My book here on Amazon
I first visited Amsterdam early in 1960s when it was a quiet sleepy city bursting with flowers and charm. Everyone pretty much spoke English - at that time German was never heard in the streets. We stayed in a B &B which, incidentally, appeared in the novel Turning Point, a futuristic thriller and the sequel to Running. Still there was nothing futuristic about our visit; my sister bought great armfuls of flowers and each day we visited the cake shop in Splot. In the evening we strolled the streets leading to the Blue Note, a Night Club, where the vocalist sang Yesterday, and other Beetles Classics, and very sweetly replied he was married to any of us teenagers, including me, who gazed at him with adoring eyes. There, I also fell in love with a student I met at the club, who took me back to my B & B on the back of his bicycle. His name was Gerard Bader (only a single r) which I coopted for my novel.
I always wanted to set a book in Amsterdam, and the idea for Children of Zeus series began right there when I took my granddaughter for a visit in 2010. (Incidentally, we were celebrating the publication of Running at the time. The storyline for that took three years to evolve, and wouldn’t have happened at all if I hadn’t dropped into the local garage and spotted a Suzuki 1000cc motorbike.)
There are so many strings that led to the writing of The Year the Swans Came and the trilogy Children of Zeus. Agents played a large part because it was an agent who suggested more, which ended in my writing The Click of a Pebble, (Bk 1 of the trilogy, Children of Zens : July 2019). No wonder it took so many years to evolve. I gathered all the memories of my first visits, very few motor cars, the dark furnishings of the B & B, push-button light switches on its stairway that gave you just enough time to reach the top of the next flight before clicking off, cobbled alleyways and decorative bridges, and added them to the souvenirs of my visit in 2010.
These memories included the Keukonhoff, a bus ride into the country, where windmills were obligatory, and a tiny island where fishermen lived, the passageways between its houses no wider than rat runs. We saw furniture being lofted up the outside of a house because its internal stairs were too narrow, and of course we dawdled over old bridges, visited the flower markets and ate cream cakes, although not from same cake shop in Splot. We also visited the Anne Frank House, where we learned about the plight of the Jews in the war, and the crippling starvation meted out to its citizens; also museums, where scenes of windswept barques dominated, and I noticed a painting of Zeus, dating from 1610 and another of Leda and the Swan. Lastly, I read the myth of the Angel of Mons.
The finishing touches - it just happens my favourite book is: Girl with a Pearl Earring by Tracy Chevalier which is set in 17th century Delft.
So
what
is the Year the Swans Came really about. Certainy an introiguing mix of
fact and fantasy with a tag line: Love is a precius work of art on
a damaged canvas.
If I had to say which of my books is it closest to, I would suggest Time Breaking, because both are first-person. Other than the first person, they are very different Time Breaking is set in England in1648. Especially the style of writing, The Year the Swans Came is not for young teens. This is a top teenj/adult crossover.
If I had to say which of my books is it closest to, I would suggest Time Breaking, because both are first-person. Other than the first person, they are very different Time Breaking is set in England in1648. Especially the style of writing, The Year the Swans Came is not for young teens. This is a top teenj/adult crossover.
This is the review from Catherine Kullmann who explains it
far better than I ever could:
*****As Maidy Bader
anxiously awaits her sixteenth birthday, the day on which ‘overnight girls
become adults, eligible to be courted, and to marry’ her thoughts return to the
past and most importantly to her elder brother Pieter’s sixteenth birthday, the
last he spent with his family. No one speaks of him or why he vanished. Life
goes on as it always did in the unnamed country. The unnamed invaders have left
and those deportees who could, have returned. Among them are the Bader’s
neighbours, the Endelbaums. Their beautiful daughter Ruth, who is Maidy’s best
friend, has had to give up her hopes of marrying Pieter. Slightly older than
Maidy, Ruth is the belle of the college the girls attend while Maidy stays more
in the background.
On Maidy’s birthday, everything changes. Maidy begins to emerge from her chrysalis. Pieter returns as suddenly as he departed, but gives no explanation for his long absence. Ruth immediately claims him, but she is also intrigued by the four strangers, handsome young men, who suddenly appear at the college. She takes their attention and interest as her due but Maidy is surprised to find herself sought out both by gentle Jaan and the strangers’ leader, the charismatic and mysterious Zande. And Pieter is desperate to marry Ruth and complete his apprenticeship with his father, a maker of mirrors.
But all is not as it seems. This is not a college romance. Unimaginable secrets swirl beneath the surface of daily life and all too soon the unwitting Maidy and Ruth are drawn into the vortex of an ancient tragedy that threatens them all anew.
I was blown away by this book, enthralled by the beautiful writing, the slow build-up of the mesmerizing story and the wonderful characters. Magical realism of the highest order.
On Maidy’s birthday, everything changes. Maidy begins to emerge from her chrysalis. Pieter returns as suddenly as he departed, but gives no explanation for his long absence. Ruth immediately claims him, but she is also intrigued by the four strangers, handsome young men, who suddenly appear at the college. She takes their attention and interest as her due but Maidy is surprised to find herself sought out both by gentle Jaan and the strangers’ leader, the charismatic and mysterious Zande. And Pieter is desperate to marry Ruth and complete his apprenticeship with his father, a maker of mirrors.
But all is not as it seems. This is not a college romance. Unimaginable secrets swirl beneath the surface of daily life and all too soon the unwitting Maidy and Ruth are drawn into the vortex of an ancient tragedy that threatens them all anew.
I was blown away by this book, enthralled by the beautiful writing, the slow build-up of the mesmerizing story and the wonderful characters. Magical realism of the highest order.
Catherine is quite correct, both the country and the invaders remain unnamed. And as I have said, it is Amsterdam. And there my next problem arose. It you name a city, readers will be on the look out for errors in the descriptions. No, such and such a street runs left! If you pick up a copy of the novel, you will discover a map at the front. Compare it with Amsterdam and you will see it is skewed – welcome to magical realism.
Lastly - In strict chronological order, The Year the Swans Came which takes place in 1951 should be Book 4. The Click of a Pebble begins the series in late summer 1934 and takes us to 1948 or 9.
For that you can blame my good friend Katie Bowes, the New
Zealand author. She said, ‘After reading, Swans, everyone will want to know
more about Zande and how he got to be Zande.’ So read The Year the
Swans Came and then the trilogy, Children
of Zeus, when all will be revealed. By which time, with luck, I will have
completed Book 5 which brings it all to a conclusion.
My book on Amazon
Barbara Spencer
Award Winning Author
www.barbaraspencer.co.uk
Connect with me on:
Twitter: @BarbaraSpencerO
Facebook: facebook.com/BarbaraSpencerAuthor
My book on Amazon
Barbara Spencer
Award Winning Author
www.barbaraspencer.co.uk
Connect with me on:
Twitter: @BarbaraSpencerO
Facebook: facebook.com/BarbaraSpencerAuthor
Blog spot: http://BarbaraSpencerAuthor.blogspot.co.uk/
About Barbara Spencer:
In 1967,
considering herself to be destined for a life of mediocrity, Barbara Spencer
hi-tailed it to the West Indies to watch cricket, the precursor to a highly
colourful career spanning three continents, in which she was caught up in
riots, wars, and choosing Miss World. No stranger to schools and book-signings
at Waterstones, after twelve years writing adventure stories for children and
thrillers for young adults, Barbara began writing historical fantasy for an
adult audience. Her first novel The Year the Swans Came was published in
2018.
www.facebook.com/BarbaraSpencerAuthorwww.facebook.com/BarbaraSpencerAuthor
I'm reading this book now, and as I type these last lines of my working day, the glorious fall sun and front stoop beckon saying... "Bring book and beer and lose yourself in a world like none you've traveled before."
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