Showing posts with label Medieval History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Medieval History. Show all posts

Monday, June 12, 2017

Interview with Rachel Nightingale


Our guest today is Rachel Nightingale. Rachel has been writing since the age of 8 (early works are safely hidden away). She holds a Masters degree and PhD in Creative Writing. Winning the Mercury Short Story competition (junior section) at the age of 16 fueled her desire to share her stories with the world. Subsequent short stories have been shortlisted in a number of competitions and a play, No Sequel, won the People's Choice Award and First Prize at the Eltham Little Theatre's 10 Minute Play competition. Another, Crime Fiction, was performed at Short and Sweet Manila and Sydney.

Rachel’s second passion after writing is the theatre, and she has been performing in shows and working backstage for a rather long time. She co-wrote and performed in the 2013-2015 version of the hugely popular Murder on the Puffing Billy Express, a 1920s murder mystery set on the iconic Dandenong Ranges train. The inspiration for the Tarya trilogy, which begins with Harlequin's Riddle, began when she read a quote by Broadway actor Alan Cumming about that in-between moment just before you step onstage, and began to wonder might be found in that place between worlds. You can connect with Rachel via Facebook and Twitter or her blog.


What is the inspiration for your current book?

 Harlequin’s Riddle grew out of an article I read about the Broadway revival of Cabaret. Alan Cumming, who was playing the emcee, spoke of the moment before you step on stage as being a ‘moment between’ where anything was possible, like the Hindu idea of heaven, or Turiya. Hence the idea for Tarya was born, a realm that artists enter when they are in the flow of creating their art. The fun part was working out exactly what becomes possible in this realm.


Is there a particular theme you are exploring in this book?

We’re at a point in time where technology has enabled anyone to produce a professional looking ‘product’, whether that be a film, book or digital art, and many people think that’s a substitute for hard work, original ideas and getting good at your craft. We’re seeing the rise of very formula ‘art’, where people copy what others have done to try to capture their success. This is encouraged by the big entertainment corporations who hold the marketing strings. The fact that the final decision about whether a book will be published is made by the marketing department on the basis of whether it will sell, not by a skilled editor who knows good storytelling, is appalling. So in the Tarya Trilogy artists’ work is proscribed – they are not allowed to do anything that is too original or that might actually move or transport the audience. If they do, they are severely penalised.

Which period of history particularly interests you? Why?

The Tarya trilogy is fantasy, but it is essentially set in the Italian Renaissance. I have only stepped sideways into a fantasy world in order to bring magical experiences into the story. The books centre on the travelling players, the Commedia dell’Arte (Harlequin, Columbine, Pierrot and others), who travelled around Italy in the 1500s. The setting and costumes are all based on that era, and the arc of the story, in terms of the dominance of the Commedia dell’Arte as an artform, follows historical occurrences.

What resources do you use to research your book?

As a historical reenactor, I have researched, made and worn Italian Renaissance dresses, so that very much feeds into what people are wearing in the books. Being in the SCA provides fabulous research opportunities because there is always someone who has done in-depth research on something you want to know about and is happy to share their knowledge, or point you in the right direction. I have also done mask making and have an extensive background in theatre and improv so the performance side of things comes from direct experience. John Rudlin’s book, Commedia dell’Arte, An Actor’s Handbook, was a key resource. I used other resources on the Renaissance for things like the ‘Memento Mori’ skeleton jewellery that appears in the second book. In terms of setting I experienced one of those inexplicable things that sometimes happen to writers – I describe towns and cities with buildings covered in tiles that form pictures. I’ve never been to Europe, but after I’d written these descriptions I found photographs of European towns where these buildings existed!

What is more important to you: historical authenticity or accuracy?

Writing fantasy gives me the room to play with things, so I’d have to say I aimed for an authentic feel as the backdrop to the more magical occurrences rather than trying to get things exactly write, although sometimes I do work from an image (eg a piece of artwork from the time) and try to describe it as accurately as possible. I’m currently writing a play based on a historical figure though, and that is completely different – I am absolutely aiming for accuracy. Her life is pretty dramatic, so I definitely don’t need to make things up to create drama. 

Which character in your current book is your favourite? Why?

Luka, who plays Pierrot onstage, has to be my favourite. You don’t see much of him in the first book, but he becomes increasingly important in the second and third books. He’s quiet and gentle, the antithesis of Hollywood’s definition of a hero, but without him Mina’s story would be very different.

 Are you a ‘plotter’ or a ‘pantser’? How long does it generally take you to write a book?

Definitely a plotter. When you’re writing over three books you have to keep track of plot points closely, and it was important to me to seed events or ideas in the first book that would come to fruition in the final one, so that meant thinking it all through well in advance. I much prefer reading books that do this, so that’s my aim. I’m hoping my writing speed picks up – real life has always got in the way so writing has been a slow, slow process, but I’m making it a priority now. The second book in the Tarya trilogy, which will come out in the middle of next year, is already complete luckily so I have a bit of time to work on the third one!

Which authors have influenced you?

I nearly failed my first year of university because I spent swot vac reading The Mists of Avalon, by Marion Zimmer Bradley. The way in which she takes myth and makes it believably real in a historical context is a huge inspiration for me. I also love Ray Bradbury’s wordsmithing ability – I hope to be half as good as him in a few more decades.

What advice would you give an aspiring author?

Read and write a lot, and if you seriously want to be a writer, take your writing seriously. There is some luck involved, but a lot of it is hard work, professionalism and the willingness to keep developing your craft.

Tell us about your next book or work in progress.

I’m writing a full length play about an intriguing historical figure. It started out as a ten minute play, but she wasn’t happy with having such a short time to tell her story! I’m working out how I can use theatrical techniques to play around with the idea of truth in the story of someone’s life. I’m hoping by interval I can convince the audience of one thing, then show them after interval that this can’t possibly be true!


The Gazini Players are proud to present
For your Edification and Enjoyment
Tales of great Joy, and of great Woe

Ten years ago, Mina’s beloved older brother disappeared with a troupe of Travelling Players, and was never heard from again.

On the eve of Mina’s own departure with a troupe, her father tells her she has a special gift for Storytelling, a gift he silenced years before because he was afraid of her ability to call visions into being with her stories.

Mina soon discovers that the Travelling Players draw their powers from a mysterious place called Tarya, where dreams are transformed into reality.  While trying to solve the mystery of her brother’s disappearance, she discovers a dark cost to the Players’ onstage antics. Torn between saving her brother or exposing the truth about the Players, could her gifts as a storyteller offer a way to solve Harlequin’s riddle?

Thanks Rachel. Good luck with your debut!

Harlequin's Riddle is available via Odyssey  Books.


HNSA 2017 Conference

The HNSA 2017 Melbourne Conference is being held on 8-10 September 2017 at Swinburne University. Rachel Nightingale is a busy girl! She will be appearing in in Session Three on Saturday 9 September at 11.15am-12.15pm.

How to Transmute Research into Compelling Historical Fiction
A passion for research doesn’t always translate into creating compelling fiction. Gillian Polack discusses the challenges of converting historical facts into page turning novels with Wendy J Dunn, Barbara Gaskell Denvil, Stephanie Smee and Rachel Nightingale.

She is also acting as our narrator in our First Pages Pitch Contest on Saturday 9 September and will be conducting a super session on Recreating Historical Costumes on Sunday 10 September.

What is it like to wear a Tudor outfit or dance in a Renaissance dress? How heavy is an ancient Chinese hanfu and how much fabric goes into its creation? These questions and more will be answered by Rachel Nightingale in this workshop, where you will have a chance to get up close and personal with a range of outfits made by historical re-enactors based on research and portraits. You will have the chance to look at a number of costuming books that deconstruct historical costumes, and perhaps even to try on a historical outfit. 

Rachel is also appearing in our Meet the Author satellite event on 18 June at the Mail Exchange Hotel, 688 Bourke St, Melbourne from 2.30-4.30pm discussing Ancient and Medieval Fiction with Lindy Cameron, Barbara Gaskell Denvil, Linda Weste and Paul Hansen. More information and tickets are available from the HNSA website. 

The conference is a celebration of the historical fiction genre which will showcase over 60 speakers discussing inspiration, writing craft, research, publishing pathways and personal histories in our weekend programme. Among the many acclaimed historical novelists participating are Kerry Greenwood, Kate Forsyth, Deborah Challinor, Libby Hathorn, Lucy Treloar, Sophie Masson, Sulari Gentill, Robert Gott and Arnold Zable. The HNSA’s speakers’ list is available on the HNSA website.

In addition to the two stream weekend programme, there will be ten craft based super sessions and two research masterclasses. You won’t want to miss our interactive sessions on armour and historical costumes either! Manuscript assessments will be conducted by industry experts, Alison Arnold and Irina Dunn. Our free extended academic programme is open for general admission but bookings are essential.

Our First Pages Pitch Contest offers an opportunity for submissions to be read aloud to a panel of publishers. And we are delighted to announce the introduction of our inaugural HNSA Short Story Contest with a $500 prize!






Let’s make a noise about historical fiction!

Thursday, June 8, 2017

Interview with Barbara Gaskell Denvil



Our guest today is Barbara Gaskell Denvil, author of The Flame Eater, Sumerford’s Autumn, Fair Weather and many more. Her full list is available on her website. You can connect with Barbara via Facebook and Twitter.

Tell us a little about yourself.

I was born in Gloucestershire, England and later moved to London where I grew up surrounded by books, paintings and antiques. My father was an artist and playwright, my mother a teacher, and my elder sister a successful author first published at age 16. The classic Victorian author Mrs Elizabeth Gaskell was a great, great, great aunt. We were a bookish family. I have worked in many literary capacities, as a publishers’ reader, a television researcher and script writer, an editor, literary critic and published numerous short stories and articles. Then motherhood took precedence. Having three young daughters, two of whom were identical twins, writing had to take a back seat.

Years later I moved to Australia where I now live in a semi-rural area of exceptional beauty, watching the amazing birds and wildlife, and at last writing full length novels. My passion is for late English medieval history and this forms the background for my historical fiction. I also have a love of fantasy and the wild freedom of the imagination, with its haunting threads of sadness and evil. Although all my books have romantic undertones, I would not class them purely as romances. Although we all wish to enjoy some romance in our lives, there is also a yearning for adventure, mystery, suspense and experience. My books include all of this and more, but my greatest loves are the beauty of the written word, and the utter fascination of good characterisation. Bringing my characters to life and taking the reader with me, is my principal aim. I am now self publishing my books, as I found that traditional publishing is not what it used to be. I now have total control over content, covers and titles. With advice from my lovely agent Sheila Drummond, we have hopefully everything covered.

What is the inspiration for The Flame Eater?

I discovered a little known fact occurring during the time period in which my book is set, and this inspired me to look further and develop the situation.

Is there a particular theme you are exploring in this book?

I believe the theme for me is twofold both the detailed extent to which characterisation can be developed and yet remain believable, and also the complex possibilities of the crime mystery, while retaining the surprise ending.

Which period of history particularly interests you? Why?

The late medieval period interests me most. I believe that the modern standards and ideals began during Edward IV’s reign, and continued to develop from there. I also became interested in the character of Richard III, and enjoyed the research to discover whether this was the villain or the hero of the late 15th century.

What resources do you use to research your book?

I have been researching this period for many years. I used to read constantly and studied both original and secondary sources. I am no longer able to read so much since I am losing my eyesight, but I still study when I can.


What is more important to you: historical authenticity or accuracy?

Both. I see them as essential in every way. Accuracy is my particular priority, but authenticity is much the same thing as far as I am concerned.

Which character in your current book is your favourite? Why?

Both Nicholas and Avice, simply because I find them both intensely alive, and I thoroughly enjoyed giving them both reality.

Are you a ‘plotter’ or a ‘pantser’? How long does it generally take you to write a book?

Most of my books have taken approximately 7 to 8 months. And yes, like you I am definitely a ‘Plantser’. 

Which authors have influenced you?

Oh, gracious, every single book I have ever read in one way or another. I suppose Dorothy Dunnett was a principal influence amongst historical authors.

What advice would you give an aspiring author?

To write and then rewrite over and over again. Believe in yourself and don’t listen to advice!

Tell us about your next book or work in progress.

I am now starting a children’s series which is partially historical and partially fantasy. This first book (Bannister’s Muster – Book 1 – SNAP) will be published in early June.  I am so enjoying bringing my favourite medieval era alive for children (8 – 15 year olds).


Intrigue, Romance and Adventure, the ideal escape when curled up with a good book. Nicholas, now heir to the earldom, has no desire to marry his dead brother’s cast-off. Emeline has no desire to marry the brutal monster who murdered his brother, the man she loved and hoped to marry. This arranged marriage is a disaster, Fire rages through the castle and takes over the wedding night, and any hopes of reconciliation. Murder and arson are destroying more than one alliance, the culprit unknown.

It is 1484 and Richard III is England’s monarch. The king entrusts many of his lords in the service of their country, so Nicholas is charged with the undercover investigation into desperately important situations.

Emeline joins with her younger sister and others of the household, determined to discover who is responsible for the disasters which have entirely disrupted their lives. But the suspects are so many. It is therefore a group of eager but desperate women of various ages, characters and capabilities who attempt to solve the mystery. Meanwhile, Nicholas learns that he has a wife to admire and to adore.

But is he a murderer? Is her mother? Her nurse? And will England’s political turmoil threaten their peace and cause even greater uncertainty? Life will never be the same. But perhaps that is just as well.

Many thanks Barbara! 

The Flame Eater is available via Amazon US, Amazon UK and Amazon AU

HNSA 2017 Conference

The HNSA 2017 Melbourne Conference is being held on 8-10 September 2017 at Swinburne University. Barbara Gaskell Denvil will be appearing in in Session Three on Saturday 9 September at 11.15am-12.15pm.

How to Transmute Research into Compelling Historical Fiction
A passion for research doesn’t always translate into creating compelling fiction. Gillian Polack discusses the challenges of converting historical facts into page turning novels with Wendy J Dunn, Barbara Gaskell Denvil, Stephanie Smee and Rachel Nightingale.

Barbara is also appearing in our Meet the Author satellite event on 18 June at the Mail Exchange Hotel, 688 Bourke St, Melbourne from 2.30-4.30pm discussing Ancient and Medieval Fiction with Lindy Cameron, Rachel Nightgale, Linda Weste and Paul Hansen. More information and tickets are available from the HNSA website. 

The conference is a celebration of the historical fiction genre which will showcase over 60 speakers discussing inspiration, writing craft, research, publishing pathways and personal histories in our weekend programme. Among the many acclaimed historical novelists participating are Kerry Greenwood, Kate Forsyth, Deborah Challinor, Libby Hathorn, Lucy Treloar, Sophie Masson, Sulari Gentill, Robert Gott and Arnold Zable. The HNSA’s speakers’ list is available on the HNSA website.

In addition to the two stream weekend programme, there will be ten craft based super sessions and two research masterclasses. You won’t want to miss our interactive sessions on armour and historical costumes either! Manuscript assessments will be conducted by industry experts, Alison Arnold and Irina Dunn. Our free extended academic programme is open for general admission but bookings are essential.

Our First Pages Pitch Contest offers an opportunity for submissions to be read aloud to a panel of publishers. And we are delighted to announce the introduction of our inaugural HNSA Short Story Contest with a $500 prize!




Let’s make a noise about historical fiction!

Monday, May 8, 2017

Interview with Robyn Cadwallader


Today we are delighted to welcome Robyn Cadwallader to the blog. Robyn is an editor and writer who lives in the country outside Canberra. She has published poems, prize-winning short stories and reviews, a poetry collection, i painted unafraid (Wakefield Press, 2010) and a non-fiction book about virginity and female agency in the Middle Ages. Her first novel, The Anchoress was published to critical acclaim in 2015 by Fourth Estate (Aust), Faber & Faber (UK), Farrer, Straus & Giroux (US), and Gallimard (France). It was awarded a Canberra Critics’ Circle Award for fiction, was shortlisted for the Indie Book Awards, the Adelaide Festival Literary Awards and the ACT Book of the Year Award, and was longlisted for the ABIA Awards. In response to the government’s shameful policies on asylum seekers, Robyn commissioned and edited a collection of essays and analysis by prominent lawyers and activists, We Are Better Than This (ATF Press, 2015).

You can connect with Robyn via her website and blog, Facebook, Twitter @robyncad and Instagram RobynCadwallader.

What is the inspiration for your current book?

I first found out about anchoresses when researching for my PhD.  I was so fascinated by the idea of women choosing to be locked away, that — even though it seemed unlikely material for a novel — the idea wouldn’t let go of me. When I visited some of the few anchorholds still standing in the UK, I began to imagine one women in her cell, wondering what it would be like, why she was there, how she would survive. She became Sarah in my novel.

Is there a particular theme you are exploring in this book?

There are several interwoven thematic strands in the novel, that emerged via writing about the experience of one anchoress. I’m very interested in the ways in which religious, philosophical and medical teaching from the ancient world through to the Middle Ages constructed the female body as sinful and dangerous, and required it be controlled. It’s the story of patriarchy, of course, and it’s writ large in the imagery of an anchorhold, where a woman is literally sealed into a stone cell, described as dead to the world, and instructed not to look out at the world. The novel explores the ways that the body is nonetheless resistant to control and Sarah discovers that her sensual life, and those of the ordinary village women who visit her, lead her toward God. A sub-theme (is there such a thing?) that I really enjoyed writing about is the variety of ways in which the written word can be used —to encourage, to control, to tell stories and even as a means of resistance, to blackmail the church.

Which period of history particularly interests you? Why?

I can become fascinated in whatever period I read, I think. But the Middle Ages, and specifically England in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, grabbed my attention via the literature. Many people (my uni students among them) assume that medieval literature is dry, dusty and always religious, but the stories are vibrant, gutsy, often funny and bawdy. The literature opened up the culture and history for me. It’s fascinating to read about the fourteenth century, a time on the cusp of the Renaissance, but such a gruelling time of famine and climate change, near civil war, plague and a peasants’ rebellion against the crown that almost succeeded. Somehow, people still survived (well, some of them) and created.

What resources do you use to research your book?

Apart from Julian of Norwich’s writings, there are no primary texts by anchoresses. So, I read the many rules written for these women, primarily the thirteenth-century Guide for Anchoresses or Ancrene Wisse, that reflects the contemporary attitude toward women as it offers advice on the inner and outer life of an anchoress. Beyond that, I visited anchorholds and their remains in the UK, I read archaeological evidence about anchorholds, theological writing about women from the early Church Fathers and some later medieval theologians; documents such as cartularies, manor court rolls and statutes; rules of life for monasteries and priories along with maps of villages and priories. Secondary material included descriptions of villages and village life; the creation of manuscripts and a thousand details of medieval life for the nobility and peasantry.  I also found feminist and literary discussions of anchoritic life especially helpful for giving me ways to understand the significance of the primary material I was reading.


What is more important to you: historical authenticity or accuracy?

Authenticity, for sure. We can’t know absolutely what life was like in the past, and whatever we read or write about the past, we do so through the lens of the twenty-first century. It can’t be otherwise. So, while I work hard to be as accurate as possible, my primary interest is in writing an engaging and thoughtful story. I think of my writing as a kind of conversation between myself and the past.

Which character in your current book is your favourite? Why?

Of course I love Sarah, the main character of The Anchoress. I spent so long inside her head, after all! But Eleanor, the little girl who visited Sarah, is my favourite. She has such natural spunk and curiosity, and best of all, she draws out the reclusive scribe, Ranaulf. When I began writing, my own thought was that the village children would be naturally intrigued by this woman locked away where they couldn’t see her: why would she be there? What would she do all day? When was she coming out? I didn’t plan any further than that, but Eleanor kept coming back, and slowly she became incredibly important to Sarah. She was easy to write, as if she insisted on being in the novel in exactly the same way that she insisted on chatting with Sarah; she was always simply ‘there’.

Are you a ‘plotter’ or a ‘pantser’? How long does it generally take you to write a book?

I’m a thorough pantser. No idea where I’m headed beyond a vague sense of the story’s general shape. I love the feeling of writing something completely unexpected that takes the story in a different direction from what I had imagined. Even better, is coming back to a scene or image that had seemed random and perhaps irrelevant, to the connections it makes to other areas of story and character.  My image is the familiar one of driving down a country lane, this time in my old VW beetle with terrible headlights, able to see only a few metres ahead of me; all I can do is trust that by the time that ground is covered, the next few metres will come into view. It doesn’t always happen and sometimes it’s overwhelming, sometimes I end in a ditch, but it’s the process that I trust.

Which authors have influenced you?

As a writer of historical fiction, I have to say Hilary Mantel, primarily, for her capacity to write about history with such wit and such strong characters, not an ounce of history-speak. I also love Jim Crace’s approach to historical fiction as well. They both grasp the authority and creativity of the writer first of all, unconstrained by the idea of writing about history. I know Mantel takes accuracy seriously, but she can push outside that when she wants to, and it works so well. I’m in awe of them both.

What advice would you give an aspiring author?

Be wary of any advice that is absolute, any do, don’t or should. So, this is what I tell myself: read, write and write some more. Be brave, take risks. Trust yourself. I’ve found that writing historical fiction, I have to continually be aware of the dangers of being stifled and falling into ‘history-speak’ (see question 8), that slightly artificial way of writing and story telling. I try to stretch out my literary arms and write with some freedom, letting the characters be people, not historical mouthpieces. 

Tell us about your next book or work in progress.

My next book is set in early fourteenth-century London and tells the story of a group of secular illuminators of medieval manuscripts.



From a remarkable new Australian author comes THE ANCHORESS, a story set within the confines of a stone cell measuring seven paces by nine. Tiny in scope but universal in themes, it is a wonderful, wholly compelling fictional achievement.

Set in the twelfth century, THE ANCHORESS tells the story of Sarah, only seventeen when she chooses to become an anchoress, a holy woman shut away in a small cell, measuring seven paces by nine, at the side of the village church. Fleeing the grief of losing a much-loved sister in childbirth and the pressure to marry, she decides to renounce the world, with all its dangers, desires and temptations, and to commit herself to a life of prayer and service to God. But as she slowly begins to understand, even the thick, unforgiving walls of her cell cannot keep the outside world away, and it is soon clear that Sarah's body and soul are still in great danger ...

Telling an absorbing story of faith, desire, shame, fear and the very human need for connection and touch, THE ANCHORESS is both mesmerising and thrillingly unpredictable.

Many thanks for sharing your journey with us, Robyn. 

You can purchase Robyn's books via these links: 
The Anchoressi painted unafraidWe are Better Than This and Three Methods for Reading the Thirteenth-Century Seinte Marherete.

HNSA 2017 Conference

The HNSA 2017 Conference in Melbourne is being held on 8-10 September 2017. This celebration of the historical fiction genre will showcase over 60 speakers discussing inspiration, writing craft, research, publishing pathways and personal histories in our weekend programme. Robyn Cadwallader will be appearing on Saturday 9 September in Session 2.15-3.15 pm.

Venturing forth: Exploring Stories beyond National Boundaries and Australasian History
Kelly Gardiner discusses with Robyn Cadwallader, Natasha Lester, Prue Batten and Elisabeth Storrs why some authors prefer to discover worlds beyond their native shores and ancestral history.

Among the many acclaimed historical novelists participating are Kerry Greenwood, Kate Forsyth, Deborah Challinor, Lucy Treloar, Sophie Masson, Sulari Gentill, Robert Gott and Arnold Zable. The HNSA’s speakers’ list is available on the HNSA website.

In addition to the two stream weekend programme, there will be ten craft based super sessions and two research masterclasses. You won’t want to miss our interactive sessions on armour and historical costumes either! Manuscript assessments will be conducted by industry experts, Alison Arnold and Irina Dunn. Our free extended academic programme is open for general admission but bookings are essential.

Our First Pages Pitch Contest offers an opportunity for submissions to be read aloud to a panel of publishers. And we are delighted to announce the introduction of our inaugural HNSA Short Story Contest with a $500 prize!





Let’s make a noise about historical fiction!

Friday, April 28, 2017

Interview with Wendy J Dunn


Today it's a pleasure to welcome Wendy J. Dunn to the HNSA blog. Wendy is an Australian writer who has been obsessed by Anne Boleyn and Tudor History since she was ten-years-old. She is the author of three historical novels: Dear Heart, How Like You This?, the winner of the 2003 Glyph Fiction Award and 2004 runner up in the Eric Hoffer Award for Commercial Fiction, The Light in the Labyrinth, her first young adult novel, and Falling Pomegranate Seeds: The Duty of Daughters.

Wendy gained her Doctorate of Philosophy (Writing) from Swinburne University in 2014 and she is the Co-Senior Editor of Backstory and Other Terrain at Swinburne University of Technology.

You can find out more about Wendy on her website and contact her via Facebook or Goodreads.

What is the inspiration for your current book?

The current book I am writing now? That’s actually the sequel, or perhaps the second novel (I really can’t say yet!), of Falling Pomegranate Seeds: The Duty of Daughters, the first novel of my Katherine of Aragon story.

Falling Pomegranate Seeds: The Duty of Daughters was published in August, 2016, and the overall inspiration for this work and my current WIP is what inspires all my writing – a passion to tell ‘herstory’, the stories of women so often neglected or forgotten by history. Historical women offer me a historical feminist standpoint to engage with as a writer through my own feminist standpoint, a standpoint I use to make sense of the master narratives of my world. Milan Kundera writes: ‘Only a literary work that reveals an unknown fragment of human existence has a reason for being. To be a writer does not mean to preach a truth; it means to discover a truth’ (cited by Carlisle 1985, np.). Thus, while I write fiction, I see my works as a way for me (and hopefully my reader) to deepen my understanding of humanity and also build a bridge of empathy between my story and my reader.

Is there a particular theme you are exploring in this book?

The inspirational lives of Tudor women and how these women navigated their harsh, patriarchal world.

Which period of history particularly interests you? Why?

Tudor history speaks to me. Sometimes I wonder if I had a past life then or it’s part of my DNA; strangely, researching my family tree revealed my ancestors had connections with both the Boleyn and Wyatt families in the 16th century.

I fell in love with the Tudors in my childhood – thanks to my father. He was English, and had a great love of history. Dad gifted me with his love of history, and story-telling. At ten, the same time I discovered Elizabeth I, I decided my father was Henry VIII – reincarnated. He not only had a temper of Tudor proportions but a love of food more suited to a Renaissance king. He also wielded a mean axe when he ‘beheaded’ the chook for the family’s Sunday lunch. Dad never hid the fact that his only son was of far more value to him than his three daughters; this also made me empathize with Elizabeth. As a child and teenager, I held onto her story of survival. I believed if she could win through to victory, so could I. And, of course, learning about Elizabeth I led me to learn about her mother, Anne Boleyn. The rest, as they say, is history.

What resources do you use to research your book?

I research through my need to know answers. I once heard the wonderful Sophie Masson say (at our first HNSA conference in Sydney) that writers are lifelong learners, and I utterly agree with her. I am committed to learning about life and our human existence – and I do that through writing. I love research. I am forever buying books to add to my research book shelves. I have also self-funded research trips to places where my historical characters actually lived, and died. I travelled to Spain after I wrote the first draft of Falling Pomegranate Seeds. Researching Katherine of Aragon’s childhood made me fall in love with the descriptions of the royal homes she would have known in her mother’s kingdom as a girl. Walking in Katherine’s footsteps, deepened my ability to imagine her life in Spain. 


But while research informs my writing, I write fiction. Research ignites my imagination. My writing philosophy is very aligned to Margaret Atwood. Like her, I don’t change solid facts, but if history leaves it unexplained, then my imagination is free to invent. While this is a writing technique common to many historical writers, I think it is relevant to reclaiming the untold stories of women from history. Research helps me build up character profiles of my historical people, but it is my imagination which opens the door to make them, I hope, live and breathe on the pages of my novels.

What is more important to you: historical authenticity or accuracy?

I take great pride in my research – and all my fiction births from this research. However, story is the beating heart of all fiction work. I believe writers write fiction because they have a story to tell; historical fiction challenges writers to construct stories through a context not their own. All through writing my first draft I am committed to research, simply because the writing of historical fiction will always lead me to more questions that cry out for answers. Research, deepening my well of knowledge, is then necessary to achieve a fictional work that will hopefully allow my reader to see my imaginings of another time and place. I try hard as a historical fiction writer to build a believable historical world and also do no harm, and that means thorough research to gain a strong sense of “who, what, and why.” Once I “know” my historical personages, my imagination takes over and writing begins. But it comes from a place of truth.  I could never write something I couldn’t believe – and that belief comes from my research.

Which character in your current book is your favourite? Why?

Oh – that is a hard one. I want to say my point of view character, Maria de Salinas, one of Katherine of Aragon’s closest friends, but she wants me to say Katherine of Aragon… Maria loves Katherine – and it is a love driving my new work. Smile – the thing is, writers spend so much time with their characters they begin to feel very close to us and very real…     

Are you a ‘plotter’ or a ‘pantser’? How long does it generally take you to write a book?

I used to be a pantser, but doing my PhD and having too many serious deadlines to meet changed that. I also realised plotting out my work before I started was a way to keep me on track. But I love the unexpected journeys that often happen when you write a novel, which means I am very willing to throw all my plotting to the wind if my characters take their story in unplanned directions.
Writing The Light in the Labyrinth showed me I can write a novel to publishable standard in two years. But I also work as a writing tutor at Swinburne University. Teaching is my other great passion, and that keeps me very busy during the year – and slows down writing my own work.  


Which authors have influenced you?

Mary Renault, Winston Graham, Rosemary Sutcliff, Elizabeth Goudge, Robert Graves – gosh, really, the list goes on and on…

What advice would you give an aspiring author?

Persevere, persevere, and persevere. Believe in yourself. Feed your muse by reading good books. Join or begin a writing group. Enter writing contests; learn to love using your red pen. And don’t forget family and friends!

Thanks for sharing your journey with us, Wendy.



Dońa Beatriz Galindo.
Respected scholar.
Tutor to royalty.
Friend and advisor to Queen Isabel of Castile.

Beatriz is an uneasy witness to the Holy War of Queen Isabel and her husband, Ferdinand, King of Aragon. A Holy War seeing the Moors pushed out of territories ruled by them for centuries.

The road for women is a hard one. Beatriz must tutor the queen’s youngest child, Catalina, and equip her for a very different future life. She must teach her how to survive exile, an existence outside the protection of her mother. She must prepare Catalina to be England's queen.

A tale of mothers and daughters, power, intrigue, death, love, and redemption. In the end, Falling Pomegranate Seeds sings a song of friendship and life.

Falling Pomegranate Seeds is available for purchase here.

HNSA 2017 Conference

The HNSA 2017 Conference in Melbourne is being held on 8-10 September 2017 at Swinburne University, Hawthorn. 

Early bird registration provides 15% off the full price for our weekend programme The same discount also applies for tickets to our opening reception

HURRY –THE EARLY BIRD TICKET ALLOCATION WILL CLOSE BEFORE JUNE.

Wendy J Dunn will be appearing in the following panel in Session Five on Saturday 9 September at 11.15-12.15 pm.

How To Transmute Research into Compelling Historical Fiction
A passion for research doesn’t always translate into creating compelling fiction. Gillian Polack discusses the challenges of converting historical facts into page turning novels with Wendy J Dunn, Barbara Gaskell Denvil, Stephane Smee and Rachel Le Rossignol.

Wendy will also be chairing 'The Lie of History' panel in our free extended academic programme with Glenice Whitting, Gillian Polack, Diane Murray and Cheryl Hayden. Admission is open to all but bookings are essential due to limited seating.

HNSA 2017 is a celebration of the historical fiction genre that showcases over 60 speakers discussing inspiration, writing craft, research, publishing pathways and personal histories. Among the many acclaimed historical novelists participating are Kerry Greenwood, Kate Forsyth, Deborah Challinor, Lucy Treloar, Sophie Masson, Sulari Gentill, Robert Gott and Arnold Zable. The HNSA’s speakers’ list is available on the HNSA website.

In addition to the two stream weekend programme, there will be ten craft based super sessions and two research masterclasses. You won’t want to miss our interactive sessions on armour and historical costumes either! Manuscript assessments will be conducted by industry experts, Alison Arnold and Irina Dunn

Our First Pages Pitch Contest offers an opportunity for submissions to be read aloud to a panel of publishers. And we are delighted to announce the introduction of our inaugural HNSA Short Story Contest with a $500 prize!

Let’s make a noise about historical fiction!