Last post, along with the usual 18th-century suspects, included the Ottonians; changing ideas of conception and women's sexual pleasure; Isabella of Parma (the one who fell in love, and vice versa, with her husband's sister); Henry IV and Bertha (and Henry's second wife divorcing him for "unspeakable sexual acts"). (Okay, Isabella of Parma was 18th century.)
Re: <i>The '15: The Great Jacobite Rebellion</i> by Daniel Szechi (2006)
Date: 2022-12-06 08:59 pm (UTC)For the White Rose by Katharine T. Hinkson (1905)
I had high hopes for this book, since it is a Jacobite adventure with f/f potential! Alas, it was not very good. The main character is Lady Nithsdale’s loyal lady’s maid, and the climax of the story is the actual historical event when Lady Nithsdale helped her husband escape from the Tower after the ’15. Lengthwise, it is more of a novella than a novel, and it feels very... simplified? It has more the feel of a fairy tale than a story set in an actual historical time and place. To exemplify, at one point a riderless horse comes back to the house, and I would not have been surprised if the horse had started talking of what happened to its master. It seems like the book thinks that Scotland consists only of the Highlands? The Earls of Nithsdale and of Kenmure are both turned into Highland chiefs. And I suspect that this book may actually confuse James III with BPC?? For one thing, he turns up before the rising begins, and for another, they consistently call him the Prince… *facepalm* The main relationship doesn't get much space to develop: the main character is instantly devoted to Lady Nithsdale, and we don't really get to see their relationship change and evolve.