11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
fantastic and realistic medieval, December 15, 2004
Inner flap blurb time:
"A Norman heiress was a chattel to be sold in marriage to the highest
bidder. If one husband died she was up for sale again.
Only the first of Matilda de Risle's husbands gives her anything
back. His is the customary Saxon morning gift -- the present to a
wife if her lord finds her sexually pleasing on their wedding night.
Matilda's morning gift was Dungesey in the Fens..."a bolt hole my,
dear somewhere to hide should trouble come." And come it does. As the
war between King Stephen and Empress Matilda in the 1140s tears
England apart, Matilda de Risle has to fight for her land, her son's
safety--and her own life. Matilda, snobbish, bossy, inquisitive,
realistic, competitive, and tough, is at once a powerful and
endearing central character in Diana Norman's splendid new novel of
medieval English life. It is set in a barbarous civil war and
is by turns violent and very funny. Above all it fills the pages with
real people, with the scents of the Fens in all seasons, and tells in
the end a heartwrenching love story."
This blurb really tells why I've enjoyed the two Diana Norman books
I've tried so far. The characters are real. Sometimes noble and
wonderful and sometimes pettish and jealous. You might get mad with
them but you can understand why they act as they do. She has a
delicious, subtle sense of humor which had me laughing out loud
several times.
Her research appears to be meticulous but is never hurled at us in
chunks just to prove she did it. Plus it's not too disgusting in
portraying medieval life. And I love the way she doesn't hit you over
the head and take you by the hand to lead you to these facts. She
also makes religion an integral part of the story.
Things which may put some people off. The heroine is fourteen when
the story starts, not unusual for medieval child brides. It spans a
20 year period of time. The heroine is married three times before she
finally hooks up with the hero. It's more a historical novel with a
romance threaded through it then a true romantic historical.
Finding out about life in the Fens, the marshland around Ely in
Cambridgeshire, was fascinating. How they lived, what they ate, how
they hunted and wove reeds to provide things needed for day to day
life. And watching the clash between Norman and Saxon showed how the
two sides were still settling in. It's a detailed snapshot
of the era and one I thoroughly enjoyed. A-
Here is the full sentence from which the blurb quote is taken:
"I just wanted, my dear, for you to have a bolthole, somewhere to
hide should trouble come, where you and our children will always be
safe and hidden and have plenty to eat. I know it seems an odd little
gift to you and it will take time to get used to its people--these
are the true English and nobody is odder than they--but I shall feel
happier that you have it."
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