Showing posts with label Edinburgh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Edinburgh. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 21, 2018

Wandering Wednesday: Edinburgh and beyond! #giveaway

by @CarolynMAuthor



My upcoming Regency romance The Making of Mrs Hale releases next week, and to celebrate, I thought I'd take a quick trip down memory lane and recall some of the places I've visited in Edinburgh, Scotland, where part of the novel is set.

My trip to England in 2015 was not going to be complete without a whistle-stop visit of various Scottish locales, including iconic Edinburgh. My sister and I stayed in the basement level of a terrace house within walking distance of the Great Mile, at the end of which stands the famous castle.


Along the way are dozens of tourist enticements, such as these emblems of Scottish music:


From the battlements you can see New Town stretched before you, a grid like system of houses built in the early 1800s in an effort to stem the disease rife in older parts of the city.


One of my favourite places to visit was the Georgian House, a National Trust property in New Town dressed with period furnishings of the - you guessed it! - Georgian era.  


Inside, visitors can see various rooms, including the drawing room with a square piano, a room designed to be the most impressive for after-dinner entertaining. Visitors are shown the parlour, where the tea-table was positioned. Tea was heavily taxed in Regency times, and the lady of the house kept the keys to the tea chest to prevent servants from helping themselves. (They were permitted to use the owner's spent tea-leaves, though!)


The dining room with Wedgwood service and Regency-era menus is also on display, as are bedchambers, the water-closet, and 'below stairs' in the kitchen and cellars. If you want a taste of Regency life, visiting such a well preserved museum is a must!
For my story, I wanted to show something of what life would be like in 1800s Edinburgh, so the inclusion of details such as cobblestones and steep streets were a must.


 As were the many public houses ('pubs' or taverns) and other interesting places pointing to Edinburgh's history.


If you get the chance, visiting Scotland is a must; it's a place filled with castles, history and mystique that still resonates today - and makes a great setting for a book, such as The Making of Mrs Hale.

Giveaway


I'm giving away a copy of The Making of Mrs. Hale (ebook for international readers or print book for readers with an Australian mailing address).

To enter the giveaway, please leave a comment on this post and/or the November New Releases post  on November 19. Receive two entries in the drawing by commenting on both posts. The giveaway closes on Friday November 30.


Can a runaway marriage be redeemed?
Marry in haste, repent in leisure—Mrs. Hale is about to find out how painful that repentance can truly be. Julia Hale ran off to be married in Gretna Green, following romance instead of common sense. 
But her tale isn't turning into a happily ever after. Her new husband is gone and she doesn't know where—or if he's ever coming back. Julia has no option but to head home to the family she betrayed by eloping and to hope they'll forgive her. 
Along the way she will learn how relationship with God can bring restoration and hope, and find the answers she needs both for her husband and her future.
The Making of Mrs Hale is now available for preorder from Amazon, Book Depository, etc 

Carolyn Miller lives in the beautiful Southern Highlands of New South Wales, Australia, with her husband and four children. Together with her husband she has pastored a church for ten years, and worked part-time as a public high school English and Learning and Support teacher. 
A longtime lover of romance, especially that of Jane Austen and Georgette Heyer’s Regency era, Carolyn holds a BA in English Literature, and loves drawing readers into fictional worlds that show the truth of God’s grace in our lives. Her Regency novels include The Elusive Miss Ellison, The Captivating Lady Charlotte, The Dishonorable Miss DeLancey, Winning Miss Winthrop, and Miss Serena’s Secret, all available from Amazon, Book Depository, Koorong, etc

Connect with her:      

Tuesday, October 4, 2016

I Can't Believe I Missed That!

by Marion Ueckermann

We spent most of June in bonnie Scotland visiting my brother who’d immigrated there a year ago. A blog or two back I’d promised to share more of that trip. Today, I’ll focus on our time in the city of Edinburgh.

I love Scotland. Who doesn’t? I know I’m biased, though. My grandfather was born and bred (till the age of fourteen) in the Highlands near Inverness, so there’s just this overwhelming feeling of returning to my roots when I visit this place.

We saved a day trip to the city for our last day in Scotland. With seven in our party, too many for one car, we took the train into the city. Edinburgh in one car would be a nightmare. In two... Don’t want to even think of that. It was great to sit back on the train, relax, and watch the green Scottish landscape go by.


We booked an all-day Hop-On-Hop-Off City Bus Tour. I’ve always wanted to do one of those, and it was great fun. We did our loop twice. The first time sitting upstairs in the open section so we could see where we wanted to stop and explore. The second time downstairs so we could hop on and off the bus several times. Having humorous tour guides explaining what we were seeing was not only informative, it was entertaining, too. Here my sister-in-law is patiently waiting for my brother while I’m scurrying into a seat behind her. My sister’s already found her place at the back of the bus.

First place we saw, just outside Edinburgh’s main train station and right where the tour buses leave from, was Scott Monument. This interesting Victorian Gothic monument to Scottish author Sir Walter Scott is reputedly the largest monument to a writer in the world. Even though reaching the highest platform promised a certificate to commemorate the climber’s achievement, I’d conquered my full quota of stairs that holiday, and my legs protested adding another 287 to my count.


I absolutely loved this cute two-story building—Queen Mary’s Bath House.  Way back in the 1500’s it was attached to a boundary wall which enclosed the King’s privy garden of Holyrood Palace. The royal family would relax here when out strolling in the garden.  It’s unknown whether it ever actually contained a bath.


We looked on at Holyrood Palace, the official Scottish residence of the British monarch, from outside the gates—too much to see, too little time. Situated at the bottom of the Royal Mile, Holyrood has served as the principal residence of the Kings and Queens of Scots since the 16th century. 


The Royal Mile is filled with interesting building such as these. I wish we’d had the time, and the strength to walk this entire road. Definitely on my itinerary for the next trip.


The Scottish Parliament building, not far from Holyrood was unusual—from the distinctive windows inspired by Henry Raeburn’s iconic painting, The Skating Minister, to the Canongate Wall façade that has quotations inscribed onto pieces of rock. These quotations are from Scottish writers and poets like Sir Walter Scott, Robert (Robbie) Burns, Sir Alexander Gray, Edwin Moigan, Norman MacCaig, and Hugh MacDiarmid. Some quotations are from historical politicians, activists, and artists. I was both surprised and pleased to find a quotation from the Bible (right hand image). This building has won numerous awards and described by landscape architect Charles Jencks as “a tour de force of arts and crafts and quality without parallel in the last 100 years of British architecture”.


Public Domain

How glad I was when we found the small statue of Greyfriars Bobby in a corner of Candlemakers Row. This Skye Terrier rose to fame in 19th-century Edinburgh. Bobby spent 14 years guarding his owner’s grave until he died. In 1912 Eleanor Atkinson wrote a novel based on the true story. Bobby’s story was also made into a movie in 1961. There are several books and films about Bobby’s life. I read one of them many years ago and enjoyed it. Here my sister is trying to touch Bobby’s nose. You’ll notice how shiny his little snout is—the result of rumors that it’s good luck to rub his nose. Apparently tourists are asked to touch gently after work to restore this tiny part of the statue failed for a second time. I didn’t see any signs alluding to this request though.


Unfortunately, there wasn’t enough time to go to Edinburgh Castle, but we did see this imposing fortress from the top of the bus.



No trip to Scotland would be complete without indulging in a haggis. Thanks to my brother’s previous trips to Edinburgh, we were treated to the best haggis around (at least I thought so). The photo speaks for itself.


After our trip to Scotland, I happened to be on the internet doing some research for a story, when I stumbled upon The Writer’s Museum. HOW DID I MISS THAT! Definitely another good reason to visit Scotland, and the fascinating city of Edinburgh, again.

By Kim Traynor (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

By Stefan Schäfer, Lich (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0) or GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html)], via Wikimedia Commons