Friday, January 7, 2022
Happy New Year! by Eileen O'Finlan
Wednesday, January 5, 2022
Baroness Orczy and The Scarlet Pimpernel ~ Fiction and Fact by Rosemary Morris
To learn more about Rosemary please click on the image above.
Baroness Orczy
and
The Scarlet Pimpernel Fiction
and Fact
“They
seek him here, they seek him there,
Those
French men seek him everywhere.
Is
he in Heaven? – Is he in hell?
That
damned annoying Pimpernel.”
The Scarlet Pimpernel, Baroness Orczy’s most famous character, is
Percy, the gallant daredevil, Sir Percival Blakeney Bart. He is the hero of her novels and short
stories set in The French Revolution, so aptly nick-named The Reign of
Terror.
Orczy was a royalist with no sympathy for the merciless Jacobins who
spared no efforts to achieve their political ambitions. Historical accounts prove everyone in France
was at risk of being arrested and sent to the guillotine. Orczy’s works of fiction about the Scarlet
Pimpernel display her detailed knowledge about Revolutionary France and capture
the miserable atmosphere which prevailed in that era.
When writing about her novel The
Laughing Cavalier, Percy’s ancestor, Orczy
described Percival’s “sunny disposition, irresistible laughter, a
careless insouciance and adventurous spirit”.
As I mentioned in my previous article in Baroness Orczy, in Vintage
Script, Percy revealed himself to Orczy while she was waiting for a train
at an underground station. She saw him
dressed in exquisite clothes that marked him as a late eighteenth century
gentleman, noted the monocle he held up in his slender hand and heard both his
lazy drawl and quaint laugh. Inspired by
their meeting she wrote The Scarlet Pimpernel in five weeks.
On the second of August 1792, Percy founded his gallant League of
Gentlemen composed of nine members. When
ten more members enrolled in January 1793 there was “one to command and
nineteen to obey.” Percy and his league saved innocents from the French
Revolutionary Government’s tool, Madame Guillotine.
London society speculated about the identity of The Scarlet
Pimpernel but, with the possible
exception of the Prince Regent, only the members of Percy’s league knew his
true identity.
Percy, a man of wealth and
influence well-acquainted with the Prince Regent, heir to the throne, married
Marguerite St. Just, a French actress.
Until Percy discovered Marguerite was responsible for an aristocratic
family’s death, he was an adoring husband.
Percy kept his alias, The Scarlet Pimpernel secret from Marguerite for fear
she would betray him. Still loving
Marguerite despite her crime, he feigned indifference, treated her coldly,
shunned her company and acted the part of a fool so successfully that he bored
her. However, Marguerite discovered the
truth about Percy and saved his life.
After the romantic couple’s reconciliation, Marguerite is mentioned as a
member of the league in Mam’zelle Guillotine.
At the beginning of each of Orczy’s novels about The Scarlet
Pimpernel and his league, the current events of the French Revolution are
summarised. Thus, Orczy weaves fiction
and face by not only featuring English and French historical figures such as
Robespierre, d’Herbois, The Prince of Wales, and Sir William Pitt, the younger,
but by making use of historical events.
For example, in Eldorado Orczy
describes the Dauphin in the care of the brutal shoemaker, Simon, who teaches
the prince to curse God and his parents.
Amid horror, Orczy uses romance and heroism to defeat evil, as she
did as a child when playing the part of a fearless prince while her sister
acted the part of a damsel in distress.
Orczy spent 1900 in Paris that, in her ears, echoed with the horrors
of the French Revolution. Surely, she
had found the setting for her magnificent hero The Scarlet Pimpernel, who would champion the victims of The
Terror. But why did she choose such an
insignificant flower for Percy’s alias?
It is not unreasonable to suppose a Parisian royalist organisation’s
triangular cards, which were hand painted with roses that resemble scarlet
pimpernels, fuelled Orczy’s imagination.
Further fuel might have been added by a man called Louis Bayard, a
young man with similarities to the real life Scarlet Pimpernel, although he
might not have been motivated by Percy’s idealism
William Wickham, the first British spymaster, engaged the
nineteen-year old Louis Bayard. In the
following years, Louis proved himself to be as elusive as Percy. Like Percy,
Louis had many aliases. Not only did Orczy’s fictional hero and Louis fall in
love with actresses, but both also appeared and disappeared without causing
comment. Real life Louis’s and fictional
Percy’s lives depended on being masters of disguise.
In disguise, Percy fools his archenemy, Citizen Chauvelin, who Orczy
gives the role of official French Ambassador to England. It is an interesting example of her
distortion of historical personalities and incidents for them to feature in her
works of fiction. In fact, it is
doubtful that Bernard-Francois, marquis de Chauvelin ever assumed a false
identity as he did in Orczy’s novel, The Scarlet Pimpernel, about Percy and his
League of Gentlemen, among whom are such fictional but memorable characters
such as Armand St Just, Marguerite’s brother, Sir Andrew Ffoulkes, Lord
Hastings, and Lord Tony Dewhurst.
Another example of Orczy weaving fact and fiction is Louis-Antoine
St Just, a revolutionary, who she describes as Marguerite’s cousin. Louis-Antoine St Just, a young lawyer, was
Maximillian Robespierre’s follower. He supported the punishment of traitors as
well as that of anyone who was a ‘luke-warm’ revolutionary. In The
Triumph of the Scarlet Pimpernel Marguerite’s brother, the fictional,
Armand St Just, meets with Robespierre and other Jacobins. Orczy portrays him as young, fervent, and
articulate as the real life Louis-Antoine St Just.
Throughout the history of publishing countless authors, who became
famous and whose work is still enjoyed as books, films, plays and t.v.
dramatizations, found it difficult to place their work. Orczy’s most famous novel was no
exception. Percy took the leading role
in her play called The Scarlet Pimpernel and
captured the audience’s hearts. Subsequently the novel was published, and Percy
became famous. His fame increased with
each sequel about his daring exploits.
http://bookswelove.net/authors/morris-rosemary
rosemarymorris.co.uk
Tuesday, January 4, 2022
The Necessity of New Year’s Writing Goals by S. L. Carlson
I am S. L. Carlson, a proud and grateful BWL Publishing Inc. author. My books can be viewed and purchased by visiting https://www.bookswelove.net/carlson-s-l
I find this yearly habit encouraging and strengthening.
More than that. As a writer, I find it vital in order to see and find my writing way.
Each year, I keep a file for the critique group. So
this new month of the new year, I looked up the file of our 2021 writing goals.
Couldn’t find it. I figured it was such a chaotic pandemic year (with me moving
a little over a year ago to a new state), that I simply hadn’t pieced all our
goals together like I’ve done the previous years. But when I searched my
emails, lo and behold, not a single 2021 writing goal popped up.
I was stunned. I stared at my computer screen for the
longest time because 1) I hadn’t sent out a request for goals (so unlike me);
2) no one else in the group made comments about it (so unlike them); and 3) I
was struck with how much this pandemic and move has kicked my writing butt!
This new year, however, our house is finally in order,
including furniture, and pictures on the walls. All our family have been
vaccinated. It’s a new year. New beginnings. Time for new goals.
If you have not made writing goals for this new year,
I admire your time, dedication, and tenacity to continue writing on your own. An
author’s life can be very solitary. As for me, I need others. If I didn’t have
a time-limit of when to have 3,000 new words written to sub to my critique
group each month, I know I’d make excuses to fill my time with things other
than writing, and there are always other things.
I’ve been in other on-line groups, like BIW (Book-in-a-Week),
where you’d post on Sunday night however many pages you think you’d be able to
write for the week, then report in on the following Sunday. I’ve also
participated in NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) in November for ten years.
THAT is a rush – writing 1,667 blabbering words each day!
If you don’t have (or even if you do have) a writing group
to share you goals with, share them in the comments below. Let’s make 2022 a
spectacular year for writing.
S. L. Carlson Blog & Website: https://authorslcarlson.wordpress.com
BWL Inc. Publisher Author Page: https://www.bookswelove.net/carlson-s-l
Monday, January 3, 2022
New Year, New…Who Am I Kidding? by Diane Bator
Happy 2022! New Year, New…Who Am I Kidding?
Every year
it’s the same old:
· “I’m going to get in shape and lose
weight.”
· “I’m going to finally get that new
job/career.”
· “I’m taking my dream vacation.”
· “I’ll eat healthier.”
· “This year, I’ll budget and save
money.”
· “January 1st, I’m writing
my book.”
Nothing
wrong with that except life gets in the way and derails our plans. Not all the
time. But who can resist when your spouse brings home pizza? Or a blizzard hits
and the most exercise you get is shoveling the sidewalk and driveway before you
collapse on the sofa? Then the car breaks down or the dog gets sick and it’s
bye-bye dream vacation and budget.
But that
book. Now that’s something you can work with, right?
What’s so
hard about writing a couple hundred pages of that epic story you have swirling
around in your head? It’s only 70,000 words and you probably speak that many on
any given day. It can’t be so hard to write them down.
January
1: Fresh notebook and a pen Aunt Matilda
gave you for Christmas because she didn’t know what else to get you and you
could use it for work. Big cup of coffee—the lifeblood of writers—and…GO!
January
2: That empty page is still staring back
at you. It’s so crisp and white why would you want to mess it up?
January
3: Maybe you’d be best off writing on
the computer. That way I can do some research at the same time.
January 4:
Did you know it’s National Spaghetti Day?
February 1:
Okay, January was a bust. It snowed far too much to write and you spent most of
your time shoveling snow and working out the plot. Time to sit down with that
notebook and stay off social media.
February 14:
If you got caught writing today, the love of your life would disown you!
Tomorrow’s the day.
February 15:
Today’s the day! You sit at your desk. At work. And get pulled into meetings
all day. By the time you get home…zzzzzz…
March 1: You
read an article about how to write a book in 15 minutes a day. One you’re done
laughing, you read it again. Maybe it could work. What you’ve been doing so far
this year hasn’t helped you make any progress. You get home from work, have
dinner and…sit in a quiet corner with a timer set for 15 minutes. Lo and
behold! You’ve written an entire paragraph by the time your alarm goes off. It
may not be as much as you wanted, but it’s a start! You celebrate with a piece
of celery then add a cookie chaser.
March
13: According to the Internet it’s Smart
& Sexy Day and you’re feeling it! That 15 minutes a day is going so well
that you’ve started taking another 15 minutes during your lunch break. Your
story may not be Pulitzer material, but it’s your book coming from your
imagination and the whole world will love it!
May 2: Whose dumb idea was it to write a book?
June 6: Those 15 minute sessions have expanded to 30
minutes now that you can bring your laptop and/or notepad outside into the
sunshine. Fresh air and a little mental exercise never hurt anyone.
July 3: While the U.S. has Independence Day tomorrow,
you’re celebrating your own milestone. 50,000 words! Over halfway there!
August 20-28:
What should’ve been your incredible week
at the beach ends up with you in bed with a stomach bug. How could you possibly
get so sick in mid-summer? At least you have more time to write—when you’re not
running to the bathroom. Back to 15 minutes a day. Better than nothing.
September 4:
The kids are back in school here in
Canada and you have a surge of motivation. You spend the long weekend doing a
final sprint to finish that book! At 4am Sunday morning, you type THE END. Your
heart races, your palms sweat, you have a celebratory glass of wine and pace
the house accepting awards and contracts from every publisher you can dream of.
Sleep? Who needs it?
September 5:
You excitedly show your masterpiece to
the love of your life who tells you not to quit your day job. You debate
tossing your manuscript in the trash. Wait. Is that really what it’s called if
you’ve a first time writer? It sounds so…Professional! You do a little research
about editing and discover it’s harder than it looks. Good thing your friend is
a teacher!
October
12: Still waiting for edits from teacher
friend. Maybe asking them to read it at the beginning of the school year wasn’t
such a great idea. The teacher suggested you run Spell Check on it before you send
it to anyone else. Why didn’t you think of that? How do you find Spell Check?
October
31: There is nothing scarier this year
than that manuscript you stuck in the drawer months ago! You’re about to stick
roast it in a bonfire when you find something that makes you realize all may
not be lost. A social media ad for a Book Coach. With butterflies in your
belly, you do a little digging to see if this is legit or just someone else
wanting your hard-earned bucks.
November
1: Good news. The coach has a link to
offer you some free advice on your first chapter. Should you? Shouldn’t you? If
you don’t, you’ll burn the book and never speak of it again. If you do…
November
15: The coach loves your story idea.
Gives you some great feedback and gives you a few options regarding working
with them. Hesitant to sign up, you take their advice and start rewriting your
book from Chapter one to The End.
November
20: Love of your life gives you the gift
of the Book Coach’s services for Christmas before you tear out all you hair.
December 31: You spend the day polishing your revised book
then sit back to put your feet up. Your coach sent you a list of a few editors
to research and several publishers and agents to consider. Your eyes ache and
your head is spinning but this is the best you’ve felt since you first typed
The End.
January
1: Fresh notebook and the brand new pen
Aunt Matilda gave you for Christmas because you drained the old one. Big cup of
coffee—the lifeblood of writers—and…GO!
Happy New
Year & Happy Writing!
Diane Bator
https://www.holidayinsights.com/moreholidays/
Saturday, January 1, 2022
New Year, New You - BWL Publishing Inc. 2022
Visit us at https://bwlpublishing.ca
The winner of the Kindle E-Reader in our Winter Wonderland Contest
Abigail Gullo from Washington State
Congratulations Abigail
ENTER OUR NEW YEAR, NEW YOU CONTEST TO WIN ONE OF THREE LUXURY SPA BASKETS THAT WE'LL BE GIVING AWAY TO CELEBRATE THE NEW YEAR.
PRIZE #1 -
PRIZE #2
PRIZE #3
NEW RELEASES COMING IN JANUARY 2022
____________________
Friday, December 31, 2021
This is Fiction! by Priscilla Brown
Gina is lover shopping,
but is a New Year's Eve party the right store for her?
https://books2read.com/Class-Act
When our readers start a book, we authors are asking them to 'suspend disbelief' (also to suspend doing the ironing, looking for a missing sock etc. etc.)
An author of contemporary romance fiction, my imagination works to create stories involving narratives of a situation, event or circumstance which could happen, or could have happened, in real life. I like to introduce credible characters into environments plausible to their personalities, individual histories, lifestyles and physical backgrounds.
May 2022 be kind to you, with lots of great stories to read and enjoy.
Best wishes, Priscilla
https://priscillabrownauthor.com
Thursday, December 30, 2021
Missing Children by Eden Monroe
Click for Purchase Information and Book Details
Amber Alert, an acronym for America’s Missing: Broadcast Emergency Response, was named for Amber Rene Hagerman (November 25, 1986 – January 15, 1996).
Thousands of children, just like Amber, go missing worldwide every year, although in many countries, statistics are either unavailable or unreliable for any number of reasons. In Canada, the first statistics on missing children were released in 1987 and in that year a staggering 57,233 were recorded. In 2019 that figure had dropped to 40,425 according to records compiled by the Canadian Police Information Centre (CPIC), but is no less astonishing.
In the few global statistics that were available (globalmissingkids,org), the United States led the way with an estimated 460,000 children reported missing every year. In Canada there were 45,288 (estimated) reported missing; United Kingdom there are an estimated 112,853 missing children reported every year; Russia, an estimated 45,000 in 2015, India, 96,000 each year, Australia, an estimated 20,000 missing children reports every year, and in Germany there were an estimated 100,000 cases of missing children annually. While those numbers sound astoundingly high, in reality even one missing child is one too many.
In Back in the Valley, Book Two of the Emerald Valley Ranch series, parents Rowdy and Victoria Brooks are thrust into that nightmare when their six year-old son, Daniel, goes missing, his twin, Liam, left behind. It’s the first time the brothers have ever been apart:
“The scream of sirens filled the air as more cruisers arrived, one officer quickly beginning to put up yellow crime scene tape.
“’ ‘Yes, that’s what they’re saying. I’m down here now, in the parking lot.” Lindy sounded as though she was about to cry. “I came in to get gas and ran into all of this. They’re talking to everyone that’s here, but I came after the fact. Victoria’s car is still at the pumps, and the door’s open. I know it’s hers because it’s got Texas plates. The guy in the store said they’ll probably put out an Amber Alert. Rowdy and Victoria and Liam are in the back in the office with the police, but you could hear Liam crying at the top of his lungs, that poor child. Just screaming. Oh Martin, this is horrible! A child abducted right here! In Sussex!’ “
In addition to a massive police response to locate the missing child and reunite him with his family, in Back in the Valley, the community draws together in their tireless search for any clues as to Daniel’s whereabouts. And then they get a major break:
“ ‘9-1-1, what is your emergency?’
‘Yes, I was driving to work on the Noonan Road about twenty miles from Markhamville in Kings County and I saw something lying on the side of the road, right beside the grass. I was past it before I realized what I was looking at. I backed up and sure enough, it was a child’s sneaker. My headlights reflected off the decals on the side of it.’ “
Children can also become lost of their own volition, separated from their parents at crowded venues of any kind, or sometimes they can simply wander off into the woods. Whatever may be the case, they’re unable to find their way back. When I was fifteen, a short distance from where we lived a small child did just that, disappearing from his grandparents’ backyard in rural New Brunswick, and off into heavily forested backcountry. As I recall it happened in late spring and while daytime temperatures were fairly warm, the nights were still cold. Searchers of all ages came from far and wide to comb the area for this precious little boy. My father also participated in the search and my mother made sandwiches to help feed the volunteers. I remember delivering those sandwiches on my bicycle to the search command post at the top of the hill; saw the distraught mother weeping and being comforted as she waited for word about her son. And on the second day he was found, about a mile away in dense woods lying under a tree, his shoes and socks on the shores of the nearby lake. Sadly he had not been discovered in time. Immediately airlifted to hospital by military helicopter, he succumbed to the effects of his ordeal.
We were eating supper the evening he was found, when frantic knocking sounded at our back door. It was a reporter wanting to use the phone (those were the days before cellphones) to call it in that rescuers had located the child. It is impossible to forget the tension and sadness of that difficult time. There was a pall over the entire community, and beyond, and tears fill my eyes all these many years later as I’m writing this.
In Back in the Valley, a well-meaning child becomes lost in dense woods when he decides to conduct his own search for Daniel Brooks, and so authorities had two missing children on their hands within a twenty-four hour period:
“Will studied the mixed Acadian forest in the distance. ‘I say we give it an hour and if nothing, we’re going to have to have help. They can bring in a dog if they have to. There’s a lot of woods up there. Let’s get going, see if we see a print or something that let’s us know we’re on the right track.’
“All three started off, parking Martin’s truck alongside the edge of the woods and then setting off on foot into the thick underbrush, over and around fallen rotting trees and past sharp snags on tree trunks that made for slow going, and of course there were the ever-present mosquitos. By 9:45 p.m. they were back, grim-faced as they stood in the kitchen.
Martin ran a hand over his face tiredly. ‘There’s no sign of him and he doesn’t answer. We’re going to have to get some help right away. I’d say the rain isn’t far off.’”
When a missing child meets the criteria for an amber alert, we the public can help by:
- Watching for the child, suspect and/or the vehicle described in the alert.
- Giving information on the location of the abduction and a description of the victim, suspect and/or any vehicle involved.
- Immediately reporting any findings by calling 9-1-1 or the phone number included in the alert, but do not call 9-1-1 to request information about the abduction.
In the event a child becomes lost or separated, kindercare.com offers sound precautionary suggestions for parents:
- children should be taught critical names and numbers;
- to freeze and stay in one place, right where they are, until found, and don’t go off with anyone;
- shout your name in a big strong voice, even yelling Mom or Dad will work;
- shout your child’s name as you search, don’t worry about being polite;
- equip your child with a whistle – a good loud one that will attract attention.
Whether lost or abducted, every year many missing children are indeed found and returned safely to their grateful loved ones. Whatever the circumstances may be, or the outcome, it is an unthinkable ordeal for the parents and loved ones, and in both cases immediate action is required.
Amber Alert was put in place in the US in 1996, and because of that child abduction alert system, as of July 5, 2021, 1,074 missing children were brought to safety. (ambertalert.ojp.gov.statistics).
Amber Hagerman’s murder remains unsolved.
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