Monday, February 23, 2015

Book review: The Siege Winter, by Ariana Franklin and Samantha Norman

Franklin’s final novel, skillfully completed by her daughter after her death, recounts two young women’s courage during a dark, chaotic era.

As civil war devastates mid–twelfth century England, Maud, the 16-year-old chatelaine of Kenniford, weds a boorish older man to save her people. Raped and discarded, Em, a peasant girl from the Cambridgeshire fens, is rescued by an aging mercenary and becomes an expert archer under his tutelage. Their stories converge as Matilda, the previous king’s heir, escapes her rival, King Stephen, and seeks shelter at Kenniford.

The event-filled plotline includes themes of vengeance and coming-of-age, a hint of romance, and a mystery about a piece of parchment that Em’s attacker will kill to repossess. Her slow recovery from emotional trauma is especially touching.

The cheeky wit and precise descriptions that were Franklin’s hallmarks are as sharp as ever, and the major characters are delightfully human. The book also has a genuine feel for medieval life and times. This unique collaboration is a worthy conclusion to one remarkable career and a promising beginning to another.

This review first appeared in Booklist's January 1st issue.  The Siege Winter is published by Morrow this week in hardcover ($25.99, 352pp) and as an ebook.  In the UK, the book is titled Winter Siege.

I've reviewed several of Ariana Franklin's (aka Diana Norman) books previously on this blog - Fitzempress' Law, her first novel from 1980, and King of the Last Days, which is about as hard to find.  My favorite, though, is Shores of Darkness, historical suspense-adventure set during the time of Queen Anne.  It's an outstanding romp through the late Stuart era.

6 comments:

  1. This sounds good. I'm glad Franklin's daughter was able to pull the book together.

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    1. The novel feels like vintage Franklin, with its great detail on medieval life and wit in unexpected places to lighten the dark atmosphere. It isn't obvious it was written by two people. I hope Norman will continue to write additional novels.

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  2. I love your comment about this book being "a worthy conclusion to a remarkable career and a promising beginning to another". I regret that I've only just discovered Diana Norman after reading Winter Siege, but am eager to read more of her work. My local library has Shores of Darkness, but not the others you mentioned. I will have to keep searching for those.

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    1. The other two are probably the hardest to find (it took me years to locate copies) but they're worth reading if you ever obtain them. Her Makepeace Hedley series set in 18th-c Boston, London, and France is also very good. I still have several of her books yet to read, including the last two in her medieval series written as Franklin.

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  3. The Makepeace Hedley series is on my wish list - and it's readily available at a price I can afford. I'm amazed at the prices for Fitzempress' Law. One copy I came across had a hefty price tag of over US$600.

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    1. Some of the prices are ridiculous! There's a copy at Amazon US for $79, but I paid less than half that at the time. It would be nice if some of her early books were reissued.

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