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Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove : January 2015
http://hiddengroveextra.blogspot.com/2015_01_01_archive.html
Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove. Historical fantasy author Elizabeth Hopkinson blogs on history, fairy tale and the arts. A well-crafted and imaginative debut novel, with strong world building and an engaging story. Juliet Marillier. Saturday, 24 January 2015. In December, I wrote a blog about The Box of Delights. How could I make it as magical as the box Cole Hawlings gives to Kay Harker? What if I turned it into my own miniature cabinet of curiosities? By Joan Fontcuberta. The artist has created...
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Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove : EdgeLit Derby - Enlightened by Grimdark
http://hiddengroveextra.blogspot.com/2015/07/edgelit-derby-enlightened-by-grimdark.html
Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove. Historical fantasy author Elizabeth Hopkinson blogs on history, fairy tale and the arts. A well-crafted and imaginative debut novel, with strong world building and an engaging story. Juliet Marillier. Tuesday, 14 July 2015. EdgeLit Derby - Enlightened by Grimdark. To go It turned out to be a very enjoyable day, both inspiring and entertaining. Etc) came under this heading. I think it was generally agreed that Scott Lynch's Locke Lamora. In which I wrote of my frustrati...
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Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove : An Eighteenth Century Easter
http://hiddengroveextra.blogspot.com/2015/04/an-eighteenth-century-easter.html
Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove. Historical fantasy author Elizabeth Hopkinson blogs on history, fairy tale and the arts. A well-crafted and imaginative debut novel, with strong world building and an engaging story. Juliet Marillier. Saturday, 4 April 2015. An Eighteenth Century Easter. For Christians, the Feast of Feasts. For others, perhaps a time associated with eggs, chocolate and weekends off work. But what could you do at Easter in the 18th century? 1 Hear a JS Bach cantata. 1735 and in the 1740s.
hiddengroveextra.blogspot.com
Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove : My journey into gender-fluid fiction
http://hiddengroveextra.blogspot.com/2015/05/my-journey-into-gender-fluid-fiction.html
Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove. Historical fantasy author Elizabeth Hopkinson blogs on history, fairy tale and the arts. A well-crafted and imaginative debut novel, with strong world building and an engaging story. Juliet Marillier. Friday, 1 May 2015. My journey into gender-fluid fiction. Tilda Swinton as Virginia Woolf's Orlando from the film of 1992: BFI Player. I recently listened to a fascinating online lecture by Cheryl Morgan about gender fluidity in science fiction and fantasy. As you can see...
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Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove : Curtains to the Darkness
http://hiddengroveextra.blogspot.com/2013/11/curtains-to-darkness.html
Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove. Historical fantasy author Elizabeth Hopkinson blogs on history, fairy tale and the arts. A well-crafted and imaginative debut novel, with strong world building and an engaging story. Juliet Marillier. Wednesday, 20 November 2013. Curtains to the Darkness. As "dark", when that is not at all how I see the story, or its original, "The Handless Maiden". Or Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata. So this winter I will be reading fairy tales for their Beauty, Truth and Goodness. 160; ...
hiddengroveextra.blogspot.com
Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove : April 2015
http://hiddengroveextra.blogspot.com/2015_04_01_archive.html
Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove. Historical fantasy author Elizabeth Hopkinson blogs on history, fairy tale and the arts. A well-crafted and imaginative debut novel, with strong world building and an engaging story. Juliet Marillier. Saturday, 4 April 2015. An Eighteenth Century Easter. For Christians, the Feast of Feasts. For others, perhaps a time associated with eggs, chocolate and weekends off work. But what could you do at Easter in the 18th century? 1 Hear a JS Bach cantata. 1735 and in the 1740s.
hiddengroveextra.blogspot.com
Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove : May 2015
http://hiddengroveextra.blogspot.com/2015_05_01_archive.html
Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove. Historical fantasy author Elizabeth Hopkinson blogs on history, fairy tale and the arts. A well-crafted and imaginative debut novel, with strong world building and an engaging story. Juliet Marillier. Thursday, 7 May 2015. Elizabeth and Carlo, sitting in a tree. Well, sitting on a sofa, anyway. Or a sopha, if you prefer. This is just a scan. The real thing is on its way to me, in the post. I can't wait! Friday, 1 May 2015. My journey into gender-fluid fiction. I also w...
hiddengroveextra.blogspot.com
Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove : The Castrato and the King
http://hiddengroveextra.blogspot.com/2013/01/the-castrato-and-king.html
Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove. Historical fantasy author Elizabeth Hopkinson blogs on history, fairy tale and the arts. A well-crafted and imaginative debut novel, with strong world building and an engaging story. Juliet Marillier. Thursday, 24 January 2013. The Castrato and the King. It's no secret that Carlo, the castrato singing prodigy in my current novel project Cage of Nightingales. It makes one wonder what the royal families of Europe were thinking, to come up with such highly contrasting tre...
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Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove : Come into the House
http://hiddengroveextra.blogspot.com/2015/07/come-into-house.html
Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove. Historical fantasy author Elizabeth Hopkinson blogs on history, fairy tale and the arts. A well-crafted and imaginative debut novel, with strong world building and an engaging story. Juliet Marillier. Wednesday, 8 July 2015. Come into the House. 12th July sees the publication of Come into the House. Read my blog on Anne Lister and Charlotte Bronte's "Shirley". In or around the 1720s-30s, she eloped with one William Fawcett, who subsequently abandoned her, forcing her t...
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Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove : The Brontës and Waterloo: 10 Things I Learned
http://hiddengroveextra.blogspot.com/2015/06/the-brontes-and-waterloo-10-things-i.html
Elizabeth Hopkinson's Hidden Grove. Historical fantasy author Elizabeth Hopkinson blogs on history, fairy tale and the arts. A well-crafted and imaginative debut novel, with strong world building and an engaging story. Juliet Marillier. Saturday, 13 June 2015. The Brontës and Waterloo: 10 Things I Learned. The Brontë sisters, by Branwell Brontë. Credit: The Brontë Society. For those who live further afield, here are 10 things I learned from it:. 3 It all began with a box of toy soldiers bought for Branwe...
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