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Historical Fiction – My Favorite Escape

Historical Fiction – My Favorite Escape In a recent survey, 80% of avid readers listed historical novels as one of their top three favorite types of books to read. I wasn’t really surprised, since historical fiction, especially historical romance fiction, is my favorite genre. But it got me thinking; why the broad appeal? First, historical novels provide a fantastic escape. When life gets stressful, the first thing I like to do is pick up a…

Movers and Shakers

It’s moving day so we’re shaking things up! Due to my husband’s job transfer, our family is saying good bye to our beloved northwestern Washington and heading to Sacramento, California. I’d love to say I’m excited but I’m just too heartbroken about moving yet again and leaving behind dear friends. However, I’m anxious for our family to be reunited. With the move and all the fall out, I will probably not blog much. Once we…

The Secret Language of Regency Fashion

When perusing old records including fashion drawings, it is easy to become confused by all the different terms used in a historical context. One such example are the words, morning, afternoon and evening, which didn’t mean what they do today. From what I have been able to determine, morning was the time of day before dinner. Therefore, Morning Dress is what one wore during the day until dinner—not just in the hours before noon. A…

Robots in the Regency

Technology from the 18th and 19th century often seems downright steampunk, when one considers the amazing advances mechanical geniuses made in mechanisms such as clocks, music boxes, and automatons, which were quite literally, robots, or androids. No, they didn’t go about shouting “Danger, Will Robinson” or make friends with humans or even take over the world (or ship), but they did move in complex ways. In the case of this charming automaton, they could also…

Regency Writing, Quills and the Indispensable Pen Knife

In a time before phones, email, text messages, and social media, Regency ladies and gentlemen had only one way of keeping in touch with friends and family too far distant to see frequently; they wrote letters. The upper classes took their writing very seriously, and often wrote long, detailed letters to family and friends. Many also wrote religiously in their journals. And, of course, poets, authors, and anyone who kept books or ledgers needed reliable…

A History of Romance Literature

by freelance writer Jane Sandwood Romance novels have a 34% share of the U.S fiction market, comfortably beating genres such as science fiction, fantasy and the classics according to statistics published by the Romance Writers of America. Within the romance genre sits the historical romantic novel, which, with the ability to transport the reader to another time and another place, provides total escapism. With the continued popularity of the historical romance, it’s interesting to have…

Regency Duels, Affaires of Honor

In England, dueling was part of a long-standing code of honor, far beyond mere tradition. Gentlemen took their dueling very seriously; they would rather die than be dishonored. Today, we’d call it misplaced pride, or an overdeveloped sense of vengeance, or really stupid, but hey, that was a different world with a different set of rules. And yeah, I’m extremely grateful the men we love don’t settle their differences like this. By the Regency Era,…

A Little Crooked House

While visiting England this past summer, I toured Windsor castle and enjoyed the town. One cute little place in the town of Windsor that captured my attention was a little crooked house called, unsurprisingly, The Crooked House of Windsor. It brought to mind the children’s nursery rhyme from Mother Goose: “There was a crooked man and he walked a crooked mile. He found a crooked sixpence, against a crooked stile. He bought a crooked cat,…

Regency London Living, the boot scraper

Georgian, Regency, and Victorian England conjure images of  unparalleled sumptuous by-gone eras. Through such romantic lens, it is easy to forget the every day, un-elegance of living in the horse and carriage days, when cleanliness was not so easy to maintain as it is in modern Western living. Before automobiles, asphalt, and street sweepers, trodding the streets and roadways got one dirty—especially one’s shoes. To protect a home from the mud and other undesirable matter…

Cardinal Birds and the Christmas Connection

Of all the Christmas symbols, one that has long puzzled yet charmed me is a pretty little bird we call the Cardinal. Originally, I believed that the association between Cardinals and Christmas was the way their scarlet feathers add a beautiful burst of color against a mostly gray or white winter landscape. However, upon further research, (I am pretty nerdy, you know) I discovered that while these are both true, there are other, albeit mostly…