RANDOM JOTTINGS


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In my teens and early twenties I used to read shedloads of historical fiction. I loved them and used to stun my history teacher at school with some esoteric fact or nugget of information that I had learned about. HOW did you know that she would cry and I would say Jean Plaidy and smile smugly…

I worked my way through the entire Plaidy oeuvre though, to be honest, they were pretty pedantic and the dialogue etc was not exactly riveting but it gave me a historical background I have to this day. I answered a question on University Challenge the other day about some early French king and realised I had picked that up from one of her books. I sometimes use to surprise my children as well with my knowledge, always a good feeling.

One of the writers I read was the above mentioned Pamela Belle. When I was working in the library system as a teenager and then full time once I left school, I had the run of all the books and every week when the box of new ones arrived it was like Christmas and I used to snag all the ones I wanted to check out. And one week I checked Winterout Wintercombe by Pamela Belle. Set in the time of the Civil War, Silence St Barbe the wife of the Puritan St George, finds a troop of Cavaliers on her doorstep, while her husband is away fighting, and has to garrison them. Led by a repulsive Captain Ridgley she finds that she is tested to the limit in trying to keep her family safe and run the house. Silence had had a repressive childhood with a strict father and had been married off to Sir George at a young age, mainly to help with his two step children. She then produced two of her own and is settled in a comfortable if boring life. Her mother in law is a constant presence hectoring Silence on her ways of bringing up her children and generally making life hell. Inside Silence is seething with rebellion but her upbringing holds her firmly in check.

But amongst the troop is a dashing Cavalier with merry brown eyes and a smiling face, Captain Nicholas Hellier, and gradually over the months of dealing with the trials and tribulations of the troops and the brutality of Ridgley, Silence finds that her friendship with the Captain is blossoming into love. A Puritan housewife yearning after a Cavalier – shock horror.

In the end the inevitable happens and Silence discovers the joy of love and happiness. Not for long of course as the New Model Army proves to be too strong for the Cavaliers and they are forced to surrender and Silence and Nicholas are parted.

I remember enjoying this book so much when I first discovered it and also remember sitting up late at night in bed unable to put the light out until I had finished it.  The following year the sequel came out and I grabbed it immediately. The Herald of Joy takes up the story several years later. Sir George is on his deathbed and he leaves Herald a cruel will behind forcing his daughter Rachel into a loveless marriage and depriving Silence of the right to live at WIntercombe unless his son Nick allows her to.  Tabitha, Silence's daughter who suspected the love between her mother and Nicholas vows to track him down and bring them together but of course in the years that followed the end of the Civil War the country is still fragmented and broken and she has no idea where Nick might be.

Both these books are large, fat books with loads and loads of reading. The historical background is wonderfully depicted and the domestic life at Wintercombe is beautifully researched and totally fascinating. There are two more books in this series and I have managed to get hold of them and will be reading them with pleasure. Now the nights are drawing in and curtains will soon be drawn, it is good to curl up on the sofa with a great book.

I had these books on my Kindle and they can be bought direct from Endeavour Press who are a simply marvellous publishing house finding titles from the past that are now available once more. They do a fantastic job and through them I have not only read Pamela Belle, but have also rediscovered another old favourite of mine, Rosalind Laker. Do check them out. They are also available on Amazon

My only quibble is the covers. The usual almost headless woman and the costumes wildly wrong and the pose of the models totally modern.   But ignore the cover and just enjoy the contents.

 

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15 responses to “Pamela Belle – a rediscovery”

  1. Elaine Avatar

    well it may have been me as I have been banging on about them for a while. Do check out the Bloomsbury ebook list as well as they have some great stuff. If you do read Pamela Belle do let me know what you think, they are available on Amazon

  2. Gillie Avatar

    I am loving Endeavour Press, if it was you that introduced me, Elaine, then ta everso! Some wonderful detective ones have been offered. Must look for Pamela Belle, not heard of her.

  3. Gillie Avatar

    Oh, my absolute favourite book……..read it so many times, much her best!

  4. Elaine Avatar

    I think one of the best Plaidy books was her book on Henry VIII and his wives. I have written essays on this and used a huge amount of the background I picked up after these readings. I also remember Catherine Gaskin, Sara Dane was one of my favourites and Dorothy Eden is another on my list. If you check out Kindle on Amazon these authors are popping up all the time. I have not read any modern historical writers but will check out those you mention.
    Alison Weir has just embarked on a series of six books about H8 and his wives. I read katherine of Aragon a month or so ago and it was wonderful

  5. LizF Avatar

    I credit the novels of Jean Plaidy for both a large part of my History A Level and my love of historical fiction which is still alive and well!
    I love your lists mentioning authors I remember well – Rosalind Laker, Constance Heaven, Anya Seton, Catherine Gaskin and what about Dorothy Eden? I absolutely adored some of her slightly Gothic tinged novels but she has disappeared off the face of publishing (although I am pretty sure I still have some of her 70’s paperbacks in the attic!)
    The name of Pamela Belle is very familiar – I will have to search her out again – but of modern historical writers have you read Elizabeth Fremantle, Susannah Dunn, Antonia Hodgson and Katherine Clements? All excellent on spirit of place and period and all really nice as well (I met them at the Harrogate History Festival a couple of years ago)

  6. Elaine Avatar

    Yes Wintercombe at 99p at mo! I am on the third of the Wintercombe books at mo and so enjoying them. Good for Endeavour Press to reprinting
    Oh and I remember Claire Lorrimer well. The Harod Eagles Russian trilogy is also now on Kindle but I have my old battered paperbacks on my shelves.
    Do let me know what you think of Wintercombe

  7. Julie Avatar

    I don’t know how I missed Pamela Belle first time round, but your description had me racing to Amazon where Wintercombe is going for a song, so I downloaded it to my Kindle straight away and I cannot wait to start reading it.
    I do miss these wonderful epic historical novels. These days, the majority of historical novels seem to be about Tudor king and queens or sagas and while I enjoy both of them, I do yearn for the days of books like Cynthia Harrod-Eagles’ Russian trilogy or those wonderful Claire Lorrimer sagas like Mavreen and Tamarisk!

  8. Elaine Avatar

    I sometimes wonder if the designers have any idea of what is in the books they are designing for I really do. I remember Constance Heaven very well and found one of her books in a charity shop past year, Heir to Kuragin and loved it all over again. It had one of those awful but wonderful covers that Pan used to design, very sixties

  9. Elaine Avatar

    Glad you find me again Anne and that I am still awesome…
    I am finding I am enjoying historical fiction all over again now and am still amazed at the amount I know when I am no historian, all culled from books

  10. Elaine Avatar

    don’t know about Stella Riley will check her out

  11. Lyn Avatar

    Loved Pamela Belle but totally agree about the dreadful new covers. I remember the hardbacks had lovely painterly covers. I borrowed them from my library too back in the day. Also read all of Jean Plaidy, Hilda Lewis, Constance Heaven etc.

  12. anne Avatar
    anne

    speaking of rediscovery, Random fell off my computer over a year ago?(long story, new computer, blahblahblah) and I have so so so missed reading it! Today, for some reason, I stumbled across a reference to it, and then found it again. YAY!!! and it is just as awesome and entertaining, and am so glad you are still out there,writing about the books, and life and all!
    Historical fiction must be a thing future librarians go in for, I know I was quite locked into it as a teen and college student. And yes, all those little historical nuggets that one finds lodged in one’s brain, for use at various times….a certain joy of well-researched hist.fic!

  13. Kelty Avatar
    Kelty

    I remember loving Pamela Belle! Thanks for bringing her to mind – now I want to do a massive re-reading. If you like that period, you may be familiar with Stella Riley – Marigold Chain, Garland of Straw and others – very sweeping.

  14. Elaine Avatar

    Deb – first of all I loved the Margaret Campbell Barnes books and they are available on Amazon if you have a kindle. Endeavour press are publishing some of hers as well. Wintercombe is currently available on Amazon for 99p if you do have a Kindle.
    King’s Jester was one of my favourites of hers
    I remember the Six Wives of Henry VIII with Keith Michel in the early seventies. It was wonderful.
    And of course Katherine by Seton is an all time favourite. I always remember her description of John of Gaunt’s ‘speedwell blue eyes’! The Other Boleyn Girl by Gregory is not my cuppa at all.
    Alison Weir has just started a series of six books on the wives of H8, fiction and the first one on Katherine of Aragon was published this year. It is excellent and the next is due out early 2017. Alison was at the Felixstowe Book Festival and I had the luck to introduce her. She gave the most wonderful talk and immediately was asked to return to talk to us about Anne Boleyn.
    I also mentioned Rosalind Laker. Her books are great reads as well

  15. Deb Avatar
    Deb

    How did I miss these? I was a huge historical fiction fan in my teens. Like you, I read all of Jean Plaidy’s books, not to mention the rather racier Margaret Campbell Barnes (how I wish someone would reprint her books). When “The Six Wives of Henry VIII” was first broadcast in the early 1970s, it seemed to open floodgates–historical fiction (much of it reprinted from years before) became extremely popular. My favorite book at the time (and still one I dip into for an occasional reread) was Anya Seton’s KATHERINE, about Katherine Swynford, mistress of John of Gaunt. The funny thing is, I can’t get into the “new” historical fiction, like THE OTHER BOLEYN GIRL. The new books are good, I’m sure, but I feel as if I’ve already been there.

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