Lady Macbeth by Susan Fraser King Don’t miss this one

I want to start by giving credit to The Book Chubi for revewing and recommending this book. I had heard of it early in the year but after reading this review http://thebookchubi.blogspot.com/2009/12/yet-do-i-fear-thy-nature-it-is-too-full.html I had to try it, and what a book it is!

How does one start a review of a book as well written and engaging as Lady Macbeth by Susan Fraser King? Should I start by telling the story of my high school senior English teacher who acted out the Shakespeare play Macbeth, thus starting my long obsession with the queen who desperately tries to wash blood from her hands or should I start by saying I am usually disappointed by historical fiction? How about a little of both.

During my senior year we were blessed with an English teacher who secretly wanted to act. When it came time to read Shakespeare Mr. Fraser (no relation to the author) taught us how to enjoy the bard’s prose by getting on his desk as he acted out the play. Watching Mr. Fraser act out a one man sword fight is a cherished memory I hope to always keep.

Lady Macbeth’s anguish over the death of King Duncan followed me through my life. I vowed I would never do something that would cause lifelong regret or sorrow. Many times in my 20s I would stop myself from doing something stupid by asking if this action would cause me to constantly want to wash it from my soul. Lady Macbeth kept me from causing myself mental scars. I never gave the person Lady Macbeth much thought, it was what she represented that stood out for me. To be honest I did not know she was a real person, I thought she and Macbeth were fictional characters or at least composites made up by Shakespeare.

As I started to seriously study Irish and English medieval history I wanted to complement my studies with historical fiction. As a lifelong reader I assumed I would fall in love with this genre, but sadly I am a critic of it. Oh I have my favorites; Peter Ellis’s Brother Cadfael, and Bernard Knight’s John Crowner, but more often than not I find issue with authors who are either so busy adding description the plot is ignored or the author feels no need to describe the times in which the book is set. King weaves a tight tapestry of both plot and character. King researched both Scotland and the Macbeths; her book shows just how well she accomplished this.

Lady Macbeth is the story of the last Celtic King and Queen of the Scots and the story of 11th century Scotland itself. Macbeth’s story is told as history, not as a tragedy; though I became so engrossed in their lives that the tragedy came because I knew there was only one ending to their story. The death of Macbeth was as upsetting to me as it was to Lady Macbeth as she talked of his last heroic effort to save Scotland from English rule.

Other reviewers have mentioned how the voice of the Scottish queen burns off the page, yet it bares repeating. King has written a character so life like, it is as if she and King spent many long hours together. If you appreciate strong female characters who are noble in the face of adversary and are strong when necessary then you will really appreciate this book.

When Macbeth kills Gruadh’s husband and takes her as his wife the book could have turned into the typical story of a man and women who dislike each other but somehow come to adore each other. King manages to write their story as it probably did happen, not how modern readers come to expect. As Gruadha rages over what has happened those around her accept it as a matter of fact. The people around her accept that Gruadha’s husband was an inept lord and that Macbeth was the better choice. Gruadha accepts her fate and the fate of her people because this was the norm. She and Macbeth slowly trust and respect each other. Though the reader is never privy to their private life, you do get the sense that these two people do love each other. As the end of the book nears it becomes harder and hard for Lady Macbeth to finish the tale as it means reliving the death of her husband.
Forget what you learned about Macbeth from Shakespeare; read this book for the characters and human drama. Read the book because it is one of those rare books that remind us readers why we spend so much time curled around our couches. I have to warn you, once finish this book finding your next good read will be a challenge.

If you dear readers have a favorite historical fiction, let me know. I am always on the lookout for a good book.

Sunday Weekly rant, I mean wrap up

It is the end of another week and boy was this a long one! Monday I woke up to about a foot of snow on my driveway. Thank goodness I had the day off; it was my monthly furlough day. I had Alex stay home from school as there was no way I would have been able to shovel the driveway and take him to school in a timely manner. As it turned out all schools were closed as were all state offices. I had planned on spending the day writing two final papers for school but ended up with a migraine. I stayed home Tuesday to finish my papers. Wednesday saw me rushing to a tire store after work to have snow tires put on my SUV. My incredible boyfriend bought the tires for me and escorted me to have them put on. After we had dinner I finished up my papers and turned them in. Thursday and Friday brought more snow but at least I felt safe knowing I had proper set of tires to drive on. I already wrote about Friday, so we will jump to Saturday. We had a break in the weather so I braved the roads and headed to the library to pick up the book Lady Macbeth by Susan Fraser King. My review of the book will come out this week. I tried to do some Christmas shopping but so many stores have closed in our small town it was hard to find what I was looking for. Saturday afternoon I was up on a ladder chipping away at the ice forming on my rain gutters, not what I expected to be doing, but it had to be done. I made some brownies and baked a Sheppard’s pie. By bed time I was exhausted!
Today I did the usual house chores and finished Lady Macbeth. I logged onto my school’s website and found out I earned As in both of my classes! You can bet I did the happy dance, as my class Visions of Creation was really mentally taxing. I honestly thought I would earn my first B, but no, somehow I managed to pull off an A.

So as you can see I have not had a lot of time to study this week’s news. I looked for news articles on the latest experiments with the Hadron Collider but did not find anything new. I am amazed at how much anger there is over the Tiger Wood’s scandal. I have read several articles and professional blogs devoted to tearing him apart. I do not understand this or I guess I do not understand why the public holds professional sports figures and celebrities to incredibly high standards then is “shocked” when do not live up to them. We see this time and time again. A celebrity is loved and venerated for nothing more than possessing a gift or skill, yet when the said celebrity shows human qualities he or she is treated like a monster. We are forgetting that the celebrity never asked to be worshiped for anything other than his or her skill, yet we the public go way beyond honoring talent mwe demand the talented behave saint like. When did this start? Why do we do it?

If Woods had endorsed monogamy or sold products promoting family values then I could understand the backlash he is facing now, but he did not. Woods promoted capitalism; buy this buy that. None of which has anything to do with being a good husband or moral person. Yes I know there is an ad out there aimed at children that says “Be like Tiger”. Again this is referring to his skill and hard work, not his personal value system.

I have a secret to share with my readers; many, many sports figures cheat on their wives. Why? Because there are hundreds of willing women who have no morals and see nothing wrong with sleeping with a “name”. Some even pride themselves for this practice.

My family owned a resort Called The El Rancho Tropicana (sadly it was sold and now is a mega mall) and from 1963 to 1983 The Oakland/LA Raiders used it as their summer training camp. I have met many football giants from Gene Upshaw to John Matuszak (who in turn introduced me to Ringo Star!). Every summer it was the same thing; single and married women hung out at the resort hoping for a chance to meet and sleep with a famous football player. Professional prostitutes would try to rent rooms hoping to make easy money all summer. With all these women around it was no wonder many players fell victim to their libido; it was way too easy to have one night stands since there were so many women willing to “service” these men if only for a few hours.

I am not saying what Woods did was right or am offering excuses for him. Cheating is never right. What I am saying is as a society we have to stop treating celebrities as if they were our local religious icons. They are human and have human failings. Maybe if we did not hold them high on pedestals they would not fall off. Perhaps if we stopping treating them like rock stars women would not be lining up for a chance to sleep with them. We need to find our heroes in other places (like the men and women who protect our country), but please when you do find a real hero keep in mind he or she is just a human being.

So ends another weekly wrap up. All I can hope is this week will be less hectic but I somehow I doubt it. I still need to find one more item for my secret santa then send it off. I looked all over for the perfect gift for my son Alex, but so far what I want cannot be found in my town. Yes, I could order it online, but it is the type of thing I want to see and ask questions about. Best Buy is my last resort so this week I will brave the crowd and spend some time and money in this most hated store. Yeah Christmas and the stress it brings. Thankfully it only comes once a year.

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