Bulletin Board

Q

Heartiest congratulations on your OBE. The best thing I read all weekend was your article in the Mail On Sunday, and the best news I had was that the Saxon series are to number eight. I look forward to putting the cat and the wife out, getting the wine in and settling down to the latest! Thank you for all your books. John Childs. Canterbury. Kent.


Q

Hi! Earlier today, I was in a bookstore in a town in Hungary (I am a Hungarian who lives in the U.S. but I go home to hungary every summer). I was surprised to see some of your books in Hungarian. I look forward to reading them in Hungarian! I wonder if They'll be as good as in in English. Best wishes, Aron Rimanyi


Q

Hi Mr. Cornwell: In a June 28th posting, Geraint asked you about books on Banastre Tarlton. The definitive biography is "The Green Dragoon: The Lives of Banastre Tarlton and Mary Robinson" by Robert D. Bass. It is currently in print and available from amazon.com and amazon.co.uk. Alan Kempner


Q

Just wanted to comment on how much I like the American cover art for Sharpe's Fury and Lords of the North. Looks like the publisher and artist really did a nice job on those. Also, I read a recent comment on this website where a reader suggested that Starbuck meet a fellow named Champ Ferguson. I strongly second that advice. Jonathan


Q

just finished the Lords of the North. Loved every page and can't wait for the next instalment. I think Uthred has become my favourite character from all your works . keep up the good work, love to you and your wife.
Russ Kershaw


Q

Just read on the website the wonderful news. In these times where honours seem to be given to the most mundane of individuals it is truly heartening to see one given to so richly deserving of a recipient. Well deserving it may be but also well overdue. Hearty congratulations.
Dave Bruford


Q

Dear Mr Cornwell, As I have said many times before, I do love your books, but as an historian and reenactor of the Celtic Iron Age, Romano-British and Anglo Saxon periods,I do find some things in your Arthur/Saxon books jar a little. You, or whoever reads these things first, is probably going to think I'm a complete geek, but when you are willingly suspending disbelief, immersed in the created world of a book, it breaks the spell somewhat to come across some thing you know to be untrue. And these two things really gall me: i) You often refer to rusty chainmail being worn. Now mail that is used regularly doesn't get rusty. It's quite handy really, the way the little links rub and move against each other, and keep themselves clean.It only rusts if left for a while in damp conditions. ii)The other thing is the blithe way in which people remove chain mail in your books. Have you ever worn mail? It weighs upwards of forty pounds, and not in one easily lifted lump either. Trying to lift a mail shirt over your head is a sure way to leave yourself undefended as you grapple with the sliding,slithering, weighty mass. The professional way is to bend over as if touching your toes and haul it up a little from the bottom. It's own weight does the trick then, sending it cascading down around your ears in no time, to fall in a neat heap at your feet. So, that's it really. Anoraking, trainspotting, whatever you want to call it out of the way. Have just finished Uhtred's latest travails, loved it, and am looking out for Sharpe's Fury! Thanks for a grand ride. Yours sincerely, Mari Hannigan.

A

I do try to convey how heavy the things were...sorry I've offended you.


Q

About a year ago I discovered your books. Today I finished reading all of them (saved the Sharpe series for the last). You are a great story teller, thank you. Looking forward to any new ones. Hal Pearson


Q

Hi Mr B Cornwell, just a fast note from downunder in New Zealand to say thank you for your great work, I just can't put your books down. Again thanks. Craig Emslie


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Mr. Cornwell, I've read all your Sharpe books, the Grail Quest books, Redcoat, and now the Saxon Stories. Sharpe is ever memorable. The best character in historical fiction I'd say-- followed of course by Derfel (classically memorable) and now it seems Uhtred. I still have many of your books to read and I am thankful for that because there are so many good stories waiting for me. But having read all the Sharpe books to date, I am envious of the fellow who has just discovered them and is just beginning to read them for the first time. But I would like to congratulate you on your award. You certainly deserve the Order of the British Empire... and to be awarded it from the Queen no less! You've done a wonderful service to English history and English culture. Not very many authors can so impactfully entertainingly and gracefully tell English history. The Queen is right in awarding you and I think the Queen speaks for all your readers in acknowledging you. You have my compliments! NP