Ask the Author: Elizabeth Chadwick
“I'll be happy to answer questions as and when I can. I sometimes run out of time, but if you bear with me, I'll try and get back to queries. :-) ”
Elizabeth Chadwick
Answered Questions (7)
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Elizabeth Chadwick
Hi Linda,
I haven't thought about it - mainly because Sharon Kay Penman has already written that story in Here Be Dragons which is a truly wonderful novel. It's an iconic rendering which would be a very hard act to follow!
I haven't thought about it - mainly because Sharon Kay Penman has already written that story in Here Be Dragons which is a truly wonderful novel. It's an iconic rendering which would be a very hard act to follow!
Elizabeth Chadwick
Hi Brooke,
They can be read as standalones, although they do have a chronological order. It isn't necessary to have read the earlier ones though, to jump into the middle.
They can be read as standalones, although they do have a chronological order. It isn't necessary to have read the earlier ones though, to jump into the middle.
Elizabeth Chadwick
Hi Deanna,
I research in depth and try to be as accurate as I can, although I prefer to use the word 'authentic' rather than accurate. I have been researching my period - late 11th, 12th and early 13th centuries for over 40 years and I have an extensive library. For me it's not just the immediate research but the constant ongoing immersion of myself in the culture and mindset of the period. Without that layering, it's easy for characters to become modern people in fancy dress. At the moment I'm reading books on pilgrimage and the Holy Land for my new work on William Marshal, and on the sidelines for curiosity I'm reading another book on the culture of food and drink in medieval England. (CM Woolgar's latest from Yale University Press. Yes, people did drink water according to his research, although you'll see the myth promulgated in a lot of places online that they didn't. That's the kind of detail I'm constantly chasing and studying in depth). It's all grist to the mill.
The Bigods were an offshoot of my Marshal novels in that I became interested in them through the marriage of Mahelt Marshal to Hugh Bigod. Hugh's mother was a royal mistress and on studying her story, I became interested in what had happened to her - what effect it had on her. I was also interested in Roger's story - denied his inheritance because of his father's rebellion, and having to rebuild, while fending off rivals. My research included material from a PHD thesis on the Bigods and Marc Morris's book on the same family which gives an overview of the earlier Bigods, although his book is mainly on the 13th century branch of the family.
Elizabeth :-)
I research in depth and try to be as accurate as I can, although I prefer to use the word 'authentic' rather than accurate. I have been researching my period - late 11th, 12th and early 13th centuries for over 40 years and I have an extensive library. For me it's not just the immediate research but the constant ongoing immersion of myself in the culture and mindset of the period. Without that layering, it's easy for characters to become modern people in fancy dress. At the moment I'm reading books on pilgrimage and the Holy Land for my new work on William Marshal, and on the sidelines for curiosity I'm reading another book on the culture of food and drink in medieval England. (CM Woolgar's latest from Yale University Press. Yes, people did drink water according to his research, although you'll see the myth promulgated in a lot of places online that they didn't. That's the kind of detail I'm constantly chasing and studying in depth). It's all grist to the mill.
The Bigods were an offshoot of my Marshal novels in that I became interested in them through the marriage of Mahelt Marshal to Hugh Bigod. Hugh's mother was a royal mistress and on studying her story, I became interested in what had happened to her - what effect it had on her. I was also interested in Roger's story - denied his inheritance because of his father's rebellion, and having to rebuild, while fending off rivals. My research included material from a PHD thesis on the Bigods and Marc Morris's book on the same family which gives an overview of the earlier Bigods, although his book is mainly on the 13th century branch of the family.
Elizabeth :-)
Sandy Vaughan
Turns out I'm related to them so it makes reading their stories even more enjoyable!
Turns out I'm related to them so it makes reading their stories even more enjoyable!
...more
Apr 05, 2016 10:12AM · flag
Apr 05, 2016 10:12AM · flag
Lewis Weinstein
Excellent answer. I imagine you are delighted, as am I, when you find conflicting sources and thus have the liberty to choose the view that you wish t
Excellent answer. I imagine you are delighted, as am I, when you find conflicting sources and thus have the liberty to choose the view that you wish to display in your story.
...more
Apr 07, 2016 06:08AM · flag
Apr 07, 2016 06:08AM · flag
Elizabeth Chadwick
Hi Carolyn,
Hand on heart it's a while since I wrote The Winter Mantle, so I'd need to go and check since I don't remember offhand! I don't think I covered that aspect in the novel, but even so, I would have checked on the biographical details. I'll get back to you.
Hand on heart it's a while since I wrote The Winter Mantle, so I'd need to go and check since I don't remember offhand! I don't think I covered that aspect in the novel, but even so, I would have checked on the biographical details. I'll get back to you.
Elizabeth Chadwick
Hi Brittany,
I would love such things to happen but how it works is that the author is usually approached by a TV or film company who ask to buy the rights to the book. Then they have to find the funding to get it made which is easier said than done! However, my Marshal novels have had the rights bought by a film company recently - hooray!!. I have historical consultancy rights on board and they are looking at making a two hour pilot. There is still a long way to go and it still might not happen, but the spark is there. :-)
I would love such things to happen but how it works is that the author is usually approached by a TV or film company who ask to buy the rights to the book. Then they have to find the funding to get it made which is easier said than done! However, my Marshal novels have had the rights bought by a film company recently - hooray!!. I have historical consultancy rights on board and they are looking at making a two hour pilot. There is still a long way to go and it still might not happen, but the spark is there. :-)
Margaret Grant Author
I am so thrilled for you Elizabeth. Hoping that one day 'Where Rowans Intertwine' will be turned into a film or 'The Nine Lives of Tigger Digger into
I am so thrilled for you Elizabeth. Hoping that one day 'Where Rowans Intertwine' will be turned into a film or 'The Nine Lives of Tigger Digger into a cartoon.
...more
Jan 02, 2024 09:10AM · flag
Jan 02, 2024 09:10AM · flag
Elizabeth Chadwick
Not really that I recall - although of course I may have banished it from my memory if it wasn't right! I do occasionally write contemporary short stories for magazines and newspapers. I can do it, but it's not my favourite thing in the world to do (I get asked to do it at times and it can pay well), so I tend to find that a chore. With my historical fiction work, I enjoy the writing and researching lots and it's not happened - yet!
Elizabeth Chadwick
Everyday attitude to violence. While I can understand it and have studied the mindset in order to write it, I do find my modern self at odds with it at times, especially when it comes to children and animals. I grew up in a society where smacking children was the norm and the 'spare the rod and spoil the child' mentality was still rife. Now it's less acceptable. There's been a shift. So if one writes a beating scene which might be perfectly normal for the Middle Ages it can be difficult for modern readers to absorb. At the same time one has to be true to history, so it's a delicate balancing act.
Terelyn Marks
I find, it's not just the casual attitude to violence, it was the extremes that sometimes occurred -- not just smacking a child, but beating them bloo
I find, it's not just the casual attitude to violence, it was the extremes that sometimes occurred -- not just smacking a child, but beating them bloody.
There was a scene in a novel I read several years ago where a man smacks his wife in the face and split her lip and bloodied her nose, causing her to bleed down the front of her gown. This happened in a large group.
Onlookers disapproved, not of him hitting her, but doing it so publicly -- he should have disciplined his wife privately! ...more
Aug 04, 2015 11:32AM
There was a scene in a novel I read several years ago where a man smacks his wife in the face and split her lip and bloodied her nose, causing her to bleed down the front of her gown. This happened in a large group.
Onlookers disapproved, not of him hitting her, but doing it so publicly -- he should have disciplined his wife privately! ...more
Aug 04, 2015 11:32AM
Kristen
Thanks! It can be really difficult to read some of the violent scenes, in your work and in the works of other authors I enjoy. I simply can't handle v
Thanks! It can be really difficult to read some of the violent scenes, in your work and in the works of other authors I enjoy. I simply can't handle violence against children. I skip over that, no matter what. Thank you for the response! Have a great day!
...more
Aug 04, 2015 01:49PM
Aug 04, 2015 01:49PM
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