I am pleased to announce that the winner of my Lionheart drawing was Johnny Pez. I’ll do another drawing in coming months, so you’ll all have a chance to win again. I’d like to thank everyone who entered the drawing for the lovely comments posted about my writing. Writing is a strange profession in many ways. It is sadly, a solitary one, and it is subjective, which can be difficult for writers to accept. We naturally want every living soul on the planet to love our books. All writers suffer through dry stretches, those barren patches when inspiration has shriveled and confidence has withered and I find myself wondering if I can write a shopping list, much less another five hundred page novel. But because I am fortunate enough to get such generous and eloquent feedback from my readers on my blog and Facebook pages, I don’t listen to those insidious inner voices, and the holiday season seems a good time to thank you all for that.
For those who haven’t been by my Facebook page recently, I am delighted to report that I adopted a cocker spaniel or spaniel mix last week. She was listed on Petfinder as a poodle-spaniel cross, although the rescue later told me they thought she is a purebred cocker spaniel. I have my doubts, for she is much smaller than the spaniels I’ve seen. She is, however, sweet and loving and playful, and if there were a contest for World’s Cutest Dog, she’d be a shoo-in. I was looking for a companion dog for Tristan, my shepherd, as he got along very well with my poodle, Chelsea. But he surprised me by showing some ambivalence toward his new roommate. Holly would come over and lie down beside him and he’d get up and stalk away like a crotchety old uncle irked at having to babysit. She did not give up, though, and she is winning him over. I caught them playing together yesterday, and he has been sharing his toys with her, even his beloved stuffed duck.
I have a number of blogs planned for the coming year. I’d like to do one for those who’ve read Lionheart, as not even an eleven page AN could cover all that I’d like to share with my readers—more assurances that the most improbable events come from the crusader and Saracen chronicles, information about the fate of some of the minor characters, those who cannot be googled. I still have three blogs left to do about the Eleanor of Aquitaine Tour in June. I plan to do one about rescue groups and the remarkable work they do. I was permitted to select only five books when the National Public Radio asked me to write about the Best Historical Novels of 2011, and there are others worthy of mention, too, so that will be another blog. I hope to do interviews with writers I admire and to call my readers’ attention to websites sure to appeal to those who love books and history. I want to do blogs about two remarkable series—George R.R. Martin’s Ice and Fire series and Bernard Cornwell’s Saxon series. And I also would like to do occasional updates about the progress of A King’s Ransom—or the lack thereof. So far Coeur de Lion is being unusually cooperative for an Angevin, but in dealing with the Devil’s Brood, I never know how long that will last.
I want to mention, too, that I have updated my website recently, and it now has links to many of the interviews I did for Lionheart; there are also links to reviews of the book, and no, I did not include the one relatively unfavorable one, not being a masochist. I’ve added new writers and websites to the My Favorites section, as well, and have expanded my Medieval Mishaps section, in which I confess to mistakes that have infiltrated my books, including one so mind-boggling to me that I did a Mea Culpa for it in the Lionheart AN even though the error itself occurred in The Reckoning. I have not yet added the link to the interview I did for NPR, but here is the link to their website and my piece about the Best Historical Novels of 2011. http://www.npr.org/2011/12/24/143149380/a-passion-for-the-past-2011s-best-historical-fiction And as my Facebook friends know, I have actually managed to write a short story, proving that the Age of Miracles is not dead. It features Constance de Hauteville, unhappy wife of Richard I’s nemesis, Heinrich von Hohenstaufen, the Holy Roman Emperor who could have taught Colombian drug lords something about abduction and extortion. Lionheart readers will have met Constance with Eleanor at Lodi, where she performs a kindness for Berengaria. Her story will appear in the upcoming anthology by George R.R. Martin and Gardner Dozois, Dangerous Women.
I want to close with something that one of my friends posted on my Facebook page. I added it to the comments section of the last blog, but I know not everyone reads through them all, so here it is again: “If I make it to Heaven, I’m asking Richard III if he knows what happened to his nephews. If I don’t make it to Heaven, I’ll ask Henry Tudor.”
I haven’t had a chance yet to take some photos of Holly, but I do have a beautiful one of Tristan to share, taken by the photographer for the Atlantic City Press to accompany an interview they did with me about Lionheart. I think he looks very regal, not at all like the dog that came so close to death in that Florida shelter. Thanks again to Joan, his savior, and Becky, his foster mom, and all those wonderful Echo volunteers who drove him up the East Coast to his new home and new life, his pilgrimage described so aptly by my friend Glenne as “like the passing of the Olympic Torch.”
All good wishes for a happy and safe New Year’s Eve. Let’s hope that the New Year will be a better one for us all.