Friday, January 23, 2026

Turning History into Story

 

The Armada has been retold until it feels inevitable.

English triumph. Spanish failure. Storms as judgment.

Yet inevitability is a narrative convenience, not a historical truth. Those living through the 1580s did not know the ending. They acted under pressure, misinformation, and fear.

Restoring uncertainty restores humanity.

Recent historical fiction revisiting the Armada—including new work releasing this season—aims to return that instability to the story.

Thursday, January 22, 2026

War is decided long before ships sail.


 

War is decided long before ships sail.

Elizabeth’s councillors argued over intelligence, intercepted letters, and rumor. They weighed whether Spain intended invasion or merely pressure. They debated how far England could go without provoking war outright.

These rooms—tapestried, candlelit, claustrophobic—were battlegrounds of their own.

Naval action begins as conversation, compromise, and risk calculation.

In Armada-era fiction, including forthcoming work tied to this period, the council chamber often proves as dangerous as the open sea.

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

The Pressure Before the Storm


In the years before 1588, Europe did not feel stable. It felt compressed.

England lived under the long shadow of invasion. Spain ruled an empire whose wealth and reach dwarfed England’s resources. Diplomacy continued, but it was brittle—less a safeguard than a pause.

This pressure was not abstract. It pressed into daily life. Coastal towns watched the horizon. Merchants delayed ventures. At court, every foreign report carried weight beyond its words.

History often rushes past this phase. It prefers spectacle. Yet the real drama begins earlier, in the waiting—when everyone understands what is coming, but no one knows when.

That suspended tension is where stories take root.

This pre-invasion atmosphere forms the opening spine of Armada: The Fire, which traces events before certainty replaced fear.

Sunday, January 18, 2026

London Book Fair: March 10-12, 2026

 


I look forward to returning to London. After all, much of the scenes in the books take place in London.

The Candle and the Map

  Before fleets moved, someone stood over a map by candlelight. Lines were traced. Distances estimated. Harbors imagined. Currents assumed....