In November 2013, we travel the 5,900 miles from London to Durban to visit the South African province of KwaZulu-Natal - which covers the former Kingdom of the Zulus, the British colony of Natal, and part of the Dutch-Boer Republic of the Transvaal. The province's population is 10.26 million (20% of South Africa's total) and the main languages are … [Read more...] about Zulu War – Zululand, November 2013
Spanish Civil War – The War Route of Northern Spain
It’s one of the strange, true but little-known aspects of the Spanish Civil War that, in July 1938, with the conflict still very much in the balance, the fascist General Franco was so sure of winning that he opened up the territory he had conquered in northern Spain for tours of his battlefields. For anybody who wants a more academic account of … [Read more...] about Spanish Civil War – The War Route of Northern Spain
Jack Telford and Desert Island Discs
SPOILER ALERT: DO NOT READ THIS PAGE UNLESS YOU HAVE FIRST READ THE ASSASSIN'S MARK Some time ago, the reviewer Tori Turner asked me to write a "character interview" for her literary blog, Lily Loves Indie, and the result was this (fictitious) transcript of Jack Telford's appearance on Desert Island Discs on Sunday 8th September 1979. This is … [Read more...] about Jack Telford and Desert Island Discs
Waterloo – The Battlefields Route
I always check out the locations for all of my novels and have never yet failed to make positive changes to the text as a result. So, early in September 2014, I drove to France and Belgium with Ann so that we could travel the routes followed by Marianne Tambour and Liberté Dumont in the novel, though the Waterloo Campaign. While doing so, it … [Read more...] about Waterloo – The Battlefields Route
Waterloo – Ten Things You (Almost Certainly) Didn’t Know
The wars that ended with Waterloo were known as “ The Great War” until 1917 The battles fought in Belgium, during the Waterloo Campaign, over those few brief days in June 1815 brought an end to 22 years of almost continuous fighting between the European powers in what had been, effectively, the first “world war” – and historians estimate that … [Read more...] about Waterloo – Ten Things You (Almost Certainly) Didn’t Know