دسته: دسته‌بندی نشده

  • Celebrating Women’s History Month

    Celebrating Women’s History Month


    A nice surprise from Harlequin

    Did you know March is Women’s History Month? I confess, I didn’t. The surprise didn’t end there: Harlequin counts my heroine, Safira of Paris, as a “woman of action.” 

    They’re including her story, Kept by the Viking, in a month long campaign, celebrating historical romance and strong women in history. 

    Safira is definitely resourceful, cunning woman who knows what she wants. Don’t take my word for it. Read an excerpt where Safira gives a man his comeuppance…and Rurik could kiss her for doing it:

    Kept by the Viking
    Forgotten Sons series, Book 1

    Mouth pursing, Dom Bertulf paused his rant against evil Viking raiders. Safira eyed the Forgotten Sons and let the leather curtain drop.

    “Pardon my interruption, Lord Ademar, Jarl.” She folded both hands against her skirts, her voice subdued. “I will join the men as I have not eaten yet.”

    “Please. Sit beside Rurik. Astrid,” Ademar called across the hall. “Some of the lingonberry bread and butter for Safira.” Then to Safira “I recall you enjoyed the bread last night.”

    Head bowed, she took her seat. Rurik was stiff in his chair. He didn’t trust her meekness.

    “Carry on, Bertulf,” the jarl said. “You were close to the good part of your story…where Vikings threatened you with their words.”

    Chuckles rippled through the hall. The Dom pushed up on the balls of his feet, his cassock swinging against spindly shins. Safira sat with both hands in her lap. Her silence suited Rurik for now. It wouldn’t last. She craved conversation with him as much as he did with her.

    It was part of their weave. Even their words belonged to each other.

    Gyda set a plate of lingonberry bread and a crock of butter before Safira. Eyes downcast, Safira buttered her bread. Gone was last night’s fine lady. She would hardly be noticed save the red silk poking up from her bodice. A leather belt cinched her undyed tunic, and she’d tied her hair in two places, at the nape and lower down her back, the same as when they journeyed.

    “It’s all bluster until Ebbo speaks,” Ademar said quietly for Rurik. “He’s the Abbot of Rouen and, for the time being, Wandrille. Wandrille’s abbot died last winter and the bishop has yet to name the new abbot.”

    “Who is he? He has the bearing of a warrior.”

    “He was. A great one. Served two kings of Paris until his family was killed years ago. Then he devoted his life to the White Christ. He brews excellent cyser, throws a spear with deadly accuracy, and I count him a friend.”

    “Who killed his family?”

    Ademar’s eyes slanted at Rurik. “Vikings.”

    Rurik’s spine hit the chair. Ebbo would have a say if he got the land or not? A fate to be decided over the theft of beer? He wanted to howl against rule of law. No blood was shed. The worst that had happened was a bent door hinge. If it had been Vlad or his men, blood would’ve spilled. Lives would’ve been lost. His father had to be laughing at his good luck.

    Was Safira laughing too? She’d warned him. But her profile was a delicate line, a fringe of jet-colored lashes dipping low against tanned cheeks. Where was the woman who kicked dirt at Sothram’s shin? The woman who boldly challenged him to a duel of trading skills in Abbod village? She nibbled a piece of bread, spine straight, head downcast. The corners of her mouth pinched. Safira was up to something.

    “What say you, Rurik of Birka, to the crimes you and the Forgotten Sons have been accused of?” Longsword’s voice beckoned from the left.

    The riddle that was Safira this morn would have to wait.

    “Everyone knows we took their beer,” he said and gave his attention to the monks. “I will pay twice what the caskets were worth and see the blacksmith about forging a new hinge for their door.”

    “Sounds like fair payment,” the jarl said.

    Abbot Ebbo’s bald pate dipped. “I thank you for making restitution for the wrongs done to my brothers.” His voice rumbled as deep as Thorvald’s. “The greater concern is that you might be their overlord and your men their guardians.”

    “There will be a test of battle, a holmgang, between Vlad—” Longsword extended his left hand “—and Rurik.” He stretched a hand to the right.

    A holmgang, a common means for Vikings to settle disputes. The fighter whose blood first touched the ground was defeated.

    “Because you will not fight,” the jarl went on. “Vlad will fight on your behalf.”

    Ebbo’s stone-faced glance went from Vlad to Rurik to Longsword. “You will decide the overlord from this battle?”

    “Yes. Tomorrow’s fight will be a uniting of Viking and Christian.”

    The good abbot snorted at that. “I’m more concerned about the soul of the man you would put over these good monks.”

    “And I’m more concerned about his might,” the jarl sneered. “While your testimony is welcome, the final decision rests with me.”

    Bemusement flickered in Ebbo’s eyes. His sandaled feet spread wider. “We welcome your spirit of cooperation and respect for the church, jarl. I make note of it when I send my reports to the bishop.”

    Truth boiled in Rurik. He could tell the good Abbot their fates would worsen with Vlad. Monks going into the forest to harvest mushrooms would never come back. Men sleeping in their beds would not wake up, their throats slit in the night. Vlad was a rabid dog who did not care about the rights of men.

    Ademar sat taller in his chair. “Do not forget my father built many stone churches in tribute to your God.”

    “And then he called for sacrifices to your Odin before he died,” the Abbot shot back. “My brothers from Wandrille Abbey need to know they will be safe under Viking rule.”

    Longsword steepled his fingers. The Abbot’s veiled warning about letters to the bishop didn’t appear to bother him. Instead he asked, “Rurik, how do you answer their concerns?”

    All eyes were on him. Two of Vlad’s feral-eyed men fingered their knives. Bjorn and Gunnar stood beside a post, marking the warriors across the room. Rurik fought well with a sword, not words. But a new skill was demanded of him—to be a leader of fighters and peacekeepers.

    “I have been told a man reaps what he sows.”

    Three monks craned their necks at the Viking quoting what must be hallowed words.

    The good Abbot nodded sagely. “You are familiar with a Godly tenet. Then you will know there is a time to judge every deed.”

    “My men were hungry,” Rurik grated. “Our provisions were running low.”

    “Thus, you needed…beer?” the Abbot countered.

    Vlad and his men snickered.

    Safira stirred in her seat. “Father Abbot, if I may speak.”

    “Granted.”

    “I was traveling with these men.” When Dom Bertulf’s scowl darkened, she rushed on, “They rescued me from a cruel fate.” She linked both hands like a supplicant about to pray. “I will not bend your ear with my sorry tale in the face of such important matters as stolen beer.”

    Rurik’s legs tensed. Her breezy tone was familiar. Haughty and quick. A verbal punch was coming.

    But…” Her voice trailed lightly as her gaze swept from one monk to the other. “We were terribly hungry and thirsty.”

    “You let yourself be ruled by the flesh—” Dom Bertolf stepped forward “—and broke the sanctity of holy ground…for what? Something to drink? These men are little more than outlaws.”

    She smiled sweetly. “Good sir, I know I am a simple woman, but please tell me, isn’t there a tale of King David taking altar bread at the tabernacle of Nob? A holy place, no?”

    The Dom frowned. “There is such a story, but that hardly equates to Vikings plundering Wandrille Abbey.”

    “As I have heard the tale, David and his men were outlaws, on the run from King Saul. They took consecrated bread from consecrated ground.” She rolled her shoulder in a Gallic shrug. “Yet, these Vikings are lawful men. I would have a care if I were you. David became king of those priests, and this man, Rurik, may one day be your overlord.” She paused, her face a picture of innocence. “There is a strong connection between the two, no?”

    Bjorn, Gunnar, and Thorvald grinned. So did Ademar, Longsword, and yes, even Abbot Ebbo.

    “What kind of unnatural woman are you?” Bertolf blustered.

    “A learned one, sir.”

    Rurik grinned, familiar with the bite in her voice.



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  • It’s Time to Celebrate World Book Day – Gina Conkle


    Since my days as an elementary school teacher, I’ve loved honoring books and reading. I’ve loved giving books away. I’ve loved talking books—fiction and non-fiction. For these reasons, I celebrate World Book Day by giving away at least 20 print novels.

    I started this tradition 5 years ago, and I plan to carry it on for many years to come.  This year’s giveaway is all of the 20 print novels pictured above (available worldwide). It will end at midnight ET on April 24, 2019 with 1 random winner drawn from the Rafflecopter sign up (see below).

    Got any questions? Just put them in the comments and I’ll get back to you ASAP.

    Yours in the love of books!

    ~Gina



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  • Dukes by the Dozen


    January’s Love Story
    by
    Alyssa Alexander

    DUKE IN WINTER

    Impeded by a blinding snowstorm, the Duke of Highrow is determined to find his way home. But when the highwayman demanded he stand and deliver, he didn’t know she would steal his heart.

    Hunching his shoulders against the bitter wind, Wulf guided his stallion onto the narrow track between the trees. With luck, he would be standing before his own fire before the storm worsened.

    “Stand and deliver!” The shout was sharp beneath the swirling snow, echoing between the silent, naked trees.

    Cursing, Wulf lifted his forearm to block the white flakes and studied the shadows dancing between the wind-tossed snow.

    The highwayman was not ten feet away, sitting atop a horse in the center of the path. His greatcoat swirled in the wind as he raised his arm, the double-barreled pistol he held appearing small and light.

    Though size was not indicative of deadliness. The thief held the weapon as straight and steady as any spymaster Wulf had encountered during the Reign of Terror.

    “What shall I deliver?” Wulf pitched his voice above the wind and narrowed his eyes, evaluating risk. He kept a pistol in his saddlebags, but he would never be fast enough to beat his opponent.

    Still, he took one hand from the reins and slid it onto his thigh. Easily, he hoped, so it would seem natural and not calculated to move closer to the saddlebags.

    “You may deliver whatever valuables you have on your person.” Through the eerie, dim, snow-light and thickening flakes, Wulf could distinguish a cap pulled low and a scarf wrapped around the thief’s face that was substantial enough to fight the wind. “Beginning with the winnings in your pockets, sir.”

    “Now, how is it you know about the blunt in my pockets?” Wulf leaned casually on the pommel. Considered his adversary.

    “A rich nabob like you, coming from a house party? Of course you have blunt.” The man’s jacket was big enough he might swim in it. A local lad, perhaps, fallen on difficult times.

    Or the Honorable Highwayman.

    Wulf had yet to make the acquaintance of the local legend, though he had heard a great deal about the highwayman’s ill-gained generosity.

    “I don’t particularly care to give up my blunt, even for widows and orphans.” Though he was actually quite willing to forgo his winnings for such a cause. “At least not at the end of a pistol,” he continued, attempting to stall.

    Another few inches and Wulf would be able to reach his weapon. He shifted again, setting his hand a little closer to the saddlebag.

    Wind rattled the branches above them, so they clacked and creaked like brittle bones. Wulf’s stallion sidestepped, pranced a few paces. Using both hands—unfortunately—Wulf brought the animal under control again.

    “Very well, Your Grace.” The pistol notched higher, its barrels seeming to stare at Wulf with two dark, round eyes. “Then I shall wound you with the first shot. Perhaps you shall change your mind.”

    “Unlikely.” Still, Wulf had lost the precious inches he’d gained reaching for his own weapon. His stallion was edgy, and the storm swirled around them—and the coins and pound notes in his pocket were not worth the effort.

    But by God, it was the principle. He’d not spent years dodging the guillotine in France only to be bested by a highwayman a few miles from his home.

    The wind sharpened, howled, and in the momentary silence as it died again, Wulf clearly heard a long-suffering sigh.

    “As you wish, Your Grace.”

    The report was deafening, slicing through the silence of snow and night. The already-spooked stallion reared, pawed the air. Even as Wulf recognized the searing pain in his shoulder for what it was, he understood he would not keep his seat.

    “Bloody hell!” he cursed, tumbling through flying snow.

    When the ground slammed into the back of his head, everything went black.

    * * *

    She’d shot him. Actually shot him.

    “Damnation.” As the sound of panicked horse hooves faded into the night, Bea looked down at her pistol and let out an irritated huff. “Why did you have to pick now to be slippery?”

    Her aim was nearly perfect, and she’d never yet wounded any of her intended prey.

    Only frightened them.

    Bea contemplated the man sprawled on the ground as snow began to blanket his greatcoat. She couldn’t leave him here. Unconscious, wounded, and without a horse, since his had gone running off into the trees.

    He was also the Duke of Highrow—a boy she’d known. A man she didn’t.

    “Damnation,” she said again, as she saw the stains on the snow. Blood. She didn’t need sunlight to recognize the dark drops dotting the ground.

    Amazon   B&N   Kobo   iBooks



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  • Crazy news! – Gina Conkle


    Yes, you read that right.  It stunned me when Sourcebooks emailed me with the news.

    So, I’m passing it on to you.

    At the moment, the ebook sale is available on these retail sites:

    Apple   Barnes & Noble   GooglePlay

    It’s supposed to be available on Amazon and Kobo.

    Maybe if you give them a nudge, they might speed up the price lowering.

    Just click the retailer of your choice listed above to download Meet the Earl at Midnight.

    Please, tell a friend. 

    Your in the love of books!

    Gina



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  • How Far into North America did Vikings go? Part 1

    How Far into North America did Vikings go? Part 1


    The case of the Kensington Runestone

    The Kensington Runstone

    Take a trip to central Minnesota

    In 1898, Swedish immigrant Olof Ohman unearthed the stone pictured above in Douglas County, Minnesota. Ohman found the stone tangled in tree roots while clearing a field. The farmer’s son was the one to point out the strange markings.

    Named the Kensington Runestone for a nearby settlement, the unusual finding caused a sensation. Yet, it was debunked almost as soon as it caught the world’s attention.

    Did Scandinavian scholars rush to judgment?

    Consider this. The 220 lb. stone appeared at a tense time between Sweden and Norway. Norwegians wanted to break from Swedish rule (they did, eventually gaining independence in 1905). But, the road to freedom was a rocky one.

    In 1893, Norway had sent a replica of the Gokstad ship to Chicago for a world expo, a move which caused friction between Swedes and Norwegians. Many wondered if the Kensington runestone was a Swedish “one-upmanship.” Others called it a bid for unity.

    Norwegians went as far as to point out that a Swedish immigrant found it.

    Was the runestone a gambit to keep the countries together? It does recount long ago Swedes and Norwegians adventuring together. People accused Ohman of chiseling this tale for attention and for political reasons.

    When Swedish scholars chimed in with their doubts about the stone’s validity, tempers cooled.

    One head-scratching facet is the mix of runes etched on the stone. There are Early Old Swedish letters (a 14th century language which kept 4 Old Norse “Futhark” letters) and Late Old Swedish (a 15th century language with no Old Norse).

    With all the uncertainty, the Kensington runestone soon faded from world attention.

    But here’s something to consider.

    Farmers of northern and central Minnesota have been finding Viking artifacts for over a hundred years. The historic pieces typically show up when fields are plowed. A few have been found by children playing on riverbanks—and everyone knows Vikings loved exploring rivers.

    Here’s something else to consider.

    Olof Ohman never went beyond a 3rd grade Swedish education. How could a barely educated man write in not 1 but 2 old alphabets? Alphabets he was never taught…

    Now you tell me, what interesting Viking facts can you share? Tell me below. I’d love to read them.

    P.S. Next week, Part 2 will feature credible theories with dates and evidence for Viking excursions in North America.

    I’m happy to share that #HistoryThursday is back!
    Just like my How to Eat Like a Viking blog series, we’ll dive into new and interesting places in Viking history. Get ready for How Far into North America did Vikings go? I promise a fun ride into the past.



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  • How Far into North America did Vikings go? Part 2 – Gina Conkle


    Letter from a king

    In 1354, King Magnus Eriksson of Sweden wrote a letter, ordering his officer, Paul Knutsson, to lead an expedition to Greenland. The king wanted Knutsson to look into reports of Greenland’s people (his subjects) turning away from Christianity.

    Some think Knutsson may have missed Greenland and landed in North America (or he went after renegade Greenlanders and found himself in North America). Records are scant on this period in Norway’s history because of much turmoil. Because Norway was in upheaval, there are no clear records Knutssson’s ship set sail, but we do have the king’s letter.

    Looking at other sources, we have Dutch cartographer Gerardus Mercator’s 1577 letter written to John Dee (scholar and advisor to Queen Elizabeth). Mercator shared that he’d learned of eight men who returned to Norway in 1364. One of them, a priest, handed the Norwegian king extensive geographical information on Arctic Islands.

    Could these eight men have been survivors of Knutsson’s voyage? Norwegian men who wandered further south into North America?

    Records dating 1364 and onward, corroborate priest Ivar Bardsson in Norway, listing him as living previously in Greenland.

    Next week, I’ll share the possible waterway, the Norse Crusader Theory, and the Battle of Visby Theory for Vikings in North America.

    Until then, tell me what you think about what was shared today.



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  • Three Ways Viking Women Showed Their Power – Gina Conkle


    Or Speak softly and carry an iron staff

    Viking witches (in Old Norse – volva singular, volur plural) were largely women. A small number of men took on the role but they were looked down on as effeminate.

    Unlike a seer, a volva wandered from settlement to settlement, and they weren’t always welcome. Sometimes Viking people met them with rocks and shouts to leave. This was because they didn’t want trouble. A volva (who could also be a seer) was paid to cast spells and speak curses. A Viking could pay the volva to rain tribulation on an enemy’s head. That’s bad if your neighbor doesn’t like you, and even worse when a settlement gets caught up in strife.

    The volva often traveled with a staff, such as the iron staff (wand) pictured above. In this case, the wand was bent at the end, like some Viking swords, to remove its power after the volva died.

    While this wand is iron, many have copper and bronze alloy tips. Why does that matter? Because when copper is put to fire, it turns the flame green.

    There’s nothing like messing with the elements to wow the locals.



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  • The Mystery of the Famous Lewis Chessmen

    The Mystery of the Famous Lewis Chessmen


    In 1831, on the Isle of Lewis in the Western Isles of Scotland, a stunning hoard was found. Rather than the usual silver and gold that excites treasure hunters and historians alike, this hoard contained ivory game pieces—93 of them, 78 of which were chessmen, 14 were large gaming counters, and there was an elaborate belt buckle. Some of the chess pieces were stained red, which aligns with the medieval standard of red and white (unpainted ivory) chess games.

    At present, 11 of the Lewis Chessmen are in the National Museum of Scotland. The rest are in England’s British Museum. This find makes an almost complete chess set.

    For nearly 200 years, all 4 rooks and 1 knight have been missing from the set. Until now.

    Meet the recent discovery, a rook.

    This chess piece has spent years wrapped in a paper bag, hidden away in a drawer. The current owner’s late father had been an antique dealer. He purchased the well-worn ivory in 1964 for £5, apparently unaware of its true identity. The late owner’s wife believed the chess piece had “almost magical qualities.”

    The famed game piece is expected to fetch £ 1,000,000. So…maybe it does?!

    Check your drawers and attics, readers! There are still 4 missing pieces.

    The current chess board in the British Museum all cleaned up and ready to play.

    More of the chess pieces with round, flat game tokens to the right and the buckle to the left.

    The Lewis Chessman are among the biggest draws at both the British Museum and Edinburgh’s National Museum of Scotland. I can vouch for their popularity. At the British Museum, these guys had their own docent assigned to the display!

    The only other item that had its own docent was an Easter Island statue (see below).

    Don’t you think it’s interesting that ivory game pieces and a giant basalt statue—and not silver and gold—get their own docent?

    Thanks for stopping by for #HistoryThursday where I like to celebrate all things big and small, known and barely known in history.

    Cheers to you, Reader!
    ~Gina



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  • Once upon a time…

    Once upon a time…


    …a red-hooded woman ran away and served a disgraced lord in his cottage. All was well in the northern woods.

    Until a wolf knocked on their door.

    I’m happy to announce, The Lord Meets His Lady, is on sale. This novel represents a labor of love, a mis-step in my career, and a big lesson in writing.

    You’re probably curious about those three points, right? Let me break them down for you.

    I loved leaving London with this book. The entire setting is a cottage in the northern countryside. Society’s glitterati is fun, but I needed a break. So, I went to Coldstream, which is about as far north in England as a body could go.

    The infamous Coldstream Bridge which connects England and Scotland. If Gretna Green is the Vegas of quickie weddings, Coldstream is Reno.

    And the most unexpected secondary characters showed up: horses!

    But you want to know about my career mis-step. This is a painful point. It took about a year and a half to write this book. I was woefully late. No editor likes that.

    Then came a big challenge: How to keep the fairy tale theme going?

    Enter Red Riding Hood.

    It was a test to make a light play on that age old fairy tale.

    My research revealed Red Riding Hood was a cautionary story for young women throughout Europe from medieval times forward. “Beware of men who would prey on your sexuality.”

    Lord Marcus and Genevieve Turner danced circles around that!

    Sometimes a woman wants the forbidden.

    With that said, I invite you to enjoy The Lord Meets His Lady.



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  • Her Viking Warrior – Gina Conkle


    I dig into viking culture and go beyond the “Odin and Valkyries” worshipping Vikings. There’s a reason for pointing this out.

    In the same way, our modern era has Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterians, etc. The same was true for Vikings. This truth plays into the life of Ilsa, the heroine, and other women of Vellefold.



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