#BookReview The Running Wolf by Helen Steadman @ImpressBooks1

The Running WolfAbout the Book

When a German smuggler is imprisoned in Morpeth Gaol in the winter of 1703, why does Queen Anne’s powerful right-hand man, The Earl of Nottingham, take such a keen interest?

At the end of the turbulent 17th century, the ties that bind men are fraying, turning neighbour against neighbour, friend against friend and brother against brother. Beneath a seething layer of religious intolerance, community suspicion and political intrigue, The Running Wolf takes us deep into the heart of rebel country in the run-up to the 1715 Jacobite uprising.

Hermann Mohll is a master sword maker from Solingen in Germany who risks his life by breaking his guild oaths and settling in England. While trying to save his family and neighbours from poverty, he is caught smuggling swords and finds himself in Morpeth Gaol facing charges of High Treason. Determined to hold his tongue and his nerve, Mohll finds himself at the mercy of the corrupt keeper, Robert Tipstaff. The keeper fancies he can persuade the truth out of Mohll and make him face the ultimate justice: hanging, drawing and quartering. But in this tangled web of secrets and lies, just who is telling the truth?

Format: Paperback (320 pages)            Publisher: Impress Books
Publication date: 1st December 2020 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

The book’s clever structure alternates between Morpeth Gaol in 1703-4, with events narrated by its wily and dishonest keeper Robert Tipstaff, and the story of the Solingen swordmakers, focused on Herman Mohll and his family. Starting with their arrival in Shotley Bridge in 1687, gradually the two storylines come together as the reader learns chapter by chapter how Mohll comes to find himself a prisoner and facing a charge of high treason. Along the way, the reader discovers much about the art of swordmaking, as Mohll instructs his apprentice in the various stages, and also about the risk of injury presented by the work and its dangerous long-term effects on health.

I particularly enjoyed the way the author introduced into the story themes which have contemporary resonance. For example, the Solingen swordmakers are essentially economic migrants, driven to move to England because that is where the best market for their products exists and the most favourable economic future for their families. The mention of duties and tariffs on the high quality steel imported from Germany had me thinking (unfortunately) of Brexit. Other issues touched on are the power of the Guilds in the swordmakers’ native Germany and the value from an intellectual property point of view of the Solingen swordmakers’ knowledge of the secret of making their famous blades.

Perhaps one of the most interesting themes is that of identity. Some of the Solingen swordmakers are anxious to hold on to their sense of being German – to create “a little Solingen” in Shotley Bridge – whilst others, including Hermann, see the necessity, indeed the inevitability, of integration with their English neighbours. As he observes, “Air must take on the scent and taste of whatever it touched, moving around the earth, the wind whipping along from country to country. It would be better to be like the air, carrying a little of whatever he’d touched but constantly moving and blending in”. In particular, when it comes to his young daughter Liesl, Hermann recognizes he can’t ‘insulate’ her from England and pretend she still lives in Germany. Readers will be pleased to know, however, the Mohlls don’t ditch all of their German customs, as the splendid description of their Christmas celebrations demonstrates.

The Mohlls are Lutheran but, ironically, Hermann is suspected of smuggling arms to aid the Jacobite cause. At one point he muses, “If only men the world over could accept there was a single Creator but many ways of praising Him, the world might be a happier place and mankind might stop tearing itself apart“. This from a man who makes swords for a living and regrets the commercial impact on their replacement by guns in modern warfare.

As with Helen Steadman’s previous books, Widdershins and Sunwise (both of which I can recommend), her research is clearly extensive. For example, she reveals in her afterword that, in the course of her research into the Shotley Bridge swordmakers, she discovered archive documents that shed new light on a three hundred year-old mystery. I was also interested to learn that one of the characters in the book – the ‘madman’ Ralph Maddison – whom I initially regarded as a bit farfetched, did exist in real life and was very likely a near neighbour of the Shotley Bridge swordmakers. Well, they do say truth is stranger than fiction! You can find out more about Helen’s research for the book, which included learning the art of swordmaking, on her website.

The Running Wolf is an example of the kind of historical fiction I love. It’s a finely honed blend of historical fact and the author’s imagination; a work of creativity to match one of Herman Mohll’s swords you could say. I received a personally inscribed advance review copy (along with some lovely goodies) courtesy of the author and Impress Books.

In three words: Fascinating, well-researched, immersive

Try something similar: The Blue by Nancy Bilyeau

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About the Author

Helen Steadman’s bestselling first novel, Widdershins and its sequel, Sunwise were inspired by the Newcastle witch trials. Helen recently completed a PhD in English at the University of Aberdeen and is now working on her fourth novel.

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#BookReview A Time For Swords by Matthew Harffy @AriesFiction

Aries_A Time for Swords_Blog Tour Banner

Welcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for A Time For Swords by Matthew Harffy, the first book in a brand new series set in the Viking age. My thanks to Jade at Head of Zeus for inviting me to take part in the tour and for my digital review copy via NetGalley. Do check out the post by my tour buddy for today, Sue at Brown Flopsy’s Book Burrow. Available now as an ebook, A Time for Swords will be published in hardback on 4th March 2021.


Harffy_A TIME FOR SWORDS_HB packshotAbout the Book

Lindisfarne, AD793. There had been portents – famine, whirlwinds, lightning from clear skies, serpents seen flying through the air. But when the raiders came, no one was prepared. They came from the North, their dragon-prowed longships gliding out of the dawn mist as they descended on the kingdom’s most sacred site.

It is 8th June AD793, and with the pillage of the monastery on Lindisfarne, the Viking Age has begun. While his fellow monks flee before the Norse onslaught, one young novice stands his ground. He has been taught to turn the other cheek, but faced with the slaughter of his brothers and the pagan desecration of his church, forgiveness is impossible.

Hunlaf soon learns that there is a time for faith and prayer… and there is a time for swords.

Format: ebook (400 pages)                        Publisher: Head of Zeus
Publication date: 10th December 2020 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

Matthew Harffy is best known for his Bernicia Chronicles series set in 7th century Northumbria of which Fortress of Fury is the latest instalment. Last year also saw publication of his standalone historical novel, Wolf of Wessex.

A Time for Swords takes place a century on from the exploits of Beobrand in the Bernicia Chronicles, transporting the reader to the time of the first Viking raids on the northeast of Britain. Our narrator is Hunlaf who, in old age, seeks to record the story of an eventful life. As he says, “I’ve seen things people wouldn’t believe. A Turkic ship on fire off the shore of Odessa. I’ve watched sunbeams glitter in the dark eyes of the Empress of Roma as we passed beneath Byzantion’s Golden Gate. I do not want all those moments to be lost in time like the winter snow when the rains of spring come.” (Is it just me or is that a subtle allusion to the ‘tears in rain’ speech by Rutger Hauer at the end of the film Bladerunner? If so, it will demonstrate the efforts of my MA English tutor to have me grasp the concept of intertextuality were not in vain.)

Hunlaf begins his story looking back to his time as a young novice at the minster of Werceworthe (modern day Warkworth in Northumberland). Despite his vocation, Hunlaf admits to being enthralled as a boy by the tales his father told him of Beobrand’s exploits against the Mercians (the subject of Fortress of Fury). As a neat in-joke, the author has Hunlaf observe, “I am sure now…that all such yarns have been embellished, for is that not the way of the storyteller, to make the tale more exciting than the simple truth?

When he travels to Lindisfarne with his fellow monk, Brother Leofstan, Hunlaf has an unexpected reunion and, with echoes of The Name of the Rose, catches sight of a forbidden book in the monastery’s library. Both events will be significant for the future but, for the time being, are overshadowed by the arrival of three Viking warships. Murder, rape and pillage follow but, during the raid, Hunlaf discovers his instinct is to fight the attackers not flee. That action will result in the forging of an unlikely alliance and mark a change in the future path of his life. It will also leave him with long-lasting memories of the dreadful sights he witnessed.  “A warrior’s scars are many, and not all of them leave their mark on the flesh.”

Knowing the Vikings are likely to target other vulnerable sites such as Werceworthe, Hunlaf joins the search for warriors willing to help defend the community. Six eventually become a warband of seven, each with their own particular skill with sword, axe or bow. By the way, if you’re thinking seven is a significant (even a magnificent) number you’re correct, as the author explains in his afterword. Each of the seven have their own personal reasons for wanting to fight, whether that’s to test themselves against the best, to protect the weak or a desire for revenge.

Like the inhabitants of Werceworthe, the reader anxiously awaits the return of the Norsemen, hoping that the crude defensive devices they have prepared and their carefully thought-out plans will be sufficient to protect the community.  It will come as no surprise to readers of Matthew Harffy’s previous books that the action scenes are vividly described so you feel every thud of axe upon shield, hear the swift flight of arrows towards the enemy and smell the burning houses.  Will Hunlaf take up his quill to record more of his adventures? If he does, it promises to be to tell of a quest to rival John Wayne’s in The Searchers.

A Time For Swords is a skillfully crafted and compelling introduction to what seems certain to be an addictive new series for fans of historical fiction.

In three words: Thrilling, action-packed, immersive

Try something similar: Wolf of Wessex by Matthew Harffy

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Harffy_MatthewAbout the Author

Matthew grew up in Northumberland where the rugged terrain, ruined castles and rocky coastline had a huge impact on him. He now lives in Wiltshire, England with his wife and their two daughters.

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