Skip to main content

Guest Post by Rebecca Hazell: A Personal Journey that Illuminates an Era

     Todays, guest writer is Rebecca Hazell. She is an award winning artist, author and educator. She has written, illustrated and published four non-fiction children’s books, created best selling educational filmstrips, designed educational craft kits for children and even created award winning needlepoint canvases.

     She is a senior teacher in the Shambhala Buddhist lineage, and she holds an honours BA from the University of California at Santa Cruz in Russian and Chinese history.

     Rebecca lived for many years in the San Francisco Bay Area. In 1988 she and her family moved to Halifax, Nova Scotia, and in 2006 she and her husband moved to Vancouver Island. They live near their two adult children in the beautiful Cowichan Valley. In her guest post, she talks about her recently published novels, The Grip of God and the sequel, Solomon's Bride. Her final novel in the trilogy, Consolamentum will be released soon. Thank you, Mrs. Hazell.






 PERSONAL JOURNEY THAT ILLUMINATES AN ERA


     First, let me introduce myself. I have been a writer and artist all my life, have written award winning nonfiction books for children, designed award winning needlepoint canvases, written educational materials for high school students, and more. Oh, and raised two great children and been married for 42 years. And in all that time, I was haunted by a story for adults that I finally have written, as a trilogy.

     It’s called The Tiger and the Dove. Its heroine, Princess Sofia Volodymyrovna of Kyivan (Kievan) Rus’, makes a very personal journey that she recounts in her memoirs. Captured and enslaved by the Mongols in 1239, she faces an alien world among the most brutal people in a truly brutal era in history. She must survive not only physically but also emotionally as she adapts to Mongol customs, outlooks on life, and threats to her survival both human and supernatural. It sounds like nothing good is going on; but Sofia meets good friends, too, and learns to broaden and even soften her heart.

     And that’s just the first novel, The Grip of God. In the next novel, Solomon’s Bride, she has escaped the Mongols and fallen into the hands of the Nizari, known commonly as the Assassins, a secret stateless state that seeks to overthrow the Mongols and much of the Islamic world in order to usher in a new, purer era of Islam. She also encounters the Crusader world, meets kings and queens, and possibly more important to her, falls in love.

     And in the final novel, Consolamentum, to be released soon, she discovers that the Mongols were not alone in brutality: in southern France, Inquisitors are burning heretics at the stake while war across the Mediterranean, not to mention savage storms, makes travel a test of courage. 

     How she survives and even thrives despite such horrors illuminates not only her age but also our own. She’s an ordinary person threading her way through an extraordinary time that in some ways is just like ours: wars, greed, extremism of all sorts. Yet just as in our own time, there is romance, beauty, and richness. In particular, Sofia meets so many people, some of them famous and historical, and some of them products of my imagination. Each of them has a story to tell, too. 

     And through them all, an era comes to life. The characters come from different cultures, religions, and places that are reflected in their outlooks and assumptions, so that we get a feeling for what life was like in, for instance, China, though Sofia never goes there. In this way, like a vast carpet, the novels introduce us to interconnected worlds that coexisted, warred with, or learned from each other. And like Sofia, we have a chance to come away from the experience enriched in understanding and, like her, able to see our lives in a deeper perspective.  

Check out my reviews of Rebecca Hazell's novels:

The Grip of God (Book One of The Tiger and The Dove Trilogy)

Solomon's Bride (Book Two of The Tiger and The Dove Trilogy)

Consolamentum (Book Three of The Tiger and The Dove Trilogy



Comments

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Cherry Trees of Rosings: A Pride and Prejudice Variation (The Lizzie Darcy Chronicles #1) by Morgan Blake: A Book Review

The Cherry Trees of Rosings: A Pride and Prejudice Variation (The Lizzy Darcy Chronicles #1) Author: Morgan Blake Genre: Historical Fiction, Romance, Paranormal Publisher: Ria Majumdar  Book Release Date: 2025 Pages: 180 Source: This book was given to me by the author in exchange for an honest review. Synopsis: A Pride & Prejudice variation with a slightly paranormal, mainly comic twist!        When Elizabeth Bennet visits her newly-married friend, Charlotte Collins, at the Hunsford parsonage, she has no idea that Mr. Darcy (he of the arrogant demeanor and perpetual cause of annoyance!) shall turn up to ruin her blissful, idyllic days.       Only, Mr. Darcy is not himself.       And then Elizabeth stumbles straight through him one day... like one would an apparition! Goodness gracious!          “Mr. Darcy, I do not know what you mean, but I wo...

The Cleansing by Victoria Alvear: A Book Review

The Cleansing Author: Victoria Alvear Genre: Historical Fiction Publisher: Hypatia Press  Book Release Date: January 20, 2026 Pages: 314 Source: This book was given to by the author in exchange for an honest review. Synopsis: Based on a true story, this is not the enlightened Rome of myth. This is a city choking on fear, where blood flows on both the battlefield and altar, and where generals and politicians alike are desperate to appease rageful gods.       When 50,000 Romans fall in a single day at the Battle of Cannae, priests claim there can be only one reason the gods abandoned Rome: a Vestal Virgin has broken her vow of chastity. And they accuse Opimia (Mia), the strongest, most defiant of the six sacred Vestal priestesses.        Forced as a child into serving Vesta, the goddess of fire, Mia has always chafed against Rome’s control of her every move—especially after being separated from her childhood love, Attiu...

The Magnificent Lives of Marjorie Post by Allison Pataki: A Book Review

The Magnificent Lives of Marjorie Post Author: Allison Pataki Genre: Historical Fiction Publisher: Ballantine Release Date: February 15, 2022 Pages: 381 Source: Netgalley/Publisher in exchange for an honest review. Synopsis: Mrs. Post, the President and First Lady are here to see you. . . . So begins another average evening for Marjorie Merriweather Post. Presidents have come and gone, but she has hosted them all. Growing up in the modest farmlands of Battle Creek, Michigan, Marjorie was inspired by a few simple rules: always think for yourself, never take success for granted, and work hard—even when deemed American royalty, even while covered in imperial diamonds. Marjorie had an insatiable drive to live and love and to give more than she got. From crawling through Moscow warehouses to rescue the Tsar’s treasures to outrunning the Nazis in London, from serving the homeless of the Great Depression to entertaining Roosevelts, Kennedys, and Hollywood’s biggest stars, Marjorie Merriweath...