historylizzie

  • Review | “Pride and Protest” by Nikki Payne

    Review | “Pride and Protest” by Nikki Payne

    I get incredibly excited whenever I come across a new retelling of Jane Austen novels, especially when it is one that transforms my favourite of all her novels, Pride and Prejudice. I think the best part of the way different authors play with the story and satire Austen first shared with the world in 1813 read more

  • Getting up close with the waterlilies: Some thoughts on Monet, the Immersive Experience

    Getting up close with the waterlilies: Some thoughts on Monet, the Immersive Experience

    Title Image: Water Lilies, 1917/19, Honolulu Museum of Art. You may have realised, if you’ve followed this blog for a while, or my Instagram account, that there are a couple of things that I really love and, not to put too fine a point on it, won’t shut up about. One is Jane Austen, another read more

  • Review & Blog Tour | “Godmersham Park” by Gill Hornby

    Review & Blog Tour | “Godmersham Park” by Gill Hornby

    It is a truth universally acknowledged that I get ridiculously excited when I have the opportunity to read a book connected to Jane Austen. I think I’ve made that clear on this blog (perhaps a little too clear?!), and today is no exception. I’m really pleased to be able to host the blog tour of read more

  • Romeo, Juliet, and… Rosaline?

    Romeo, Juliet, and… Rosaline?

    Autumn to me always says period drama season: it seems to usher in the Sunday night drama, even though they are available all year round, but I think it has something to do with the nights drawing in and the temperatures dropping. I’ve started my last couple of posts with this cosy fantasy… apparently I read more

  • Review & Blog Tour | “In the Shadow of a Queen” by Heather B. Moore

    Review & Blog Tour | “In the Shadow of a Queen” by Heather B. Moore

    Hello, I’m back again with another historical novel review for your weekend – continuing the theme I’m feeling at the moment of the cosy weather coming in and wanting to curl up in the evenings with a good book! Thank you to Austenprose and Shadow Mountain Publishing for gifting me a copy of Heather B. read more

  • Review & Blog Tour | “The Belle of Belgrave Square”, by Mimi Matthews

    Review & Blog Tour | “The Belle of Belgrave Square”, by Mimi Matthews

    It’s almost the weekend, it’s starting to get into crisp cosy weather (even here in Savannah!), and what better to celebrate both of those things than a new read! You might remember that earlier in the year, I shared a review for Mimi Matthews‘ book The Siren of Sussex, which is the first in a read more

  • Mini-Post | Waddesdon Manor

    Mini-Post | Waddesdon Manor

    Forever one of the country houses I’m most interested in, welcome to Waddesdon Manor, a French château in Buckinghamshire. Waddesdon was built by Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild and completed in 1883 – he wanted somewhere to escape from London to. (Very nice if you can!) As you may guess from the style, the architect was read more

  • Mini-Post | Salem, Massachusetts

    Mini-Post | Salem, Massachusetts

    Salem is a coastal city that, before European colonisation, was lived in for thousands of years by American Indians and was part of a peninsula known as Naumkeag. Due to war, contact with settlers and a smallpox epidemic, many Naumkeag people passed away in the early seventeenth century. English settlers arrived and founded Salem in read more

  • Mr Malcolm’s List Review for BSECS Criticks

    Mr Malcolm’s List Review for BSECS Criticks

    Hello! I feel like I start every post recently apologising for being a little quiet – this summer has been exciting for so many reasons but the main one is that I finally got married with our family and UK friends around us! To cut a long story short – we eloped two years ago read more

  • Review & Blog Tour | “A Lady’s Guide to Death and Deception”, by Katherine Cowley

    Review & Blog Tour | “A Lady’s Guide to Death and Deception”, by Katherine Cowley

    I’ve been thinking the last few years every time I return to Pride and Prejudice that maybe (just maybe!) Mary Bennet gets a raw deal. Yes, she is a little insufferable, particularly when she is moralising about the virtue of a woman just as Lydia runs off with Wickham, which is both unhelpful and unnecessary read more

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