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Showing posts with label Terry Spear. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Terry Spear. Show all posts

Thursday, February 12, 2015

February 6th - February 13th

What Happened this Week in History?
  • February 6th, 1685- Duke of York becomes King James II of England and VII of Scotland upon the death of his brother Charles II
  • February 7, 1984-Space shuttle astronauts Bruce McCandless II and Robert L. Stewart made the first untethered space walk
  • February 8, 1952-"The Dukes of Hazzard" ended its six and a half year run on CBS television
  • February 9, 1983-Prince's "Little Red Corvette" was released
  • February 10, 1933-The Postal Telegraph Company of New York City introduced the singing telegram
  • February 11, 1531-Henry VIII of England is recognized as supreme head of the Church of England
  • February 12, 1870-The Utah Territory granted women the right to vote
  • February 13, 1866-Jesse James holds up his first bank in Liberty, Missouri and gets away with $15,000
And Soon to Make History....
February 10, 2015

The release of Kissing the Highlander
 by Eliza Knight, Terry Spear, Vonda Sinclair, Victoria Roberts, and Willa Blair.



Monday, May 6, 2013

How Highland Wolves Differ from Others at Highland Weddings By Terry Spear

Welcome back to History Undressed, guest author, Terry Spear! She writes hot Highlanders with a bite! Enjoy :)


How Highland Wolves Differ from Others at Highland Weddings

By
Terry Spear

In medieval times, brides stood on the groom’s left so that he could easily get to his sword if anyone should attempt to steal his bonny bride. Some churches allow swords during ceremonies—saluting the couple as in military weddings, cutting the cake at the reception, but most grooms don’t wear swords to their own wedding. Unless maybe the party dresses up for a themed wedding.

That said, Highland wolves do things differently. They come armed. Sgian Dubh in stocking and sword at their belt. It’s a matter of pride and their heritage. Not only that, but some of the Highland wolf clans are still fighting. So it’s also a necessity.

Bride stealing? Sure, it even goes on today. It’s also known as marriage by abduction, marriage by capture, and bride kidnapping.

So if you want to protect your bride, better be prepared to fight for her!

At a traditional Highland wolf wedding in contemporary times, the men and boys all wear kilts. But the lassies are free to wear whatever they wish. Now, not all Highland wolves marry in a church. Wolves mate for life and they don’t feel the need to prove to anyone that they are bound to each for life. Unless the groom holds a title, or one of his brothers is first in line if he doesn’t have an heir. Then a marriage for the humans’ sake is necessary as in A Highland Werewolf Wedding.

Then again, sometimes a wolf gets mixed up with a human and then if the woman insists on having to be married—unable to see that wolves don’t need that human condition—a wedding will take place like in Dreaming of the Wolf. You never know when one wolf’s wedding will start a trend though, and others will want to follow suit.

So whether you're at a Highland wolf wedding, or slipping back to medieval times where marriage could be had by consent—no church ceremony necessary—by civil law—you were married.

The church considered them clandestine or irregular marriages if they were not done on the porch of the church no matter how publicly announced they were.

Wolves don't care about all that. Their matings are binding for life.

Just in case you needed to know. So if you mix it up with a wolfish guy, if you say I do to him, you'd better be prepared to make it forever.

With that said, who all is ready for A Highland Werewolf Wedding, some more of those hunky Highland werewolves, and a chance at a win of A Howl for a Highlander?

Tomorrow is the release day for A Highland Werewolf Wedding!!!

One lucky commenter has the chance to win a copy of A Howl for a Highlander, US or Canada address only.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Bestselling and award-winning author Terry Spear has written over fifty paranormal romance novels and four medieval Highland historical romances. Her first werewolf romance, Heart of the Wolf, was named a 2008 Publishers Weekly’s Best Book of the Year, and her subsequent titles have garnered high praise and hit the USA Today bestseller list. A retired officer of the U.S. Army Reserves, Terry lives in Crawford, Texas, where she is working on her next werewolf romance and continuing her new series about shapeshifting jaguars. For more information, please visit www.terryspear.com, or follow her on Twitter, @TerrySpear. She is also on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/terry.spear .

A Highland Werewolf Wedding
Elaine Hawthorn is a gray American werewolf, currently out of work, and on a mission to share in a family treasure. When she arrives in Scotland, she nearly has a head-on collision with one hot, kilt-garbed Highlander, and runs him off the road.

Werewolf laird Cearnach MacNeill isn't happy Elaine ruined his car, but he quickly becomes her protector after a misunderstanding lands her right in the middle of two feuding clans. Now he's out to ensure that this sexy female wolf gets her fair share of her clan's treasure. He knows he should leave well enough alone, but it's too late to leave his heart out of it.



Friday, February 1, 2013

The Highland Clearances with a Werewolf Perspective By Terry Spear

Terry Spear in Scotland
Today I'd like to welcome back, special guest author, Terry Spear to History Undressed! Terry is a USA Today Bestselling author of historical and paranormal romance. Today she's got quite a twist for us! Enjoy!


The Highland Clearances with a Werewolf Perspective
By Terry Spear

Yep, you heard right!

When I create a fictional story, I try to base it on truth—in part. After all, everyone knows werewolves don’t really exist. Yet, in my Highland wolf stories, werewolves live for centuries, and as such, they have lived through history. When most of us would read about this in history books, they helped to make the history.

Duncan MacNeill is off to Grand Cayman Island to locate the crook who stole his clan/pack’s fortune. While there, he runs into a she-wolf who proves more than intriguing. Not only is she alone, but she’s wearing the Rampant lion on her shirt—and that means? She’s either got Scottish heritage, is a Scot, too, or she just likes all thing Celtic. And he’s interested.

But what he learns is that she’s from a clan that was driven from their homes during the Highland Clearances. See? I really did mean to talk about them!

And his clan is one that took part in ousting crofters from his own lands.

So you see? Instant attraction and instant trouble.

When we visited Scotland, it was beautiful. Lands free of the clutter of homes, cities, people. Just beautiful. If the Highland Clearances hadn’t been part of Scotland’s history, what do you think it would have looked like now? Tons of people filling every square inch of land? Maybe.

What about those who were driven from their homes? They went to Australia, America, Canada, and elsewhere, learning new trades, starting over, some prospering for themselves when they couldn’t have in Scotland. They would never have left, never ventured elsewhere if they hadn’t been forced to.

Yet it was terrible to be uprooted from their homes, many of the dwellings burned.

Acts of Parliament attempted to do away with all things Highland—the playing of the bagpipe, wearing of the tartan, teaching of the Gaelic, gathering of clan members. Where my MacNeills ended up settling—through the treachery of the captain they had paid to take them to North Carolina—reports said that they lived a more “Highland life” than those left behind in Scotland. They gathered, played bagpipes, wore their tartan, and continued their way of life, at least for as long as they wished with nobody dictating to them about it.
Religion had been another issue in the Highlands during this time. With moves to North America, the clans could continue to enjoy their faith.

Life was hard in the Highlands way before the Highland Clearances began. For some, they found their new lives way better than their past. For some, it was no better. And others, worse.

It was terrible the way people were uprooted from their homes. But many left to join family who had settled Overseas and there, they continued to be family, unlike where they had lived—often family of those who owned the land, who had fought for them, and now were forced to go.

Lands both in Canada and America were given away free to those who could homestead the land the farther west people moved. Conditions could be harsh, but no more so than in the Highlands. Many of our town names and roads around where I live are Scottish names, including the county I live in: McLennan and the city I live near: Crawford. The Scots were hardy and settled even the wildest areas.

Adversity can make us stronger.

Today, many of those whose families were driven from Scotland during the Highland Clearances now gather at Celtic Fests all over North America. And are proud to be descendants of the hardy Highlanders.

Have you ever been in a situation where you’ve been uprooted—either a job or home situation or even family—and the move you’d never planned to make came to be, and you realized it was the best thing that could ever have happened? Not at the time, though. And it might take some years to see the benefits, but have you?

Thanks to Eliza for having me here today! One lucky commenter will have a chance at winning a copy of A Howl for a Highlander, US or Canada addresses only!




A HOWL FOR A HIGHLANDER BY TERRY SPEAR – IN STORES FEBRUARY 2013

A Highland Wolf on a Mission...
Duncan MacNeill is hell-bent on catching the thief who's stolen the clan's fortune and run off to Grand Cayman Island. Duncan has rarely left his homeland and he couldn't care less about an island paradise. He never expected to find a beautiful distraction who will show him just how appealing paradise can be...

Meets a Dangerous Distraction...
Lone wolf and botanist Shelley Campbell headed to the island to study the old growth forests. She didn't count on meeting a handsome Highlander who can't keep his paws off her.

Praise for Terry Spear:
"Intense and swoon-inducing...The chemistry is steamy."—USA Today Happy Ever After

"Fascinating characters and an exciting, action packed plot."—RT Book Reviews, 4 Stars

"Intriguing...The queen of werewolf drama Terry Spear provides a powerful take of love and war."—Midwest Book Review

"Highlanders and werewolves. Be still my heart!"—The Good, the Bad, and the Unread

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Bestselling and award-winning author Terry Spear has written a couple of dozen paranormal romance novels and two medieval Highland historical romances. Her first werewolf romance, Heart of the Wolf, was named a 2008 Publishers Weekly’s Best Book of the Year, and her subsequent titles have garnered high praise and hit the USA Today bestseller list. A retired officer of the U.S. Army Reserves, Terry lives in Crawford, Texas, where she is working on her next werewolf romance and continuing her new series about shapeshifting jaguars. For more information, please visit www.terryspear.com, or follow her on Twitter, @TerrySpear. She is also on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/terry.spear .

Purchase A Howl for a Highlander:

Monday, December 3, 2012

Highland Rake with a Ghostly Twist by Terry Spear

Welcome back to History Undressed, guest author, Terry Spear! She's got a new release, HIGHLAND RAKE, with a new twist and she's sharing her ghostly travels to Scotland! The pic to the left is Terry Dunnottar Castle in Scotland. Enjoy!



Highland Rake with a Ghostly Twist

FromRavenswood House in Ballater, Aberdeenshire where a seafaring ghost, trader in alcohol and tea, resides…to ghostsat various inns all over Scotland…to a BBCspecial about how highly populated Scotland is with ghosties…to castles that house ghosts…

Dunnottar Castle 

and Brodie Castle

I was fascinated with the idea of incorporating one…or a few…in my current book release.
In one castle we visited, it was said that a young lady was taken in by the laird, but when she was found pregnant, and unwed, she vanished. Now her ghost haunts the castle.

We didn’t see any evidence of hauntings while we visited the seven castles in Scotland, but when we stopped to take pictures of the Highland cows in a pasture, trees shading them, no farmhouse nearby, a river beyond the field, tall hills behind us, no buildings or people anywhere about, I heard the most beautiful instrumental Celtic music. I felt carried away to a movie scene, the grass bright green, the air chilly on that October day, the red long-haired cows munching on grass, and the Celtic music playing in the background.
When I reached the fence to get as close as I could to take pictures of the cows, the music stopped. I took several pictures, then joined my lady friends, one being Vonda Sinclair, another Highland romance writer, and said, “Did you hear the music? Wasn’t it beautiful?”
Highland Cow

I knew they’d say yes. I mean, who wouldn’t who loved all things Scottish?

Neither heard any music. I couldn’t believe it. It was real, just beyond the tall lonely hills where not a soul lived or stirred.

So when I wrote Highland Rake, third book in The Highlanders series, I wanted the heroine to be able to commune with ghosts. She has a pesky ghostly brother, and the hero’s spirited sister that tangles with Alana’s brother. The story is filled with mystery—why her brother had died, who had murdered her father and his men—and both the living and the dead help to provide clues in this Highland Medieval romance.

Even in my Highland wolf series, starting with Heart of the Highland Wolf, the MacNeills have a ghostly cousin who lives at Argent Castle. I just couldn’t write the werewolf tale, without having a resident ghost! In A Howl for a Highlander, and A Highland Werewolf Wedding, both coming in 2013, the MacNeill ghost has his part. The Castle Dunnottar inspired me to write: A Highland Werewolf Wedding though. The Medieval castle overlooks the northeast coast of Scotland in Kincardineshire and was extremely cold that day. But when we were in the inner bailey, surrounded by thick walls, I felt almost warm. I didn’t feel anything evil—just at home there. And so because of that I used the castle ruins in the story.

Several roads in Scotland have ghostly sightings also. Drivers have thought they’ve hit a person, only to discover there is no one there. One of the days we traveled, the fog was so thick, it was hard to see much of anything. I could imagine a ghost blending in with the mist.

Scotland just seems the perfect place for spirits to thrive.

Having had a love of all things ghostly since I was a child, but never having experienced such a thing back then, I always felt the ghost stories fun-filled fantasy. I later encountered ghostly apparitions. One was in the Palo Duro Canyon, Texas, where Indian ponies raced across the cliffs, and as I was curled up in a sleeping bag alongside my fellow Army ROTC cadets, I believed we would be trampled to death. Except the ponies were already dead—corralled by the US Cavalry and herded off the cliff’s edge to prevent the Indian tribes that had gathered to fight from remounting their ponies and fighting again.

I didn’t believe that I had had a ghostly experience then. I never do. It happened. I heard them, their hooves pounding the ground, their neighing and whinnying, and snorts. The only thing I realized I didn’t sense was the vibration through the ground that I would have felt as they stampeded toward us. They moved away and faded into the night. And no one but me had heard them.

Yet, when I went to write about the real ponies years later, and was doing research about them, for years believing they were wild mustangs, I discovered many over the years had heard the ghostly horses.

I’ve had other experiences too, only in one, my son, daughter, and mother witnessed it too. You know, it’s really great when others have seen or heard the same thing you have!

So what about you? Ready to witness ghosts in Scotland? Or have you already? Or somewhere else that you’ve been?


Dougald MacNeill takes Lady Alana Cameron to his laird brother James's Craigly Castle when he finds her roaming the heather on the MacNeill lands. But who has sent her there and why? Her uncle, laird of the Cameron clan, and warring with the MacNeill for years, has made a marriage arrangement with another clan and now that is even at stake.

Having witnessed her father's death, and even believing he had returned her home when all along he had been dead, Alana discovers she has the gift, or curse, of seeing the newly departed and sometimes those who should have long ago passed over. Her own deceased brother continues to plague her, the rake, and now another, who is very much of the flesh, Dougald MacNeill, has her thinking marrying a rake might just have its benefits. Dougald's sister, who is one fiesty ghost, has offered to help Alana keep Dougald in line if he thinks of even straying.

But who sent Alana on a fool's errand in the first place to remove her from the Cameron's lands and set her squarely in Dougald's care, and who really killed her father and her brother, and what has it all to do with Alana? Will she and Dougald learn the truth before it is too late?


Terry
"Giving new meaning to the term alpha male where fantasy IS reality."

About the Author
USA Today bestselling and an award-winning author of urban fantasy and medieval romantic suspense, Terry Spear also writes true stories for adult and young adult audiences. She’s a retired lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army Reserves and has an MBA from Monmouth University. She also creates award-winning teddy bears, Wilde & Woolly Bears, that are personalized that have found homes all over the world. When she’s not writing or making bears, she’s teaching online writing courses or gardening. Her family has roots in the Highlands of Scotland where her love of all things Scottish came into being. Originally from California, she’s lived in eight states and now resides in the heart of Texas. She is the author of the Heart of the Wolf series and the Heart of the Jaguar series, plus numerous other paranormal romance and historical romance novels. For more information, please visit www.terryspear.com, or follow her on Twitter, @TerrySpear. She is also on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/terry.spear .


Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Time Travel Fun! By Terry Spear

Welcome back to History Undressed, guest author Terry Spear!  Today, she's talking about one of my favorite genres: Time Travel. And she's taking us on an adventure! I hope you enjoy her post as much as I did! On lucky commenter (USA Only) will win a copy of Ms. Spear's book, A GHOST OF A CHANCE AT LOVE.


Time Travel Fun!
By Terry Spear

So you want to time travel back to the 1870’s? Good for you. Let’s go!

Wait! First, there are rules. No taking back stuff that wasn’t made in the earlier time. You don’t want to upset the known world back then, do you?

Years ago when games were first being made for the computer, I played a neat time travel game where the player could take back items, like a comb, that had been made in ancient times. But anything that was a more recent development, the player would lose if she took it with her on the journey. It was amazing to me how early some items had been made, and how recent others were.

So when we take this trip back to Texas in the 1870’s, remember this:

No cell phones, no laptops, no flip flops or T-shirts. No pants, no shorts, no bikinis or halter tops either. Hide those pierced ears, or any other piercings you might have! Tattoos are out. Unless you’re a pirate. No bras, no pantyhose, no silky panties either.

Still with me?

It’s hot in Texas and what do we have to wear?

Long dresses, petticoats, corsets, and pantaloons, short boots and stockings.

Are you still coming?

Remember your parasol, a fan, and fringed purse for the ride.

Don’t wear much makeup or you might be taken for a lady of ill repute.

And for goodness sakes, if you’re a grown woman, not a little girl, your dress must cover your ankles and your hair must be UP. Very important.

Why? Long hair and bare ankles are just too sexy for men to witness without them…getting ideas.

Yeah, I know, I totally agree how silly this sounds, but I didn’t make the rules!

So we’ve picked out some authentic looking clothes, have our hair up, no nail polish, and makeup is non-existent, to a barely-there look, and we’re ready to go. Right?

Wait! Money!!! Even though bartering was an accepted practice, we definitely don’t have anything to barter with, ahem, that we would be willing to barter with, so money can help. No credit cards, debit cards or writing checks either. Although, sure, checks were written back then, but they wouldn’t look like OUR checks! Did you know that the routing number on checks came into existent after a man stole so many payroll checks and then after they caught him, he helped the banking institution to stop people like him from robbing companies blind by coming up with the routing number?

So we’ll have to find some old money to tide us over. Which can get pretty costly, but we’re game, right?

The money’s tucked into our fringed purse…wait, I know it’s already hot out, but we have to wear some gloves, and we’re off. Well, no, we need smelling salts for when we’re overcome from the heat, the clothes, and the corsets binding us! Then we’re ready!

The great part in going to the past is that there are more men out here in the west who are dying to have themselves a woman.

I won’t say whether they’re a great catch themselves, or how hardy you have to be to last out here, or how much fun you might really have…

Remember, we’re here just to witness how things were done in the old west—not like the movie versions, and then, well, if we can wrangle some hot guy who still treated a woman like a woman and wanted to bring him with us into the future, that might work!

But what if you decided you liked the old way of life, found the rancher of your dreams, a family you could love, and wanted to stay? That could work too! And you might even slip some of those lacy bras and sexy silky panties under your long gowns for when you’re alone with your man.

So anyone game?

Thanks so much, Eliza, for having me, and hope everyone had fun dropping by to see what time travel might be like to the 1870’s in a small western town in Texas!

Terry Spear

“Giving new meaning to the term alpha male where fantasy IS reality.”


A Ghost of a Chance at Love

Lisa Welsh only wishes to leave a messy divorce behind for a couple of days stay in Salado, Texas but wakes to nightmares and a cowboy in her bed, and she has no earthly idea how he got there. But the situation gets worse when she learns she's now living in 19th Century Salado. Even more worrisome is the tall dark stranger, and everyone else in town believes she's some woman named Josephine Rogers who is supposed to be dead. Jack Stanton can't believe the clerk gave him an occupied room at the Shady Villa Inn, but worse, he was ready to ravage the woman in that bed-until he realized his mistake. Now the woman he thinks is Josephine claims to be some other woman-and though he could never abide by Josephine's fickle ways, this Lisa Welsh intrigues him like no other. Still, if she isn't Josephine, he figures he best help her find her way back to where she really belongs no matter how much he wants to keep her with him. Together, Lisa and Jack must solve the mysteries and face the troubles in their worlds or they will never be free to share the love that binds them across the ages.


 
About the Author...
Award-winning author of urban fantasy and medieval historical romantic suspense, HEART OF THE WOLF named in Publishers Weekly's BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR, NOR Reader Choice for BEST PARANORMAL ROMANCE.

Terry Spear also writes true stories for adult and young adult audiences. She's a retired lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army Reserves and has an MBA from Monmouth University and a Bachelors in Business and Distinguished Military Graduate of West Texas A & M. She also creates award-winning teddy bears, Wilde & Woolly Bears, to include personalized bears designed to commemorate authors' books. When she's not writing or making bears, she's teaching online writing courses.

Friday, November 18, 2011

Political Intrigue during the Medieval Age by Terry Spear

Welcome to History Undressed, guest author Terry Spear! Terry is the award-winning author of fantasy and medieval romance. Leave a comment to win a copy of Ms. Spear's medieval romance novel, Winning the Highlander's Heart.

Political Intrigue during the Medieval Age
By Terry Spear

The medieval period was from about 500 AD to 1500 AD, so quite a bit of time and change.

When we talk about one period of time, it can be very different from another in terms of lifestyle, clothes, and what was available to the populace. Also, the change in the political arena made for a lot of difference in medieval times.

So when we say we’re writing about a medieval romance in a particular time, it can be way different from one much later. And it depended on the location. Some areas were still more in the Dark Ages, when others had moved ahead.

I chose to write about King Henry I’s time period, 1100 AD, because I found him a fascinating king and the emerging scenario with his taking a wife who was the daughter of the Scottish king and the Saxon princess, who had been the niece of the Saxon king killed and replaced by Henry’s father, William the Conqueror of Normandy. She was an interesting person as well, again educated, and her mother had placed her in her aunt’s convent, to ensure unscrupulous men would not have their way with her.

Now, Henry was the first of the kings who was really educated as he was meant to be a bishop, not king, since he was the third son of William. But the older brother, William Rufus, who was serving as king after their father died, met his own death in a hunting accident under rather suspicious circumstances while Henry was in attendance. The next oldest brother was away fighting the Crusades, so what could Henry do? But take over the treasury and become king.

It’s important to learn as much about the clothing, food that was served during this period of time, as well as the accommodations. Although because I write romance, I don’t get into some of the smellier details.

But what I found the most fun while creating the story was including some of the political intrigue.

When William conquered Saxon England, the ruling king died and the Saxon princess and prince fled to Scotland where they were given protection. But the Scottish king fell in love with the Saxon princess. Now doesn’t that sound like a fairy-tale romance? It was. When he died years later, she did also, of grief.

The thing of it is, the Saxon princess’s father had been king, but his brother murdered him and took over the kingdom, and then he took in his brother’s son and daughter, since he had no children of his own. Like I said, lots and lots of intrigue.

The Saxon prince united with Henry’s older brother, who vows to take over England and rule as he should have. I did include some of that in the story as well. One of the knights who they meet on the road is actually a knight that Henry used to lead his men to fight his brother.

In one case, Lady Anice and Malcolm MacNeill stay at a real castle that was still owned by a Saxon. He had pledged his loyalty to William the Conqueror, figuring probably that he would be the winner and didn’t want to lose his lands.

William had offered his relation to him, after he had her husband (a Norman baron) executed because he had plotted against William. So then he offers her as the wife to the Saxon lord in payment for his loyalty. She refuses and he sends her to one of the islands to live in poverty. But her daughter doesn’t want this kind of life and offers herself to marry the Saxon lord.

So that was included in the story as well. Don’t you just love all this real life intrigue?

It’s so much fun to use real history that is just as fascinating as making it up!

One of the things I found also interesting was that although women wore wimples and covered their hair (because it was too enticing for men not to be covered), but during the time that Henry’s wife ruled by his side, women didn’t have to wear the covering. And they often braided their hair with extensions to make it even longer!

While she was at the convent, she’d been beaten by her aunt for throwing down her hair cover and when she left there to marry Henry, she vowed not to wear it again. It became fashionable then for many of the ladies to wear their hair uncovered.

Another thing I found fascinating was that the food wasn’t bland or dreary to eat, not in a royal household, but was decorated to a fairly well. And fruits and vegetables were considered bad for you if it wasn’t cooked first.

Castles were defenses, foremost. They didn’t have huge windows, but merely arrow slots where they could shoot an approaching enemy. I visited several castles in Scotland and in one of the tower rooms, they had not only the arrow slot windows, but they’d created round ones for updated weapons--guns. Men who would be holed up in the tower for a long time, watching the grounds, would use another hole nearer the base of the floor to relieve themselves.

Yep, no toilet! Where would it go? Down the wall of the tower to the ground below. :)

Also while I visited the Scottish castles, the stairs were narrow, to prevent more than one attacker access and they always curved to the right so that the defender would have the advantage where  he could swing his sword and unless the attacker was left-handed, he could not as well.

You’ve heard that knights were supposed to be chivalrous, right? At first, they weren’t. Some would steal from those who couldn’t fight back just because the knights were so well armored. Then the rule of chivalry came into effect, and though it didn’t mean everyone would abide by the rules, things got better. But one of the funny happenings I uncovered with regard to knights—was that their armored feet—the sabaton--were armored plates riveted on the boots. For a period, the fashion was to make them longer and longer, kind of like women’s pointy dress shoes. The knights would wiggle their long shiny armor plated toes at the ladies in a sexual way, making them blush and giggle.

The church, wet blanket that it could be, declared that the shoes were indecent and could not be that long. Not sure what they said about the cod pieces as the men’s tunics rose ever higher and the men’s cod pieces grew ever bigger.

So that’s a glimpse of medieval history undressed—a little bit of political intrigue can go a long way!

Would you have been offended if a knight had wiggled the toe of his armored boot at you?

Terry Spear

“Giving new meaning to the term alpha male where fantasy IS reality.”

Author bio: Award-winning author Terry Spear is the author of urban fantasy romances and medieval Highland romances. She received Publishers Weekly's Best Book of the Year in 2008 for Heart of the Wolf. A retired officer of the U.S. Army Reserves, Terry is a librarian by day. She lives in Crawford, Texas.

CONTEST: Comment to win!

A copy of Winning the Highlander's Heart will be given to one US winner, the cover of a knight, not the Highland figure.


Escaping from King Henry’s advances, the Scottish Lady Anice falls into the hands of Highlander Laird Malcolm MacNeill, and murder and mayhem follow when she discovers some of her key staff are missing and she's targeted next.




*~*~*~*~*~*




The Accidental Highland Hero

Lady Eilis Dunbarton’s life undergoes a drastic change with the death of her cousin, Agnes. Now she’s faced with the disagreeable prospect of marrying the man who was to be her cousin’s husband. Not by a change of contract, though. Instead, by deceit—pretending to be her cousin. But if her husband-to-be discovers she’s not really Agnes, her life is forfeit. So what choice does Eilis have but to flee? When Laird James MacNeill’s clan rescues a half-drowned lass from the sea, there is speculation she is of the enemy clan, especially since she doesn’t remember her own name. James is immediately enticed with the lady, but his focus must remain on finding the proper bride. For if he does not wed soon, he must give up his holdings to one of his younger brothers. Focus slips away with each day Eilis is close, and James finds himself contemplating the thought of taking her to wife without knowing her true identity. But how dangerous would the end result be? And what will happen if Eilis’s husband-to-be comes looking for her only to find her in the arms of another man?