Laura Frantz

What’s in the February Issue of HRM?

We know your TBR (To Be Read)  list is going to jump up after this issue! 

Not only will you fall in love with the authors who wrote the articles and columns and be looking up their books, each of them mention several titles that mean something to them and it’ll send you further down the path of good reads. Additionally, be sure and find your favorite sub-genre comfort zone in HRM Book Reviews. Thank you to all the authors and reviewers that shared their books, time, and opinions there. And now to introduce what lies ahead in the features of the February Issue...

HRM’s Patricia Walter-Fisher was able to interview best-selling author Beverly Jenkins about her career, personal life, and what’s ahead for this beloved writer. Like many authors, “Ms. Bev” fell into writing and got “enough rejections to wallpaper my house…[and] wallpaper your house.” She’s known not only for her heart-warming plots and characters, but for her ability to include real historical details, including accurate early US African-American history (she shares some excellent source titles for this) and sometimes self-described research tangents like, “what kinds of frogs would you hear at night in Louisiana?” 

Author Anya Seton was born in New York in 1904 and wrote twelve historical novels, one of which, “The Winthrop Woman” (and a particular kiss from “Katherine”), captivated Susannah Fullerton years ago. Now she brings us an overview of Ms. Seton’s life and work in the HRM column, Falling in Love with Classics. 

In Heyer’s the Thing this month, Author and Heyer expert, Jennifer Kloester tackles a question she must hear so often, What’s your favourite Heyer? If you haven’t read any Georgette Heyer and you’re looking for a book to start with, or you have read oodles of her books and want to hear if Ms. Kloester shares your opinion, be sure and give this article a read.

In keeping with the St. Valentine’s Day theme, we have two articles from author Michelle De Bruin. De Bruin gives us a primer on the Romantic era of music and some of its better known composers in The Romance Found in Beautiful Music. She also gives us A Brief History of Saint Valentine, and the most popular biographical story that explains why he became the patron saint of lovers.

“It’s been said that love makes the world go around”. Certainly we as historical romance fans believe there is a lot of truth to the old saying. From early Valentine’s cards to missives of love and affection, author Laura Frantz explores some cards and letters of love by famous folks from history.

Author Deb Marlowe is back with some Regency Valentine’s Day traditions and fun details about how it was celebrated. She has two recipes for us: a recipe for Cranberry and Wine Poached Pears and homemade Marzipan. Cranberries were native to England and were thought to be superior in flavour, though smaller in size than those from Russia or the Americas.

For a spot of travel, author Sarah Sundin shares photos and observations from her research trip to Normandy, France, the setting for her Sunrise at Normandy series set during World War II, while Linda de Sosa brings news of her historical romance travel holiday service, Historical Romance Journeys, and gives us a taste of what we might enjoy with group travel as like-minded HR book lovers.

Our short story is titled, “A Warrior’s Heart” by author Rose Vane. This romantic tidbit is set in Wallachia, part of present day Romania, and we think you’ll enjoy it.

And yes, more Society News from our special correspondent at The Teatime Tattler in Historical Gossip, “Make this a special edition,” Samuel declared with a smirk. “I want it on the front page and not buried inside. Our readers deserve to see this first thing with their breakfast.”(Sherry Ewing).

There may be bonus content. Stay tuned!!!

On Love, Letters & Shakespeare's Sonnet 116

Love and Letters

by Charlotte Brothers

In this post, let’s explore our private associations with Shakespeare’s famous Sonnet 116, love letters, and talk about Austen’s more seasoned heroes & heroines.

From a letter to Eliza signed Alexander Hamilton-

Coming in the next issue, popular inspirational historical romance author and Christy Award winner, Laura Frantz, invites us to re-visit some love letters from well-known men written in that first blush of love or as long-time husbands.

“Sadly, our electronic age has far removed us from the art of letter writing, even rendering them antique. Yet who among us who’ve received or written a love letter have ever forgotten the emotion behind it? Or the occasion it became?”

Laura Frantz “Historical Love Letters” for HRM coming 2020

Sonnet 116

Let me not to the marriage of true minds

Admit impediments. Love is not love

Which alters when it alteration finds,

Or bends with the remover to remove:

O no; it is an ever-fixed mark,

That looks on tempests, and is never shaken;

It is the star to every wandering bark,

Whose worth's unknown, although his height be taken.

Love's not Time's fool, though rosy lips and cheeks

Within his bending sickle's compass come;

Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks,

But bears it out even to the edge of doom.

If this be error and upon me proved,

I never writ, nor no man ever loved.

One of the most familiar and oft quoted love poems of the English language, William Shakespeare’s Sonnet 116 conjures up pleasant memories for me.

I’m probably not the only one here that first heard it first in the 1995 movie version of Sense and Sensibility and then committed it to memory that same year along with my husband who was taking a Shakespeare class at the time.

Nowadays, when I hear this sonnet in my head, it’s spoken in the sable baritone of British actor Richard Armitage who reads it in the Audible Collection of Classic Love Poems. This audio collection features poems from a variety of poets, not only Shakespeare, and it’s provided me excellent listening material while I paint or cook.

Here’s a link to an old interview with Richard about his experience recording the poems. https://youtu.be/1CWi73TYWHE Interview with Richard Armitage – narrator of 'Classic Love Poems'

Richard Armitage as John Thornton in “North and South” BBC

Who else here watched or read Sense and Sensibility as a much younger woman and just could not see appeal in the Colonel Brandon character? How about Persuasion? Was the plainer or older hero and heroine harder to identify with? Has that changed for you as you’ve gotten older?

I’d like to know what you think.

How we relate to fictional characters may correlate to our own evolving understanding of love in all its seasons. The word “love” in English really has a variety of meanings and by its nature, or our nature, seems to change through the years.

Alan Rickman as Colonel Christopher Brandon in 1995 “Sense and Sensibility

My husband and I met before the internet and cell phone era. I lived in Maine and he lived in Washington state. We wrote long letters to each other, and there was nothing more thrilling at the time then getting a letter from him in the mail. We talked on the phone 1x a month and the letters flew twice a month at about 20 pages each. We have them saved and bundled with ribbons.

Moving away from lovers… do you have anyone close to you that you still write to with pen and paper?

I am grateful that I have letters from my grandparents, great-grandparents and other dear relatives and friends saved. It’s so precious to see their handwriting and remember the family events that were going on while they were alive.

I have a dear friend that gave me a blue lapis pen with gold flecks in it and some handmade writing paper many years ago. I still treasure the pen. It’s got the very unromantic name of ‘Super Pen” and I still buy it ink and use it for letter writing. This friend and I correspond through letters only and share a passion for art, books, and paper craft. Our relationship has produced a very special collection of letters that now span nearly thirty years of our lives and the exchange won’t stop until one of us does.

Remember the gift that a card or written words can be.

The lapis pen and postcards in “Memories of Summer” by Thimgan Hayden

The lapis pen and postcards in “Memories of Summer” by Thimgan Hayden

I hope you’ve enjoyed this foray into the art of love and letters! Cards and letters are an inexpensive and yet precious gift to give.

Won’t you write and tell us of your special letter or life event that connects with a topic mentioned here?

Sincerely,

Charlotte B.