Wiki Commons (portraits)
www.aveleyman.com (screencaps)





Heather Domin is the author of The Soldier of Raetia, set in Augustan Rome, and Allegiance, set in 1922 Dublin. Her next two novels are due in 2013. She's been a reviewing member of the Historical Novel Society since 2007 and a contributor at Unusual Historicals since 2011.

13 January 2013

Guest Blog: Blythe Gifford


Welcome back one of our own, Blythe Gifford, who has been blogging with Unusual Historicals since 2009. Her new trilogy from the Harlequin Historical line, The Brunson Clan, continues this month with CAPTIVE OF THE BORDER LORD. Set on the Scottish Borders during the early Tudor era, it centers on a family of Border Reivers. This time, the heroine is Bessie Brunson, only sister of the clan. Here's the blurb:

TO MARRY HIM WILL BE TO BETRAY HER FAMILY

Bessie, the selfless sister of the powerful but stubborn Brunson clan, has sacrificed herself for her family’s honor and is at the mercy of the court of King James. Ill-suited to court life, she must confront their mortal enemy, Lord Thomas Carwell, dressed in nothing but borrowed finery and pride.

Underneath the relentless gaze of her captor, she’s enticed not only by him but also by the opulence of a world far removed from her own. When the furious king demands her brother’s head, Carwell is the only one to whom she can turn. But she must pay the ultimate price for his protection….

**Q & A with Blythe Gifford**

Was it easier to write the second book of a series?

“Easy” and “write” never seem to meet in the same sentence for me.  What came more smoothly this time was the historical mindset and events.  I knew the world, many of the key characters, and how they might relate to each other.  But then what did I do?  I took Bessie Brunson away from the valley she – and I – knew so well and plopped her in the middle of new corners of Scotland.  Ones I had to research all over again. 

So where does the story take place?

Like Cinderella, Bessie is whisked away from her work-a-day world, first, to a royal palace, Stirling Castle, and then, to the hero’s castle by the sea, modeled on Caerlaverock, the only triangularly shaped castle in Britain. 

Researching a castle sounds like fun!

It was!  Stirling is one of the most famous in Scotland.  It has now been restored beautifully and there’s a beautiful website that brings the castle, and the people to life.  The only problem is that many of those additions were made by the king AFTER the period of my story, so I was forever checking dates. 

I felt slightly less constrained about my hero’s castle, since he is, I must remind myself, fictional.  But Caerlaverock is well documented and now sits at the edge of a nature preserve, so the muse had lots of fodder!  Floor plans and photographs galore are available online.  

And your heroine gets to meet the king!  Just like Cinderella!

Yes, we meet King James V and see a tournament and dancing at the court.  All very glamorous, but also intimidating for a woman who’s never been so far from home.  We love the Cinderella story, but it seems to me that Cinderella was a fish out of water, just like Bessie Brunson.  That couldn’t be as easy as Walt Disney made it look!

So what about the hero?

Lord Thomas Carwell, hero of CAPTIVE OF THE BORDER LORD, appeared in RETURN OF THE BORDER WARRIOR.  He might (or might not) have betrayed the Brunsons and they certainly did not trust him.  I left the question unresolved.  In fact, I didn’t know the truth myself until I wrote this book, so the uncertainty was genuine.  He is a man of many secrets, as it turns out, prepared to adjust to shifting tides.  That made him the opposite of blunt, plainspoken Bessie Brunson and so, of course, they are perfect for each other. 

Does this book stand alone?

My intention was to make each story complete, however, the stories are tight and sequential and there’s an arc to the series as a whole which climaxes with a confrontation between the Brunsons and the king.  Harlequin scheduled them close together:  November/January/March, so readers who love to gobble up a series in order can do so!  I hope readers enjoy watching the evolving relationships among the Brunson family members, too.  Three siblings and, eventually, three spouses allowed some interesting interactions.

What’s up next?

TAKEN BY THE BORDER REBEL, will be released in print in North America February 19.  Electronic and UK editions will be available March 1.  As a bonus, starting February 25, I’ll have a free, online read available on the Harlequin website.  One of the secondary characters from CAPTIVE OF THE BORDER LORD will get her own happy ending!  (Title TBD.) 

One lucky reader who comments on today’s blog will be randomly selected to win a signed copy of RETURN OF THE BORDER WARRIOR or CAPTIVE OF THE BORDER LORD.  Your choice!  

Blythe Gifford has been known for medieval romances featuring characters born on the wrong side of the royal blanket. Now, she’s written a trilogy set on the turbulent Scottish Borders of the early Tudor era, starting with RETURN OF THE BORDER WARRIOR, November 2012, Harlequin Historical.  CAPTIVE OF THE BORDER LORD will follow in January 2013, and TAKEN BY THE BORDER REBEL in March 2013.  The Chicago Tribune has called her work "the perfect balance between history and romance."  Visit her at www.blythegifford.com, www.facebook.com/BlytheGifford, or on Twitter @BlytheGifford. 

Author photo by Jennifer Girard.  Cover Art Copyright © 2013 by Harlequin Enterprises Limited.  Permission to reproduce text granted by Harlequin Books S.A. Cover art used by arrangement with Harlequin Enterprises Limited. All rights reserved. ® and ™ are trademarks owned by Harlequin Enterprises Limited or its affiliated companies, used under license.

10 January 2013

Excerpt Thursday: Captive of the Border Lord by Blythe Gifford

This week, we’re welcoming author Blythe Gifford, a regular Unusual Historicals contributor, whose Brunson Clan trilogy continues this month with CAPTIVE OF THE BORDER LORD from the Harlequin Historical line.  (The series launched in November with RETURN OF THE BORDER WARRIOR and will conclude with the March 2013 release of TAKEN BY THE BORDER REBEL.)

Blythe will be here Sunday to talk about the series in more detail and offer a copy to one lucky commenter.

The Brunson Clan trilogy is set on the Scottish Borders during the early Tudor era and centers on a family of Border Reivers.  Here’s a glimpse of CAPTIVE OF THE BORDER LORD:

TO MARRY HIM WILL BE TO BETRAY HER FAMILY

Bessie, the selfless sister of the powerful but stubborn Brunson clan, has sacrificed herself for her family’s honor and is at the mercy of the court of King James. Ill-suited to court life, she must confront their mortal enemy, Lord Thomas Carwell, dressed in nothing but borrowed finery and pride.

Underneath the relentless gaze of her captor, she’s enticed not only by him but also by the opulence of a world far removed from her own. When the furious king demands her brother’s head, Carwell is the only one to whom she can turn. But she must pay the ultimate price for his protection….


**An Excerpt from Captive of the Border Lord**

In the excerpt below, the hero has followed the heroine to the kitchen, where she needs to replenish food and drink.  Suspicious of his reason for coming to the celebration uninvited, she has just asked him bluntly why he is there.

Carwell kept a smile clamped on his lips.  He was learning not to underestimate Bessie Brunson, but it was hard to keep that in mind when he looked at the woman.  Red hair tumbled over her shoulders, her brown eyes sparked with suspicion, and her lips were full and soft and ready…
He stopped his thoughts.  “Leave this night for celebration.  I’ll speak to your brothers tomorrow.” 
“Tomorrow?  When Rob’s head is double its size because of the wine he’s drunk this night and Johnnie is comfortably abed enjoying his new bride?”
He swallowed a sour retort.  “They’ll be ready to listen when they hear why I’ve come.  It’s a matter for men’s ears.”
She looked to Heaven before she met his eyes again.  “You’ve no women in your household.”
He blinked.  He hadn’t.  Not for years.  “No.  Not…now.”
The memory cramped his heart.  He would never take a woman for granted again.  A twinge, a weary sigh, these could signal the threat of something worse. 
He set the thought aside.  That was not to be shared with anyone, least of all with this stranger.  Yet for a moment, he had imagined she would understand.
“If you had,” she said, “you would know that we do not need to be protected from the truth.” 
Looking at this woman, he doubted that her family had protected from anything at all.  “Then you’ll know it when they do.  And it will be tomorrow.”  The king had no more patience than that.
Despite his offer of help, she asked for nothing as she moved around the room, effortlessly scooping up oat cakes and putting another batch near the hearth.  When she finished her sweep through the kitchen, she shook the girl awake and told her to watch that the fire did not burn the kitchen down.
Finally, she joined him at the door. 
“You wanted to help.”  She set down her cakes, filled two flagons with ale from the barrel, and shoved them at him, her eyes flashing with anger.  “Carry these.”
Silent, he followed her into the cold, proud that he had refrained from pouring her precious ale into the dirt.  The woman was stubborn as the rest of her kin.  Maybe more so.
But as he watched the sway of her walk, he remembered the way she had leaned toward him in the dance, following his lead through the unfamiliar steps.  For those few moments, there had been nothing but music and movement and the two of them.
Well, her hatred would be back in force tomorrow. 
Just as soon as she discovered he was here to take her brother hostage.

Blythe Gifford has been known for medieval romances featuring characters born on the wrong side of the royal blanket. Now, she’s launching a trilogy set on the turbulent Scottish Borders of the early Tudor era, starting with RETURN OF THE BORDER WARRIOR, November 2012, Harlequin Historical. CAPTIVE OF THE BORDER LORD will follow in January 2013, and TAKEN BY THE BORDER REBEL in March 2013. The Chicago Tribune has called her work "the perfect balance between history and romance.” Visit her at www.blythegifford.com, www.facebook.com/BlytheGifford, or on Twitter @BlytheGifford. 

Author photo by Jennifer Girard.  Excerpt Copyright © 2013 by Wendy B. Gifford.  Permission to reproduce text granted by Harlequin Books S.A.  Cover Art Copyright © 2013 by Harlequin Enterprises Limited.  Permission to reproduce text granted by Harlequin Books S.A. Cover art used by arrangement with Harlequin Enterprises Limited. All rights reserved. ® and ™ are trademarks owned by Harlequin Enterprises Limited or its affiliated companies, used under license.

04 November 2012

Guest Blog: Blythe Gifford


Blythe Gifford introduces The Brunson Clan in RETURN OF THE BORDER WARRIOR!

This week, we’re talking to one of our own, Blythe Gifford, who has been blogging with Unusual Historicals since 2009. Her new trilogy, The Brunson Clan, launches this month with RETURN OF THE BORDER WARRIOR. Set on the Scottish Borders during the early Tudor era, it centers on the Brunsons, a family of Border Reivers. Blythe is here to talk about the trilogy and offer a copy of the launch title to a lucky winner. Here's the blurb:

WORD IN THE ROYAL COURT HAS SPREAD THAT THE WILD SCOTTISH BORDERS ARE TOO UNRULY. UPON THE KING'S COMMAND, JOHN BRUNSON MUST RETURN HOME...

Once part of a powerful border clan, John has not set sight on the Brunson stone tower in years. With failure never an option, he must persuade his family to honour the King’s call for peace.

To succeed, John knows winning over the daughter of an allied family, Cate Gilnock, holds the key. But this intriguing beauty is beyond the powers of flattery and seduction. Instead, the painful vulnerability hidden behind her spirited eyes calls out to John as he is inexorably drawn back into the warrior Brunson clan…

**Q & A with Blythe Gifford**

What’s so unusual about the setting of this series?
First, let me say how glad I am to be here at “home,” talking about this series. What’s unusual? Well, when it comes to historical romance, which is what I write, Scottish Highlanders get all the glory. I find the Borders much more interesting. Whether there was a formal war or an uneasy peace, the Borders were, in effect, a war zone for 300 years. They operated almost like a “third country,” with their own “Border Laws.” Wardens, think of them as sheriffs or governors, were appointed for each governmental district, or March. The wardens of the Western Scottish March and the Western English March, for example, were supposed to work together to keep the peace and punish those who broke it. Their success was marginal at best.

So do the Borders have anything in common with the more popular Highlands?
We’re familiar with the importance of family in the Scottish Highlands, but it was equally important, if not more so, on the Borders. Family was more important than king of either Scotland or England and family feuds and alliances were stronger than national loyalty. One family might be allied with another across the border, or enemies with a family on its own side. The Border laws forbade marriage across the border, in a futile attempt to keep family loyalty aligned with national interest.

So how does that family loyalty influence RETURN OF THE BORDER WARRIOR?
Loyalty to family and the family’s loyalty to another member of the clan really drives the first book. John, the youngest son, returns home after years of serving as a “big brother” to the young Scottish king. John is a man with something to prove, both to himself and to his family. As the only blue-eyed Brunson, he’s always felt as if he didn’t belong. Now, he no longer wants to. As soon as he enforces the king’s command for peace, he plans to return to his life at court and leave the valley of his birth for the last time.

But first, he must persuade Cate Gilnock to release his family from their promise to avenge her father’s death. Such a promise is like a sacred oath. Cate is a woman fierce as a warrior, but behind her eyes, John senses vulnerability and secrets she refuses to share. Bit by bit, he falls in love with her, and with each step, he is drawn back into the life he thought he had left behind forever. Because of Cate, he discovers he is more like the rest of his family than he thought until, finally, he must decide:  Is he truly a Brunson? Or is he the King’s man after all? Which promise will he keep?

You’ve worked real history into the story as well, right?
I seem to be unable to write a story that’s not somehow tied to actual history. In this case, James V of Scotland is a character and his own ascension to power plays an important role in the story. James himself is one of the more “unusual” Scottish kings. He’s typically been overlooked while most of the attention goes to his daughter, Mary, Queen of Scots.

It’s been awhile between books for you, hasn’t it? And this represents a change in several ways.
My last release, HIS BORDER BRIDE, was out more than two years ago. It, too, was set on the Scottish side of the border, but almost two hundred years earlier. There were raids then, yes, but the heyday of the reiving era was the sixteenth century, when RETURN OF THE BORDER WARRIOR is set.

My previous books were set in the fourteenth century and featured a main character born on the wrong side of the (usually) royal blanket. So I changed time periods, as well as emphasis. Everyone in this series knows who their parents are. Of course, that is part of the problem! I enjoyed writing about the relationships between the two Brunson brothers and their sister, too.

You’ve already given regular readers of this blog a preview of the world of the Brunsons, haven’t you?
I’ve blogged about a typical night of raiding, about one of the deadliest Border feuds, and in October, wrote about the historic incident that was the inspiration for the entire series. In addition, I told readers about King James V’s illegitimate children. So if readers want more background, they can revisit those posts.

One lucky reader who comments on today’s blog will be randomly selected to win a signed copy of RETURN OF THE BORDER WARRIOR.

Blythe Gifford has been known for medieval romances featuring characters born on the wrong side of the royal blanket. Now, she’s launching a trilogy set on the turbulent Scottish Borders of the early Tudor era, starting with RETURN OF THE BORDER WARRIOR, November 2012, Harlequin Historical. CAPTIVE OF THE BORDER LORD will follow in January 2013, and TAKEN BY THE BORDER REBEL in March 2013. The Chicago Tribune has called her work “the perfect balance between history and romance.”



Photo credits. Cover used with permission. Author photo by Jennifer Girard 

01 November 2012

Excerpt Thursday: Return of the Border Warrior by Blythe Gifford


This week, we’re welcoming author Blythe Gifford,  a regular Unusual Historicals contributor, whose Brunson Clan trilogy launches this month with RETURN OF THE BORDER WARRIOR. The series will continue with CAPTIVE OF THE BORDER LORD, January 2013 and TAKEN BY THE BORDER REBEL, March 2013. Blythe will be here Sunday to talk about the series in more detail and offer a copy to one lucky commenter.

RETURN OF THE BORDER WARRIOR is set on the Scottish Borders during the early Tudor era and centers on a family of Border Reivers. Here’s a glimpse of the story, along with an excerpt:

WORD IN THE ROYAL COURT HAS SPREAD THAT THE WILD SCOTTISH BORDERS ARE TOO UNRULY. UPON THE KING'S COMMAND, JOHN BRUNSON MUST RETURN HOME...

Once part of a powerful border clan, John has not set sight on the Brunson stone tower in years. With failure never an option, he must persuade his family to honour the King’s call for peace.

To succeed, John knows winning over the daughter of an allied family, Cate Gilnock, holds the key. But this intriguing beauty is beyond the powers of flattery and seduction. Instead, the painful vulnerability hidden behind her spirited eyes calls out to John as he is inexorably drawn back into the warrior Brunson clan…

In this excerpt from Chapter One, John has come across Cate, practicing her sword fighting against her own shadow. He thinks to play with her, easily besting her sword with his dagger, but the woman proves more capable than he imagined…

He jumped just in time to escape a touch. Now was not the time for distractions. He had expected a playful joust. Instead, he faced a warrior.
He swung high, but she held up her sword, turned sideways, to block his stroke. A clever move, but lifting the two-handed sword had strained her strength and when she lowered it, her arms shook.
Seizing on her weakness, he attacked and they crossed blades again.  Prepared now, he leveraged his strength against her sword. Though she kept her grip, he pushed the blade away, coming close enough to feel her chest rise and fall, nearly touching his. 
Close enough that his mind wandered, careless of the blades, thinking that under her tunic and vest, she had breasts. Now he could see her face, the angles of it, sharp and cleanly sculpted as her sword. Yet thick lashes edged her brown eyes, disguising some of the hatred there. 
“Surrender now?”
Panting, she shook her head. Yet her lips parted, tempting him to take them. She was, after all, a woman. A kiss would be mightier than a sword.
He pushed her sword arm down, pulled her to him, and took her lips.
She yielded for a breath, no more. 
But it was long enough for him to lose his thoughts, to forget she held a sword and remember only that she was a woman, breasts soft against his chest, smelling of heather…
In a flash, she turned stiff as a sword and leaned away, though her lips did not leave his, so he thought she only teased.
When he felt the point of a dirk at his throat, he knew she did not. 
“Let me go,” she said, her lips still close that they moved over his. “Or you’ll be bleeding and I’ll leave you to it, I swear.”
He eased his arms from her back and she pushed him away, wiped her mouth, and spat into the dirt. 
He touched the scratch she’d left on his neck, grateful she had not drawn blood. 
Her eyes, which he had thought to turn soft with pleasure, narrowed, hard with fury.
“It’s a Brunson you’re facing,” he said, trying a smile. “Not a Storwick.”
She raised both sword and dirk, the larger wobbling in her grip. “It’s a man I’m facing who thinks what I want is of no consequence if it interferes with his privileges and pleasures.” 
Had he imagined the echo of the bedchamber in her voice? No more.
He raised his eyebrows, opened his arms and made a slight bow. “A thousand pardons.” Words as insincere as the feelings behind them.
She frowned. “You are a stranger here, so you know no better. And because you are a Brunson, I’ll let you keep your head, but I’ll warn you just once. You will not do that again. Ever.” 
She lowered her sword, slowly.
You are a stranger. She was the Brunson, besting him with a sword, displacing him at the family table. His temper rose. “And what if I do?”
The blade rose, this time, not pointed at his throat, but between his legs. “If you do, you won’t have to worry about bedding a woman ever again.”
He swallowed, gingerly, his body on fire. Only because she had challenged him. Nothing more. No man could desire such a woman. 
“Then have no worries on that score, Catie Gilnock,” he said, flush with anger. “When next I bed a woman, it most certainly will not be you.”

Blythe Gifford has been known for medieval romances featuring characters born on the wrong side of the royal blanket. Now, she’s launching a trilogy set on the turbulent Scottish Borders of the early Tudor era, starting with RETURN OF THE BORDER WARRIOR, November 2012, Harlequin Historical. CAPTIVE OF THE BORDER LORD will follow in January 2013, and TAKEN BY THE BORDER REBEL in March 2013. The Chicago Tribune has called her work “the perfect balance between history and romance.”


Photo credits. Cover used with permission. Author photo by Jennifer Girard