Hee hee! No more guilt!

Napping is coming back!

By coming back, I mean, back now that I'm an adult, but not a senior citizen, and no longer pregnant. (Those seem to be the only times napping is acceptable).

But not any more!  Check this out. (I'm too lazy and under too much of a deadline to summarize; you're going to have to click over and read. Sorry.)

I like my afternoon naps. Thirty to forty-five minutes in the mid-afternoon (right before the kiddies get home from school)…what a treat.

And now, I can legitimately call it "brain food."

Life is good. 

Meg and Tom: The Good Old Days Are Gone

I watched Sleepless in Seattle with my daughter a few weeks ago, remembering it to be a funny '90s romantic comedy when Meg Ryan was still cute and and neurotic…and a flick without any objectionable content.

Well, I was sort of right. The only real objectionable content was the use of the term "ho" in relation to Tom Hanks's girlfriend, and the fact that a 9 year old boy supposedly flew from Seattle to NYC alone without a hitch (pre-911, of course. Don't they have rules about that now?).

But I only enjoyed one half of the movie: the part with Tom Hanks in it. The part with Meg was…annoying. (Thank goodness they didn't meet until the end!)

I used to love her and as many of you know, When Harry Met Sally… is one of my all-time favorite movies. She was cute in that. In Sleepless, she was trying to reprise that role and didn't do it very well, IMO. Too frenetic, too high-strung, and just not as funny. 

But Tom was great.

I'd forgotten how sad that movie is, too, though. I remembered it really only being sad at the beginning, but after seeing it again with my daughter, I see that it's pretty much a tear-jerker all the way through. 

Seeing the movie also reminded me of a bit of weirdness in my life that paralleled Annie's (Meg's character).

I had dated a guy seriously for years, and just around the time we were planning to get engaged, I ended the relationship.

He looked just like Bill Pullman (the guy to whom Meg Ryan's character is engaged to at the beginning of the movie)…and my Music Man, who I started dating right after breaking up with the Bill-Pullman Look Alike, at the time bore a striking resemblance to Tom Hanks (curly dark hair, strong features, dark eyes and brows). Enough that I noticed that Meg's Annie and I seemed to have parallel taste in men.

Weird huh? So I told my daughter this, and she heartily agreed that I had made the right choice.

Anyway, do you remember that movie? Have you seen it lately? Thoughts?

Did you know you can buy that houseboat that Tom Hanks's character lived in? Excuse me while I check my bank account for $2.2 million….

Monday Moanin’

I guess it's not Monday morning anymore, is it? At least here in Michigan it's not, where, after a week  of mid-60 and 70-degree weather they were talking about snow today…. (That hasn't come to pass, thank goodness.)

This is just a quick note to say hi, and that I'm still in my cave, finishing up torturing my characters in the last Victoria Gardella book.

I hope next week to rear my ugly head back in the blogosphere and get back into the swing of things!

In the meanwhile, question for you: Summer moviedom is nearly upon us. What is your most anticipated flick being released this summer?

Me? Since Mr. Damon hasn't seen fit to make another Bourne movie for me, I am all over the hotness that is Prince Caspian. Sigh. I do have a weakness for men in chain mail.

You? 

Me ‘n’ Roberta G.

I adore, absolutely adore Roberta Gellis's books.

I discovered the Roselynde Chronicles in the early 1980s, around the time I had just finished reading John Jakes's  The Kent Family Chronicles. I was delighted to find a similar sort of family saga (but much heavier on the romance) set in medieval England by Ms. Gellis. This after I had recently seen Becket and A Lion in Winter and fallen in love with the Platagenets.

So not only did I read the Roselynde Chronicles, but then every other Gellis book I could get my hands on over the years.

Gellis has a masters in biochemistry and another one in medieval literature–and it shows. There's not one bit of a crack in her historical settings. You're there, transported back into those times not only in the clothing and technology of 12th century England, but also, firmly and without excuse, into the mindset of that time.

My favorite Gellis book, which also ranks as one of my all-time favorite books (and is an annual re-read), is Alinor, the second book in the Roselynde series. I have also recently begun to read her Magdalene la Bâtarde mystery series–a medieval-set mystery series.

So when I had the chance to hear her speak on two different panels at RT, I made sure not to miss them. I'd never seen her speak before, and indeed had only met her for about thirty seconds five years previously.

I was lucky enough to snag her after the second panel and offer to buy her a cup of tea (selfishly, of course, wanting to just talk to one of my idols). She accepted and off we went.

We had a cuppa and chatted and I was quite the fangirl. I did control myself for the most part, but I did rave and go all googly-eyed when we talked about Alinor and Ian, and Magdalene and Bell.

I also had the chance to ask some questions and find out a few things I'd always wondered about.

Here are some of the little nuggets I got:

"Roselynde" is pronounced "Rahz-a-lynde" (I had been saying "Rose-a-lynde" all these years!).

Ian di Vipont, the hero in Alinor and one of my all-time favorite heroes ever, was inspired by Tyrone Power. Now, I didn't know who Tyrone Power was any more than the Mr. Romance guy knew who Tom Hulce was, but that's the beauty of Google. I present to you Tyrone Power, aka Ian di Vipont.

And, yes, I'm all over this. Definitely Ian.

I asked Ms. Gellis about King John, who appears in all of the Roselynde books and is portrayed as quite the villain. She describes him as having a lovely, mellow voice, almost hypnotic in its beauty, and I wondered if that was true, or if she'd given him that characteristic on her own. 

She said she'd given him that voice because it seemed to fit–he was a very persuasive man and could be very charming, and she felt that a voice like that would fit. Brilliant, hmm?

She also believes he was as much of a lecher as she portrayed him.

I asked about Richard the Lionheart…did she think he was really gay, or simply asexual. Ms. Gellis's response was that she thought that Richard, like Alexander of Macedonia, was simply not very interested in sex–with either gender. That he got his rocks off (my words not hers, lol), so to speak, through battle and being a soldier. I'd buy that too.

Sigh. So what else.

The Magdalene la Bâtarde mysteries (which one of my other idols, Bertrice Small, pic below, also thinks is brilliant)….

I have really enjoyed those medieval-set mysteries and since there are only four (Ms. Gellis, at Ms. Small's insistence, is working on the fifth), I have had to control myself from blazing through them.

I had to ask Ms. Gellis, though, about the setting. She had every single street down, gave directions from place to place like she'd been there in twelfth-century London–even down to which tradesman's shop was where. She had to have a map, didn't she?

Yes, she did. Whew. I felt better after hearing that, even though she told me that the map wasn't always clear. 

We talked about the ongoing romance between Magdalene and Bell, and whether/how it would ever be resolved.

And we talked about a lot of other things too…like that she bought her first computer in the early 1970s and it cost $5000 for the big clunky thing…but she's been writing on the computer ever since. Wow.

And then, I released her from my clutches (mwahahahaaa) and let her head upstairs for a much-needed rest before the Vampire Ball that night. But I walked around the rest of the day with a huge smile on my face. What fun. 

I had hoped to have the chance to fangirl all over Ms. Small as well, because her books were a great inspiration to me over the years too…but unfortunately, our schedules didn't mesh. I did have a few moments to tell her how much I enjoyed her books, but that was all. Maybe next year. 

So…have you ever read Roberta Gellis? Or Bertrice Small? Inquiring minds want to know.

Rises the Night Hunt

As many of you know, Rises the Night was released last June. Almost a year ago.  People saw it all over the place–in the bookstores, in Walgreens and Walmart, in Kroger, and a variety of non-bookstore locations.

Now, all of a sudden, it's popping up again in non-bookstore locations.

And that's odd (but not upsetting) to me, since the books displayed in places like Walgreens and Kroger and Giant Eagle, etc., are swapped out at least on a monthly basis. They don't have a lot of space, so they have to swap out books quickly to keep new titles in. 

Curiously, in the last few weeks, I've heard from several people that they've seen Rises–one saw it in an airport in Florida, and someone else in a grocery store in PA (and she squealed quite loudly and announced to everyone in the vicinity that she knew me).

So do me a favor–take a peek at the book sections in non-bookstore locations in the next week or so and let me know if you see Rises anywhere. Just 'cause inquiring minds want to know. You can comment below with store and location, or email me directly.

About Me

Colleen Gleason Historical Author

I'm a novelist who writes the historical vampire slayer series, The Gardella Vampire Chronicles. When I'm not working on my next book, I love to read, watch movies, and raise my three kids and husband.

Coming in August



Watch for the fourth installment of the Gardella Vampire Chronicles, coming to bookstores everywhere in August!

Now Available



The third installment of the Gardella Vampire Chronicles is now available in bookstores everywhere!

Now Available!

The second installment of the Gardella Vampire Chronicles takes Victoria to Venice and Rome.
 

The First in the Gardella Vampire Chronicles

My novel, The Rest Falls Away, first in the Gardella Vampire Chronicles, described as "Buffy the Vampire Slayer meets Pride & Prejudice"

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