Showing posts with label National Portrait Gallery Waterloo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Portrait Gallery Waterloo. Show all posts

Sunday, December 19, 2010

A Bumper Month

I can hardly catch my breath this month with three books out!
The seventh in the Regency Silk & Scandal continuity, and my second contribution to the series, is The Officer and the Proper Lady. My hero, Hal Carlow, is a cavalry oficer in Brussels just before the battle of Waterloo and his heroine, Miss Julia Tresilian, a most respectable young lady, is there too, in search of a husband.

Instead of an eligible gentleman, Julia falls for Hal, the worst rake in the cavalry. For once in his life Hal is set on doing the right thing, but when he is left for dead on the battlefield he finds he has underestimated well-behaved Julia, who will do anything to save the man she loves. The story can be read alone but it also brings the series to the point where the old scandal has become lethally dangerous. All will be revealed next month!


Also out in December is the third in the The Transformation of the Shelley Sisters trilogy. Innocent Courtesan to Adventurer's Bride is the story of youngest sister Celina. She has taken refuge from her bullying father in her aunt's brothel but an accusation of theft sends innocent Lina fleeing to the depths of the Norfolk countryside. She thinks she is taking refuge with one of her aunt's elderly ex-clients, but the arrival of his heir, the adventurer and scholar Quinn Ashley, a man with his own demons to fight, plunges her into more danger - and into love.



The third book is a complete departure for me - non-fiction. I love walking in London to locate places and people, often long gone, sometimes, surprisingly, still to be found. When I looked at my notes I realised that I had the makings of a walks book that would allow me to share this pleasure with enthusiasts for the period and so Walks Through Regency London was conceived.

There are ten walks - I had to stop somewhere! - taking in the St James's area; Hyde Park and Kensington Gardens; Mayfair North; Piccadilly and South Mayfair; Soho North; Soho South to Somerset House; British Museum to Covent Garden; Trafalgar Square to Westminster; The City from Bridewell to Bank and Southwark and the South Bank.

I used illustrations from my collection of Regency prints to illustrate the book in full colour - some fashion prints, some sporting, but mainly views of London from Ackermann's iconic Repository. Along the way I found places and objects I never expected - a startlingly lifelike waxwork of Nelson in Westminster Abbey; the location of Warwick House where Princess Charlotte escaped from her father to run away to Princess Caroline; Napoleon's "nose" and the surviving columns from Carlton House. I have drunk beer in Tom Cribb's own pub and in the only galleried coaching inn left in London; seen the scales that Byron and Nelson were weighed on; looked at a cell door from Newgate and admired the first public male nude statue in London.

The cover illustration is St George's Hanover Square in 1812.
For more information and how to get a copy see http://www.louiseallenregency.co.uk/ or email me at louiseallen.regency@tiscali.co.uk

A very happy Christmas and a wonderful New Year to everyone!

Louise

Thursday, December 04, 2008

Regency research at the National Portrait Gallery


I should have done it ages ago, but I've only just visited the Regency rooms at the National Portrait Gallery and found them well worthwhile.
They are up on the second floor, logically following on from the 18thc rooms and include Royalty, Celebrity and Scandal, Art, Invention and Thought and The Romantics.
But best of all for research is the Regency Portrait Explorer located at the far end of Room 20. This is a touch screen giving access to the behind the scenes resources of paintings, prints and sculptures arranged by topic or group. So if you want to look at fireplaces or fans, military men or explorers, here they all are, along with an interesting timeline with key portraits for each year.
Armed with the name of your favourite sitter or artist you can go to the touch screen terminal in the shop and order a print of the picture in a variety of sizes from £5 for A4 on high quality photo paper.
I came away with this picture of Sir John Fox Burgoyne by Thomas Heaphy, one of his preliminary sketches for a panoramic picture of Wellington and his Waterloo officers. Sir John is a perfect model for Hal Carlow, the hero of the next book I will be writing, so I was thrilled to find him.
Louise Allen