By Suz de Mello (Guest Blogger)
Those
of you who follow my blogs (Mom? bro?) are aware that I’ve written
two prior blogs about this subject, one when I lived in southeast
Asia (http://tinyurl.com/mjrpexn)
and one when I spent a year in China teaching English to toddlers
(http://tinyurl.com/nxdk5jz).
Weirdly,
I’m not a particularly avid shopper. I don’t go malling and don’t
view shopping as a pastime. Sometimes it’s okay when I’m in the
mood, but usually...not. But when I find myself in a new, exotic
city, I love to wander around the stores and see what’s being sold,
compare foods, clothes, trinkets to goods I’d find in my hometown.
And
thus it might have been for Isobel Kilburn, the heroine of Bridling
His Vampire. At age eighteen, she traveled to
Edinburgh to enjoy the 1766 social season before she was slated to
enter an arranged marriage to Edgar, laird of the neighboring clan,
the MacReivers.
Leaving
aside the question of what strong-willed Isobel thought about being
denied the choice of a mate, what would she have seen in the
Edinburgh shops? How might she react?
Though
Isobel was a high-born young lady from a wealthy clan, Kilburn Castle
is located in the far northwest of the Highlands, far away from any
town or city of substance. So imagine: before she arrived in
Edinburgh, Isobel had never seen a shop.
She would have seen goods for sale at fairs or other gatherings, but
such events would have been few at remote Kilburn.
So the
first wonder for Isobel would have been the city itself. And even
now, in the 21st
century, Edinburgh is a wonder and a joy. I’ve been there a couple
of times, and it’s a lovely city. Then, however, Edinburgh had the
undesirable reputation as the dirtiest and most crowded city in
Europe.
Let’s
get back to the question: what would have been sold in the shops of
1766 Edinburgh?
At the
time Edinburgh was the center of the Scottish Enlightenment. From the
1740s onward, the city came to be seen as a center of forward
thinking, especially in the areas of economics, history, science,
philosophy and medicine—a new medical branch had been formed at the
university there in 1726. So bookstores and coffeehouses flourished.
Having been educated by her governess, Alice Derwent Kilburn (the
heroine of Desire in Tartan),
Isobel would have been capable of participating in the intellectual
discussions of the time. But ‘tis unlikely she was interested—her
main pursuits at Kilburn were riding unbroken horses and getting into
trouble.
And,
though the city was unmarred by excessive industrialization, a linen
weaving works had been established in Canongate. So drapers—what
we’d call fabric stores—abounded.
And
what was the nature of the city? Wealthy and cultured. Several major
banks were headquartered there. Music was popular and the Edinburgh
Music Society established in 1728. Many improvements were made during
the time Isobel visited. And improvements were needed—as I
mentioned, Edinburgh was thought to be one of the most crowded and
unsanitary cities in Europe. However, the overcrowding threw all
social classes together—lords might live in the same tall row-house
as a chimney sweep.
But
the improvements changed that to a certain degree. The newer parts of
the town were seen as more desirable than the older quarter, where
the poor remained while the wealthier moved on.
I hope
I’ve intrigued you enough! If not, here’s what the story is
about:
Bridling his Vampire
by Suz deMello:
Scotland,
1766.
Edgar,
Laird MacReiver, has never regretted his decision to wed Isobel,
daughter of Clan Kilburn’s laird, until she bites his tongue and
drinks his blood. Still, he's determined to bridle the wild child of
the infamous vampire clan by any means necessary, including bondage
and discipline.
But
are some women impossible to tame?
Available
at http://www.ellorascave.com/bridling-his-vampire.html
About
the author:
Best-selling,
award-winning author Suz deMello, a.k.a Sue Swift, has written
seventeen romance novels in several subgenres, including erotica,
comedy, historical, paranormal, mystery and suspense, plus a number
of short stories and non-fiction articles on writing. A freelance
editor, she’s worked for Total-E-Bound, Liquid Silver Books and Ai
Press, where she is currently Managing Editor. She also takes private
clients.
Her
books have been favorably reviewed in Publishers
Weekly, Kirkus and
Booklist, won a contest or two, attained the
finals of the RITA and hit several bestseller lists.
A
former trial attorney, her passion is world travel. She’s left the
US over a dozen times, including lengthy stints working overseas.
She’s now writing a vampire tale and planning her next trip.
--Find
her books at http://www.suzdemello.com
--For
editing services, email her at suzdemello@gmail.com
--Befriend
her on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/sueswift,
and visit her group page at
https://www.facebook.com/redhotauthorscafe
--She
tweets her reading picks @ReadThis4fun and @Suzdemello
--Pinterest:
http://www.pinterest.com/suzdemello/
--Goodreads:
http://bit.ly/SuzATGoodreads
--Her
current blog is http://www.fearlessfastpacedfiction.com
3 comments:
HI, Suz,
Great post! I visited Edinburgh once, many years ago, and loved the sennse of history. But you're bringing the history alive!
Thanks, Lisabet! I've been there a couple of times--the photo is one of mine :) I do love the place.
And thanks for the blogging opportunity!
Interesting. I have a book, How the Scots Invented the Modern World.(I bought it after they pulled it from my local library shelves. I'm not sure that some of it is not a bit of an exaggeration, but we had always been told in school that Ben Franklin invented the idea of lending libraries, but that is untrue. The Scots had them as far back as at least the 1740's, even in small towns. The smiths, the shopboys and yes, even the women were all well-read.
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