'historicalnovel' yielded 8 matches.
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- Reading Historical Fiction Enjoy reading historical fiction? Just getting interested in it? Here are some useful sites for readers (or prospective readers) of historical fiction. You're bound to find something you like through the links below, whatever the time period you...
- Susan Higginbotham, Author of Historical Fiction Set in Medieval England Welcome to my lens! When I'm not working at my day job, I'm writing historical fiction. My first novel, The Traitor's Wife: A Novel of the Reign of Edward II, won the gold medal in the 2008 Independent Publisher Book Awards in the Historical/Military...
- To Kill the Christ! - Chapter Twenty-three: Roman Intrigue Carl still was angry the next morning. Rebecca, too. But this time they were angry with Gaio. Breakfast was quiet while both mulled their own thoughts, interrupted only by occasional outbursts from Curtis. "I can hardly believe Gaio would do suc...
- "To Kill the Christ" - Book One in the Trilogy "A Kingdom Called Long Reach" Introduction: In this historical speculative fiction, an American Protestant doctoral candidate in Oxford and his fiancé, an English Catholic nurse, along with a Muslim trader who is a member of a terrorist group, are blasted into tribal Brita...
- To Kill the Christ! - Epilogue Cunobelin rode out from the gloom of Sherwood and paused to stare in wonder at the huge fortress sitting on a knoll about a mile away. Reports from spies had warned of its size, but to see it even at a distance was a revelation. Without turning towar...
- To Kill the Christ! - Chapter Twenty-seven: A Senator’s Letter of Passage The steep road to lacus Sebinnes was made more dangerous by mud flows across the road after they passed the snow pack. Only a slow and careful descent enabled the caravan to safely reach the Roman village on the northwestern end of the lake. It was a...
- To Kill the Christ! - Chapter Twenty-eight: Messalina The trip to Brundisium and across the Adriatic to Greece was without event. Aurilius’ letter with its embossed wax seal opened doors and burnished welcome signs. There was even assurance of passage to Corinth by a naval vessel that sailed with...
- To Kill the Christ! - Chapter Thirty: Raphael in Seliocopolis As the commandos came out of the Syrian Gate several of them pointed to the sprawling city sitting on the south bank of the Orontes River, but clinging to the flanks of Mount Silpius. Ephesus was large, Carl remembered, but Antioch seemed to go on fo...
