Matthew Harffy lived in Northumberland as a
child and the area had a great impact on him. Decades later, a documentary
about Northumbria's Golden Age sowed the kernel of an idea for a series of
historical fiction novels. The first of them is the action-packed tale of
vengeance and coming of age, THE SERPENT SWORD. The sequel is THE CROSS AND THE
CURSE.
Matthew has worked in the IT industry, where he
spent all day writing and editing, just not the words that most interested him.
Prior to that he worked in Spain as an English teacher and translator. He has
co-authored seven published academic articles, ranging in topic from the
ecological impact of mining to the construction of a marble pipe organ.
Matthew lives in Wiltshire, England, with his
wife and their two daughters.
When not writing, or spending time with his
family, Matthew sings in a band called Rock Dog.
1.
How and/or when did you get hooked on history?
I think living in Europe and having parents who would take
me to amazing historical sites sparked an interest in history from a early age.
I grew up in England and lived in some fabulous places that were steeped in
history. We lived for a few years in the village of Norham in Northumberland,
where I would play in the ruined Norman castle on the hill overlooking the
Tweed valley. Later we moved to Spain, and went to places such as Toledo, with
its cathedral and castle, and the monastery palace of El Escorial. Being
surrounded by such rich history, how could I not be hooked?
2. What
role does history play or has it played in your personal life?
My wife loves history too, so when we travel anywhere, we
are both interested in visiting local monuments and museums. That, and our
mutual love of books, are constants in our relationship and we have tried to
instill the same passions in our daughters.
3. How
is/How was history a part of your professional life/career?
History is of course a major part of my writing career.
I've only published one novel and it is historical fiction, so I spend a large
proportion of my time researching history and reading other historical fiction
novels.
4. Why
is studying/knowing history important?
Knowing history is important because by understanding the
past, we can try to avoid making the same mistakes in the future. It is the
typical answer, but I think it is really true. It is a pity that more people
don't seem to care about the lessons of the past.
5. What
is your favorite period or aspect of history to learn about and why?
For the last few years I have been immersed in early
seventh century Britain researching for my novels. It is a fascinating time,
with Christianity emerging as the primary religion of the British Isles. It is
a time of clashes between the Germanic peoples known as the Anglo-Saxons and
the native Britons. It is a time where the island of Britain is splintered into
several small kingdoms, each vying for supremacy. England as a concept did not
exist and the land would not be unified for many centuries. It is a dark age of
battles, heroism, intrigue and religious conflict. It is a wonderful time to
write about, with so many stories, and so little in the way of hard facts.
Perfect for a novelist.
6. What
drew you to the world of the Bernicia Chronicles?
As I have said in the previous answer, the period is full
of interesting characters and powerful stories. The land of Bernicia itself is
what nowadays is called Northumberland, along with part of modern-day Scotland.
I lived there for a few years as a child and I fell in love with the rugged
landscape, rocky coastline and ruined castles. It is so barren in places, it is
easy to imagine Anglo-Saxon warriors trudging through the windswept hills of
the Cheviots towards the fortress of Bebbanburg (Bamburgh), atop its crag of
rock, standing sentinel over the iron-gray waters of the North Sea.
7. What
will history lovers get out of your books?
They will get a feeling of total authenticity as they sit
beside the protagonist, Beobrand, on mead benches in smoky halls while scops
sing epic tales of dragons and night-dwellers. They will feel the rush of
terror and excitement as shieldwalls clash. They will be taken on a journey
into the dark past of the British Isles as Beobrand searches for his brother's
killer, seeking to bring justice to an untamed land. And readers will learn of
the history of those faraway northern kingdoms as the Angelfolc (the Angles)
fought to gain control of the land from the Waelisc (the Welsh) who inhabited
the island before their arrival.
Links:
Website: http://www.matthewharffy.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MatthewHarffyAuthor
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MatthewHarffy
Buy THE SERPENT SWORD: http://getbook.at/TheSerpentSword
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Bamburgh Castle at dawn
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Jim
Auchmutey, author of The Class of '65: A Student, A Divided Town,
and the Long Road to Forgiveness, is a veteran journalist who worked as
a reporter and editor at The Atlanta Journal-Constitution for almost 30 years. He writes about a
wide range of topics, from food and sports to religion and politics. He's
currently working on a history of barbecue for the University of Georgia Press.
He's a fifth-generation Georgian.
1. How and/or when did you get you hooked
on history?
I've never not been interested in history. I grew
up in Atlanta and started elementary school during the Civil War centennial
years, which coincided with the height of the civil rights movement. Atlanta
was at the center of both of these epochs. I wanted to know why my home town
had been conquered and largely destroyed during war, and why all these people
were marching in the streets and willingly going to jail. I didn't understand
until later that they were part of the same story. In addition, my father was a
Naval officer in the Pacific during World War II and participated in a dozen
landings, culminating in Okinawa. So as you can see, I felt personally
connected to three of the biggest events in American history: the Civil War,
the civil rights movement and WW2.
2. What role does history play or has it
played in your personal life?
History haunted me from an early age. When
I was a boy and the family would be driving somewhere in Georgia, we'd pass a
history marker and I'd yell from the back seat, "History sign!" and
make us pull over so I could read it. The knowledge that something significant
had happened at that spot was enough to make my skin tingle.
3. How is/How was history a part of your
professional life/career?
A newsroom like the Journal-Constitution's always has a lot of transients and
newcomers in it. I was the guy they asked about local history, the one who took
important new hires on tours around town. As often as I not, I wrote about
subjects that had to do with our history. To name a few things I wrote about at
the AJC: the Leo Frank case, the 1906 Atlanta race riot, Martin Luther King
Jr., the Civil War in Georgia, lots about the Confederate battle flag, our
Southern food traditions (especially barbecue) -- just about everything I did
had to do with history in some way.
4. Why is studying/knowing history
important?
This is so obvious to me that I may have a
difficult time explaining it simply. To understand anything, you have to
understand what has come before and why things are the way they are. The past
is a great teacher.
5. What is your favorite period or aspect
of history to learn about and why?
I find that we're most curious about the
era that came just before we became aware -- the world of our fathers and
mothers. My parents grew up on farms in rural Georgia during the Depression. I
have always been fascinated by how their lives went from mules and outhouses to
cars and postwar suburbs in Atlanta. I'm most interested in the 1930s to the
early 1960s, and the enormous changes that a state like Georgia went through
during those years. I wrote a lot about Atlanta's postwar boom and about the
civil rights revolution of the 1950s and '60s. Again, things that are just
beyond my memory. (Well, I do remember seeing "colored" signs when I
was very young, but they are a distant image in my mind.)
6. What interested you in the Koinonia
community and what makes its story unique?
I heard about Koinonia during my first job
out of college, with the Presbyterian Church's denominational magazine, and
visited the farm soon thereafter to write a story for The Atlanta Constitution -- my first out-of-town assignment for
the newspaper. You could still see the bullet holes in the siding where
Klansmen had shot into the farm buildings during the 1950s. I found that sight
very moving. I guess I should fill in some background: Most people today, if
they know of Koinonia at all, know of it as the birthplace of Habitat for
Humanity. Before that, Koinonia was one of the most controversial and embattled
religious communities in America. The farm was established in 1942 on the
principles of pacifism, communal sharing and racial brotherhood. In the eyes of
many locals, that made them draft-dodgers, communists and race-mixers. During
the 1950s, the farm was boycotted by local businesses and attacked by
nightriders, who vandalized its property, shot at its residents and bombed its
produce stand twice. It's an amazing story of persecution and perseverance. But
I didn't know the whole story.
7. Tell us about your book The Class of '65: A Student, a Divided Town, and the Long Road to
Forgiveness?
The part of the story I
didn't know is what happened to the Koinonia children when they entered the
public schools of Sumter County. The Class of '65 is about one
of those children, Greg Wittkamper, the only Koinonia kid at Americus High the
year it admitted a handful of black students (1964). At the beginning of school
that year, Greg, who is white, rode to class with three of those students in a
black funeral home limousine. He wanted to show his support for them. In the
previous three years, the civil rights movement had mobilized in southwest
Georgia, in Albany and then Americus, and Greg had been involved in the
demonstrations like others from Koinonia. A mob met the funeral home limo with
rocks and verbal abuse. For the rest of his senior year, Greg was a treated like
a pariah -- a traitor to his race. He was spit on, assaulted, tripped, shoved
down stairs. When he picked up his diploma at graduation, his name was booed
and he was chased off campus by a group of toughs.
More than
40 years later, some of the white classmates who had stood by while Greg was
abused tracked him down in West Virginia, where he had lived for decades, and
wrote him beautiful letters apologizing and asking for his forgiveness. Had
they really changed or were they just looking for easy absolution as they
entered their twilight years? Greg went back to Georgia to find out. What he
discovered was inspiring, hopeful and more than a little sad.