I spent last weekend in the United States, visiting friends from university and from my military career. And yes (nerdy spoiler) I’m an inveterate gamer as well as a sword nerd and a reading nerd and a history nerd. I play them all–fantasy role-plying games (RPGs hereafter) and historical RPGs and sci-fi games with 40,000 […]
Archives for March 2015
Clothes Make the Character (Or why everyone in the Traitor Son series has to have a wardrobe)
Margherita De Marco Yes, it’s true—I have closets full of historical clothes. In fact, not only do I have closets full, but so do my wife and daughter—clothes for at least three time periods (besides our own, of course) and sometimes four. Or five. Nor are these clothes, strictly speaking, costumes. To me, a costume […]
The Siege of Belgrade 1456, or why is history so complicated?
This week, I’m writing the last pages of the last installment do ‘Tom Swan and the Siege of Belgrade.’ It is, I think, some of my best writing; by including a major female character who is, to put it nicely, a ‘woman of the army,’ I’ve taken an opportunity to give a voice to the […]
The Red Knight — Writing about Tournaments
Photo credit Celia Peachum (www.flickr.com/photos/celiapeachum/) Six months ago I wrapped up the ‘Tournament’ portion of Tournament of Fools (or whatever my publishers will eventually call it.) I’ll try to avoid spoilers, but I thought that it might entertain readers to get an idea of the process. And, as the publishing date is coming in October […]
Writing about Fighting
I am often asked–often by readers, but occasionally by other writers–about writing fight scenes. I thought I’d write a sort of mixed book review, ‘sport’ review and writing tutorial. The three books (really, two books and a series) are, in no particular order, Bob Charette’s brilliant Armizare, the Chivalric Martial Arts System of Il Fior […]
Review of ‘The Thief’s Tale’ by SJA Turney
Buy It in the UK! Buy it in the USA Last year, before the ‘Pen and Sword’ tour even launched, I took a few days in Istanbul with one of my oldest friends, Steve Callahan, and my wife Sarah. When we met up with Steve, he told me he’d been reading Simon (SJA) Turney’s Ottoman […]
And sometimes, I’m wrong
That is a stele (or a fragment thereof) in the New Acropolis Museum in Athens. I was there last year with my Pen and Sword tour… which of course we’re doing again this year–anyway, I was looking at this stele, as one does, and I suddenly realized that I’d misunderstood the way a trieres (a […]