Remember When . . . Modern Was Ancient?

GiveawayLove Finds You in Golden, New Mexico by Lena Nelson Dooley

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In the past week as I immerse myself in all things Ancient Persian, I discovered a few key things about the culture.

1.) Persia was crazy wealthy. I’m talking C-R-A-Z-Y. Jewels embedded in the ceilings. Stone pillars polished so highly they shone like mirrors. Gold this, silver that, everything all bling-bling. There was not an inch of the king’s palaces that weren’t decorated, painted, bedecked, bejeweled, or otherwise designed to impress. And it wasn’t just a palace. Each capital city had a compound with multiple palaces, and there were four–count ’em, four–capital cities.

2.) They were surprisingly modern in their thoughts about women. Not only were there professional women, they earned MORE for the same work than men did. They got a year’s paid maternity leave. And one of Xerxes’ most trusted naval commanders was a woman. Cool, eh?

3.) Religious tolerance was not an invention of the United States. It was also the policy in Persia–which shouldn’t be all that surprising, given how often the generosity of the kings of Babylon, Persia, and Media are mentioned in the Bible when the Jews were their subjects. Though Persia actually had a monotheistic society, they let all their subject nations keep their own systems of belief.

4.) It is impossible to listen to Iranian dance music without dancing. Seriously–try it. I turned some on just for ambiance. First some slower stuff like what they played in the documentaries I was watching, then a faster one that had me bopping around my chair, much to the amusement of my hubby and daughter.

Hope everyone has a happy Wednesday! Back I go to Jewel of Persia . . .

Remember When . . . They Drank the Rivers Dry?

Two giveaways – Jennifer Hudson Taylor’s Highland Blessings and Ginny Smith’s Third Time’s a Charm.

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More today from my good friend Herodotus. =) I’d been concentrating on putting words to the page for a while, but yesterday I got plenty of those down and so took up my gigantic book to read while outside with the kiddos. There were quite a few times when, just as the first time I read it, I went, “Whoa.”

Scholars all agree that Xerxes rallied the largest army up to that point in history when he marched against Greece. Scholars today also say, “But surely it wasn’t as big as Herodotus says it was. He just wants it to sound that way so that it’s more impressive when the Greeks win.” That’s a reasonable argument, but . . . well, he’s really specific. And since I have no better numbers, we’re running with them.

Now, picture this. An army so big it takes it seven days to march past any one point. That’s (according to my hubby’s math last night) a line of soldiers 200 MILES long. See why I was “Whoa”ing? According to Xerxes census of his troops, the land army was 1,700,000 strong when they stepped foot in Greece. They also kept gathering forces as they went (a condition of surrender) so that their numbers kept on growing.

According to Herodotus, this huge force (plus their slaves, concubines, supply crews, and animals) drank dry nearly every river they came across. Um, yeah. I should think so.

Then there was the fleet. They had 1,207 ships. So factor in crews for them, all the special folks that go along with it, etc., and the total number of fighting men swells to 2,317,610. (See, pretty darn specific.) Factor in all those slaves and supply crews–but NOT counting the concubines they brought and the eunuchs–and Herodotus estimates that the total number of people moving en masse into Greece was . . .

5,283,220. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Sorry, I’m still totally stunned by this. There are probably more interesting things to talk about, but WOW. Am I right?

A funny note about it–Xerxes was so proud of this army (duh, right?) that when they caught spies from Athens and were ready to execute them, he stepped in and said, “No, no. Let’s give them the grand tour and send them home. How else will everyone know how awesome we are? Let ’em shake in their shoes and surrender, boys, and we can all go home without lifting a finger!”

He said, similarly, about enemy supply ships they saw, “Let ’em go. They’re headed where we are, right? We’ll just eat their grain once we get there.” I love Xerxes. =)

Happy Wednesday, everyone! I’m off to dethrone a queen.

Remember When . . . Day Turned to Night?

Giveaway – Sarah Sundin’s fantabulous A Distant Melody!

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In re-reading Herodotus’s History (how many of you can say you’ve done that? LOL.) about the Greco-Persian war, I keep stumbling upon fantastic little tidbits that I don’t remember from my first read-through. Perhaps because we had to read so stinkin’ much of it for each class that little details didn’t really have time to stick. But wow! I’m finding some real gems for this new book!

One thing I’m still trying to figure out how to work in . . . at one point, Xerxes and his massive army are ready to finally, officially launch their campaign against Greece and cross the formidable river, Hellespont. They’d spent years first preparing and then bridging it. A storm collapsed their efforts, which led to Xerxes’ infamous command to have the river lashed. They bridge it again and are finally ready to cross, when . . .

Day turns to night. Literally, according to Herodotus. Middle of the day, and POW! No clouds, no eclipse, just DARK. What do y’all make of that?

Now, the Ancient Greeks knew their astronomy–they would have known had it been a predictable phenomenon. And the Persians? They studied this stuff like nobody’s business. Remember Daniel in Babylon, excelling at all their maths and sciences? Same empire.

But this . . . this defied explanation. So when Xerxes looked to his magi and said, “Yo, dudes, what’s up with this?” they had no natural explanation.

“Obviously,” they replied, “it’s an omen.”

“No, really? Brilliant, guys. Brilliant. How about telling me what it’s an omen of?”

Insert the magi scratching their heads. Then one says, “Oo, oo, I know, I know! You know how Greece is represented by the day? And us, we’re the night? Well obviously this is an omen of the night overtaking the day and Persia gaining a victory over Greece! Eh? Eh??”

Xerxes liked this (I mean, why wouldn’t he??) but it still struck fear into a lot of the other people. See, even in 483 A.D., people knew spin when they heard it. And whether or not night was supposed to be them, it was darn scary when it overtook them twelve hours ahead of schedule.

Now, am I mixing this story with other memory, or is there some Old Testament account of something like this happening? I know there was an occasion where one of the prophets commanded the sun reverse, but was there a darkness thing? (Other than the plague?) If so, I’d love a refresher on where that is. If not . . . yeah, then I’m just confusing this one with other thoughts. =)

The real question, though, is how I can use this is my novel. Oh, the endless possibilities. Hmm . . . .

Remember When . . . The Moths Ate History?

GiveawayTo Darkness Fled, a young adult fantasy by Jill Williamson.

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How’s that for a weird title? LOL. Had I not wanted to use my “Remember When” opener, it would have been “The Holes History Left.”

So. I’m researching for a new Biblical-fiction, which I have mentioned briefly on here before. (I’ll have an official announcement about it soon-ish.) It’s going to be combining the book of Esther in the Bible with the history of Xerxes (what the rest of the world called King Ahasa-whatever in the Bible) as told by Herodotus in his chronicles of the war between Persia and Greece.

Here’s the thing, though. Reading them, trying to put them together, leaves a lot of questions. Stupid ones like “When was his oldest son born?” that should have ready answers. But don’t. We have very few records of the Persians outside these two sources I’m already using, so if they don’t tell me, nothing does.

In a way, it’s frustrating. I just want to know how old the kid was!! But I’m going to focus on how freeing it is, too. Because the more holes, the more illogical stuff that’s recorded, the more I get to spin my way for my story, the more I get to make up.

Scholars today also agree that Herodotus, who gives us most of what we know about Xerxes, was rather biased against him, given that X was leading a massive army against H’s people and all. So in all likelihood he doctored the truth a little to reflect his own beliefs and make Xerxes look as terrible as possible in the eyes of the Greeks. I’m totally taking that into account and assuming Herodotus wasn’t a mind reader so didn’t actually know all the thoughts he attributes to Xerxes. I’ll be attributing my own thoughts to him, thank you very much. 😉 (I mean, not mine. But my interpretation, LOL.) For instance, some of the wackier things he did are going to be explained by a sense of humor. History doesn’t record one, but you know. History rarely does.

Some of my best story ideas arise when I read something in history and am left going, “Yeah, but what about . . .?” Like in Esther–how, exactly, did no one know she was Jewish when everyone knew Mordecai was and they obviously had some kind of association?? Well, I have my theory, and it revolves around my main character. =)

Does the Esther story as told in the Bible leave you with any unanswered questions for me to work in?

My Friend Laurie Alice – Interview

My Friend Laurie Alice – Interview

Today I am tickled pink to welcome the awesome Laurie Alice Eakes to my blog. I know her from a historical group I belong to, and let me assure you all that she is just amazing. Always full of insight, willing to help the rest of us with our questions, and a fabulous writer to boot.

Laurie Alice has a great thing going on at her blog right now–hop over to http://seizethechance.blogspot.com/ regularly and leave a comment on the post, because on post 500, Laurie Alice is giving away a gift to EVERY commentor! When will that be? Well, that’s the thing–we don’t know. =) But sometime in the next little while, and I assure you her blog’s worth reading of itself.

For now, have fun getting to know this wonderful lady and her latest book, The Glassblower!

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About Laurie Alice

Award-winning author Laurie Alice Eakes does not remember a time when books did not play a part in her life; thus, no one was surprised when she decided to be a writer. Her first hardcover was an October, 2006 Regency historical from Avalon Books and won the National Readers Choice Award for Best Regency, as well as being a finalist for Best First Book. After selling her first book in the inspirational market, she also wrote articles and essays for Christian publications. A brief hiatus in publishing climaxed with her selling thirteen books in thirteen months, to publishers such as Barbour, Avalon, and Baker/Revell.

She is an active member of RWA and ACFW, and started the Avalon Authors group blog. A graduate of the Seton Hill University Master of Arts Degree in Writing Popular Fiction, And a Bachelor of Arts graduate in English and French from Asbury College, she is an experienced speaker, and has made presentations at local and national RWA conferences, as well as local universities and libraries.

Until recently, she lived in Northern Virginia, then her husband’s law career took them and their dogs and cats, to southern Texas, where she writes full-time and enjoys the beach whenever possible.

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About The Glassblower

Now that Colin Grassick, a master glass-blower from Scotland, has arrived to help at the Jordan glassworks, Meg Jordan’s dreams of teaching the poor, local children are coming true. Finally, someone will have time to make windows for the rural New Jersey schoolhouse, to keep out the cold – and vandals. To Joseph Pyle, the wealthy, arrogant man to whom Meg will soon be betrothed, the destruction of Meg’s new windows is inconsequential – as his wife, she will be forbidden from teaching. Why would Meg’s father insist she marry a man like Joseph and stay away from the endearing Colin?

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What’s your latest book?

My most recently released book is The Glassblower, which was released to the Heartsong book club in December of 2009 and is now on christianbook.com and listed on Amazon, though apparently they don’t have their copies yet. And we stand on the verge of my next release The Heiress, the second book in the series.

And what a fabulous book it was! You can read my review of it here. What’s your favorite part of the story?

There’s a scene at a wedding. It’s winter and snowing and the heroine and hero encounter one another outside—he’s not a guest. They have an intense dialogue and their first kiss. Sometimes I write a scene and just know I got it right. That’s one of them.

Oh yes, that was a great scene. You definitely got it right! What was the hardest part to write?

The beginning. Beginnings are always difficult for me.

Is there a theme to this book?

Yes, trust God for your future. Don’t try to force it. You’ll just mess things up.

Hmm, too true. What’s your favorite genre to write? To read?

My favorite genre to write is historical romance. I am such a romantic and love history. And that’s what I like to read, too, but when I’m working, I actually love something quite opposite like a thriller or at least a romantic-suspense.

And with all the upcoming releases you’ve got on your plate, you’re undoubtedly working most of the time! What’s one of the oddest or most interesting things someone has ever said about you?

You have such a great voice, you should be on radio. I think this is odd because I am not particularly fond of my voice. Too much of my Mid West roots twangs through despite my efforts to smooth it out. But several people have told me this over the years. In college, when I’d answer the dorm hall phone, sometimes guys would just talk to me if the girl they were calling wasn’t available. They liked my voice. I don’t get it.

LOL, well you apparently sound great to everyone else. I’d comment on my opinion, but I’ve only read your voice, never heard it. 😉 What would your dream office look like—and what does your REAL writing environment look like?

My dream office would have at least a gas fireplace at one end and a coffee bar at the other, with big windows interspersed with bookshelves in-between. I’d have a great old-fashioned secretary kind of desk and big comfortable chairs, too. My real office is pretty basic, but at least I have one.

Oh, that sounds fabulous! I sort of set up an office attached to my bedroom, but I never use it. Instead I’m always at the table in our family room. Sigh. Wouldn’t be so bad if I had shelves! Speaking of which (or things you put on them, anyway), is there any one thing or reference you keep handy when writing? Anything you kept around for this particular book?

For this book, I kept my primary resource on glassmaking available, The Glassmakers by Leonard Everett Fisher, but references vary from book to book.

What lessons have you learned through the publication process that you wouldn’t have guessed as a pre-published writer?

Here the author just laughs. You could do a whole blog on this. To make it simple: Getting the sale is the easy part.

Then comes all the little sales, right? Whole different ball game! Aside from writing, what takes up most of your time?

My family, which right now means my husband and our sundry animals.

If someone were to give you $5,000 to spend on anything you wanted, what would you buy? (No saving of gifts to charities allowed!)

A trip to London.

You might find me stowed away in your luggage. =) Do you remember where you were when you got your first or most important call about a book contract?

Oh, yes. It wasn’t my first or even second; it was my third.

I was in New Jersey doing some training when I got the call that my new Jersey series had sold to Barbour. This was important because I thought my career had come to an end with the two books. What was even more fun than being in NJ when learning about NJ, my hero in The Glassblower is a Scot and we had a Scottish man In the class with the same name as the hero—Colin. I spent a lot of time talking to him to get the cadence of his speech right for my hero without resorting to a lot of dialect and weird spellings.

I remember when you told our historical group about that. So cool! What are you writing right now?

I am writing the first book in my Regency series for Baker/Revell, which is due out in the autumn of 2011.

Any upcoming releases we should keep our eye out for?

Lots, thanks be to God. The Heiress and The Newcomer from Heartsong Presents, and When the Snow Flies from Avalon Books. I have two books from Revell coming out next year. And also this year is the large print edition of my first book for the CBA, Better than Gold. The Lord certainly took me from famine to feast.

Hence my constant motto of “I want to be Laurie Alice when I grow up.” =) Is there another author who has greatly influenced your writing?

I can’t point to just one. Patricia Veryan, Georgette Heyer, Jo Beverley, Laura Kinsale… Yes, those are all secular authors, and I read secular fiction exclusively for so long my writing voice was established before I started writing for the CBA.

Thanks for stopping by, Laurie Alice! Readers, don’t forget to swing over to her blog regularly so that you don’t miss Lucky Post 500!!

Remember When . . . You-Know-What Went Out of Fashion?

Things you might want to know: two more days to enter the giveaway for Lisa’s Meander Scar. Ditto for Stray Drop at Continuous Delights. Five more days to enter for it at The Character Therapist. New review of Stray Drop up at Tiffany’s Bookshelf, which gives an opinion on the book from someone who doesn’t always read Christian fiction. My guest post is still up at Chocolate Contemplations on achieving your dreams.

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So, on a blog dedicated mostly to Christian fiction, am I allowed to talk about (casting a furtive glance around) S-E-X? (Did you catch the whisper? LOL) Well, I hope so, because I’m gonna.

In the interview about A Stray Drop of Blood that’s up on A Sequence on Continuous Delights (linked above), the blog owner asks for a rating on the romance. I understand why she wanted this and applaud her, actually, for providing the information her readers want to know. But it got me thinking.

In Stray Drop, sex is a huge factor. It just IS. The whole book revolves around it because Abigail’s beauty led her into a situation where she was forced to a man’s bed. She’s a slave, so historically speaking, this is nearly a given. (Nearly.) But as Jeannie (licensed therapist) points out at The Character Therapist (also linked above), Abigail then had to go through the feelings any rape victim today goes through. And she had to do it all under the watchful eye of her loving masters without letting them in on the secret.

Obviously, I had to actually mention what was going on to deal with it, LOL. So I was very relieved when the first review came in from Dina Sleiman and thoughtfully answered my question about how well I handled it. She liked how each moment of passion was answered with realistic, Bible-based lessons and consequences.

I find it interesting, though, how history deals with the topic through the ages. There have been times (Ancient Rome among them) when people talked about it as openly as we do today. Then there are the times in history when women are taught that it’s a terrible, terrible thing good only for making children, and that no proper lady would ever dare enjoy it. In my Victorian trilogy, I had to take into account this mindset, and yet somehow still make it understandable to women today. I chose to bridge that gap by making my heroine raised along the Med, where the British view on the subject was not shared so much.

It’s a topic that needs to be addressed, I think, especially in Christian writing. Sex may just be the most universal subject out there. Everyone, from Adam and Eve down to the youngest among us today, will have to deal with it in some way or another at some point in their lives. You show me a person who has never faced sexual temptation and I’ll show you a cardboard cutout. How we deal with it profoundly affects who we are–and because it’s so crucial, so important, God has a lot to say about it.

Can I write a historical that doesn’t deal with sexual temptation/sin and the consequences of it? Well, maybe I could . . . but I haven’t yet, LOL. It’s not always a driving force as it is in A Stray Drop of Blood, but it’s going to come up, however understated it may be in some stories. Because I don’t know about you, but I deal with people. And people deal with sex. QED.