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Alinor (The Roselynde Chronicles: Book Two) [Hardcover]

Roberta Gellis (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)


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Book Description

November 1984 Roselynde Chronicles
She could barely meet his eyes . . . so how was she to marry him?

Widowed and a mother of two, Lady Alinor no longer feels the same joy being the mistress of Roselynde. Her husband's passing has left emptiness, both at the keep and in her heart. Somehow, Alinor manages to remain spirited, even as King John's rule means she must fight to keep her land and her family safe. Salvation lies with a trusted family friend, Sir Ian De Point, who offers to marry Alinor. In order to protect that which she loves, Alinor reluctantly agrees because England's days are growing darker, along with the ire of King John, who hasn't forgotten the mistress of Roselynde, nor his intentions for her ruination . . .

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"A master storyteller." -- Publishers Weekly --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 558 pages
  • Publisher: Gregg Pr; First Edition edition (November 1984)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0839828616
  • ISBN-13: 978-0839828617
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,124,978 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Roberta Gellis has a varied educational background--a master's degree in biochemistry and another in medieval literature--and working history--10 years as a research chemist, many years as a free-lance editor of scientific manuscripts, and more than 40 years as a writer. She is married--to the same man for over 60 years (no mean feat in these days) and lives in Lafayette, Indiana, with her husband Charles and a lively Scottish terrier called Zoe. She has one child, Mark, who teaches Rhetoric (a fancy name for expository writing) at Kettering University in Michigan. Mark is married to Sandra and they have a lovely daughter, Elizabeth.

Gellis has been a successful writer of historical fiction, publishing over 25 meticulously researched historical novels since 1964. The best known of these are The Roselynde Chronicles (ROSELYNDE, ALINOR, JOANNA, GILLIANE, RHIANNON, and SYBELLE). The series has been reprinted many times since its first appearance in 1979, most recently in 2006. Gellis has also been the recipient of many awards, including the Silver and Gold Medal Porgy for historical novels from West Coast Review of Books, the Golden Certificate and Golden Pen from Affaire de Coeur, The Romantic Times Award for Best Novel in the Medieval Period (more than once) and Lifetime Achievement Award for Historical Fantasy, as well as Romance Writers of America's Lifetime Acheivement Award.

More recently Gellis has ventured into other genres, starting with mythological fantasy (DAZZLING BRIGHTNESS, SHIMMERING SPLENDOR, ENCHANTED FIRE, BULL GOD, and THRICE BOUND). Most recently she has written historical fantasy, with a series of book coauthored by Mercedes Lackey set in Elizabethan times (THIS SCEPTER'D ISLE, ILL MET BY MOONLIGHT, BY SLANDEROUS TONGUES, and AND LESS THAN KIND). Before that she was writing historical mysteries, a four-book series set in London and Oxford in 1139 (A MORTAL BANE, A PERSONAL DEVIL, BONE OF CONTENTION and CHAINS OF FOLLY) and one set in the Italian Renaissance in Ferrara (LUCREZIA BORGIA and the MOTHER OF POISONS).

Since Gellis is one of the early addicts to electronic readers---she purchased a RocketeBook way back in 1999---it is no surprise that she was eager to get her own out of print historical romances into electronic format. Cerridwen Press (http://www.cerridwenpress.com) has published the Heiress Series (THE ENGLISH HEIRESS, THE CORNISH HEIRESS, THE KENT HEIRESS, FORTUNE'S BRIDE, and A WOMAN'S ESTATE) as well as the Royal Dynasty Series (don't ask me about that, there isn't a royal or a dynasty in any of the four books---it was a notion of a long-ago agent) SIREN SONG, WINTER SONG, FIRE SONG, and A SILVER MIRROR. Cerridwen offers a variety of formats, one of which can be read by the Kindle and for those too firmly addicted to paper, the books are also available in a very nice Trade edition (but those are rather expensive).

I'm sorry I don't have any amusing anecdotes to relate, as recommended by the Profile, but a writer's life is really very quiet. Sometimes my neighbors ask my husband what has happened to me because they haven't seen me in such a long time. Depending on his humor of the moment, sometimes Charles tells them that I can't come outside because he keeps me chained to my computer---but that isn't true. He lets me get up once in a while.

Roberta Gellis

 

Customer Reviews

19 Reviews
5 star:
 (16)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (19 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The book that made me want to write medieval fiction too!, May 28, 1999
By A Customer
Alinor is perhaps the best medieval historical I have ever read. In no other book have I met characters who have been so real that they have almost walked off the page and into my room. The jousting scene is a true masterpiece. Her hero, tall dark and handsome could have been a stereotype in less skilled hands, but she turns him into a wonderfully rounded character, complete with human flaws. I'm still in love with him more than twenty years after reading the novel! Alinor too is superbly characterised. I love the way she gets the better of King John. Roberta Gellis's grasp of Medieval politics is masterly, as is the way she brings them to life so that a reader can understand them without feeling they are being lectured at. I write historical fiction myself under the pen name Elizabeth Chadwick - see The Conquest, The Champion, The Love knot. I am aware of owing a tremendous debt to Roberta Gellis for showing me the way. I wish she was more prolific. I'd buy every one!!
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Roberta Gellis continues her classic Roselynde series with Alinor, June 29, 2006
By 
Rebecca Huston "telynor" (On the Banks of the Hudson) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
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This year I've been busy rediscovering a classic historical romance series that was first published back in the 1970's and early 1980's. Now under the Harlequin Signature Select publishers, the books are being reprinted, with additional notes and tidbits from the author, Roberta Gellis.

Alinor, the third book in the series, begins in the year 1206, about fourteen years or so after the events in Roselynde. England's King Richard has died, and so has his mother, Queen Alinor. Now the youngest of the Angevin brood has become King -- John. Alinor, the lady of Roselynde, knows that her life and lands are in danger once the king discovers that her beloved husband, Simon Lemagne, has died. To save herself, and especially the lives of her two children, Joanna and Adam, she knows that she has to remarry, and soon. It's not a prospect that she is looking forward to.

To complicate matters further, an old friend is returning to Roselynde -- Simon's former squire, Ian Vipont. Ian, who is much the same age as Alinor, adores Simon's children, and when word comes that King John is planning a particularly unpleasant match for Alinor, Ian decides that he must protect her and the children, even if it means that he must marry her, even though she may not love him at all.

As for Alinor, still mourning the death of a husband who was thirty years her senior, reuniting with Ian means that she finds herself overcome with both an emotional and physical attraction. Cautiously, and with a great deal of mutual misunderstanding, the couple agree to marry, even knowing that it will cause them both a great deal of grief at the hands of King John and his henchmen.

How the pair work out their differences, and manage to survive a very dangerous time in English history is what makes this novel work. I found myself very caught up in Alinor and Ian's story, along with those of the children, and Ian's squires, Owain and Geoffrey. These are characters that the reader can empathize with, and despite a few problems, the setting and situations are very believable.

Along the way, the reader is treated to scenes of a medieval marriage, a very vivid boar hunt, sieges and medieval warfare, and a plot and storyline that has real substance to it. Roberta Gellis is one of those few writers that I consistantly enjoy, who can make a historical setting live and breathe, and while the research does take liberties here and there, I can forgive her. What I have really enjoyed is that she's not afraid to weave in actual historical personages into the story -- here we not only see King John, but his half-brother, William Longsword; William Marshal and his wife Isobel and Lord Llewelyn of the Welsh and his wife, Joan. All of these people will play important parts in the novel, but Gellis has great talent to make them behave as actual people do, and makes the story all that more real. Too, problems are not solved in an instant, which also makes the story believable -- it takes quite a while for Alinor and Ian to work out their differences.

Now for the tricky part of the novel. Gellis is not at all shy in showing that the real middle ages were not the pretty, romanticized view that most have. There is a great deal of violence, some of it directed at women and children which most authors have abandoned in recent years for not being that politically correct. However, it was a factor in the time, and while it did make me a bit queasy in spots, it was at least not gratutitous. I would caution sensitive readers to take care in reading this one, as the violence and sex does get graphic.

My other big problem is with the way that Gellis handles the character of King John. Yes, he has been vilified as one of history's most evil kings, but she paints him here as a sadistic monster. While some of his actions were certainly horrible -- his involvement with the death of his nephew, Arthur certainly is questionable -- I have a hard time believing that he was this repellent. Most of what is known of John has been written by religious chroniclers who glorified Richard Lionheart (who wasn't that much of a king) and treated John as barely human. However, looking at what he actually did creates a very different portrait of the man -- for a more sympathetic picture, I would recommend Sharon Kay Penman's novel, Here Be Dragons which takes a much more careful view; if you enjoy the characters in this one, Penman's novel has many of them appearing in Dragons.

In these reprint editions, additional features are tucked away in the back of the book. This time around we get an author's note, wherein she explains some of the liberties that she took with history; a glossary of medieval words and expressions, and an excerpt from the next book in the series, Joanna which is due to be reprinted in December 2006. Alas, there isn't any medieval recipes in this one, something that I hope will appear in the next book.

All in all, despite the flaws, this was a very enjoyable read, and gets a very solid recommendation from me. Four and a half stars, rounded up to five.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Alinor is one of my favorites, June 30, 2006
Despite the cover, Alinor does not wield a sword during this story. She does however wield base practicality, political craftiness, leadership charisma, a mothering instinct, and of course, womanly charms.
Roberta's research into the lifestyles of the times allows for a vividly detailed setting that provided several "oh, so that's how they used to do it" revelations for me without beating me over the head with it.
The writing itself is masterful with realistic love, subplots galore,deep character development, and main characters that I admire. That last is my criteria for enjoying a book.

By the way, even though the featured review gives away too much of the story... there is a lot left to be discovered and enjoyed.
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