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Patricia Watkins

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Patricia Watkins, an information scientist by profession, emigrated from her native Wales to North America, where her wide-ranging interests and spirit of adventure have led her into occupations and situations she has put to good use in writing her novels: she has been lost in the White Mountains of New Hampshire with only her rough collie for company, been a researcher at Stanford University, become caught up in the race riots of the deep south, sailed the waters off Newport, RI, had a .22 rifle aimed at her stomach in the Salt Lake Desert, provided her own, professional landscape photographs for the backdrop of one of the talks at the NY Public Library during Wales Week in 2009, created a rose garden now used as the logo for the soft-furnishings department of a large US department store chain, provided the technical information necessary for an international aid organization to carry out its field projects, owned her own database-creation company, and become stranded in Death Valley. During this time, she edited and published a small newspaper, wrote satirical articles for newspapers and began writing novels.
Thus far she has written and published four historical novels, two of which have received 4-star, recommended reviews from The Bookbag (www.thebookbag.co.uk), and the third the Kirkus review, quoted here. The fourth has not yet been reviewed. She has also written two modern novels: one, a crime novel with a romantic element, the other a psychological suspense novel -- neither as yet published.

THE WAYWARD GENTLEMAN Cover
BOOK REVIEW

THE WAYWARD GENTLEMAN

BY Patricia Watkins • POSTED ON Dec. 9, 2012

An 18th-century “gentleman player” fights, loves and charms his way through Ireland in Watkins’ (The Wayward Gentleman: John Theophilus Potter & The Town of Haverfordwest, 2012, etc.) delightful ode to the theater.

John Theophilus Potter (“Theo” to his many friends and admirers) is blessed with exuberance, height, swordsmanship, and such good looks that noblewomen can’t help but try to seduce him. He also has a quality that proves to be both a blessing and an impediment: He’s a skilled actor, equally adept at performing dramatic roles (Hamlet, Romeo) and comedic ones (the drunkard Trinculo in The Tempest). He becomes enamored with the theater as a precocious child growing up on a country estate outside Dublin, where he’s raised to be a gentleman. In 18th-century Ireland, however, propriety forbade gentlemen from performing onstage, a custom gradually being reversed by the likes of Thomas Sheridan—a real actor who features prominently in Theo’s story. (Theophilus Potter was apparently a real person, too, although biographical details of his life are scant.) Theo’s battles against the prejudices of the time lead to some of the book’s adventures, while others are the consequences of uncertain parentage, insane acquaintances, temporary blindness, vindictive women, villainous Trinity students, and the petty jealousies and small catastrophes that affect an acting troupe. The novel’s plot is as restless as its protagonist, resulting in a compelling narrative with a few hastily introduced and dropped characters and storylines. Like the picaresque novels this one emulates, Watkins’ story isn’t too concerned with psychology; readers know little about Theo’s internal state, beyond an occasional reference to nightmares or the “residual emotional problems” caused by, for instance, his near-murder at the hands of his best friend. But it is nonetheless a vivid historical envisioning, with insightful observations about playacting in everyday life and memorable anecdotes about life in the theater. In particular, costuming mishaps inform several buoyant episodes.

A spirited historical novel marked by humor, intrigue and entertainment. 

Pub Date: Dec. 9, 2012

ISBN: 978-0957210479

Page count: 322pp

Publisher: Down Design Publications

Review Posted Online: Dec. 9, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2014

Awards, Press & Interests

Favorite author

Joseph Conrad

Favorite book

Pride and Prejudice

Unexpected skill or talent

Photography

ADDITIONAL WORKS AVAILABLE

DYFED ODYSSEY: Connell O'Keeffe & The Spider's Web

Irish actor, Connell O’Keeffe, who suffered severely at the hands of a murderer three years previously, in 1797, now runs a stud farm in north Pembrokeshire, where he breeds Arabian horses. Happily married to his beloved Katherine, he has a young son with another child on the way. A crisis arises one morning, however, when the groom discovers one of O’Keeffe’s prize mares, Khayri, has been stolen, and a ransom note pinned to the door of her stable. O’Keeffe and his servant, Morgan, immediately set out to retrieve her. When he kisses his wife goodbye on that June morning in 1800, neither is to know that it will be several months of heartache and adversity, before they are together again.
Published: Aug. 31, 2012
ISBN: 9780957210462

THE WAYWARD GENTLEMAN: John Theophilus Potter & the Town of Haverfordwest

The year is 1778, and a young Irish actor, John Theophilus Potter, arrives in Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, with a troupe of performers from the famous Smock Alley Theatre in Dublin. While here, he falls in love with a local wealthy heiress, Elizabeth Edwardes, and they are married. Although very much in love, Elizabeth refuses to leave her beloved Pembrokeshire and return with him to Ireland, forcing Theo to abandon his career as an actor, for Haverfordwest is a town that does not even have a theatre. Witty, high spirited, full of humour, and endowed with boundless energy, Theo is now at a loss to know how to find fulfilment, and his quest leaves his genteel Elizabeth forever wondering what he will do next; given his nature, it is usually something to leave her bemused, aghast, or in fear for his life.
Published: June 30, 2012
ISBN: 9780957210448

TRICK OF FATE: Connell O'Keeffe & The Pen Caer Legacy

It’s 1797, and the French have invaded Pembrokeshire. O’Keeffe, an actor on his way home to Ireland, witnesses a murder, and suffers a life-changing injury as a result. Traumatized, he is taken prisoner as one of the Irish Republican invaders. This is the story of his escape, and of the love he finds from a woman who helps save him from himself.
Published: Aug. 31, 2012
ISBN: 9780957210455

VOYAGE INTO LIMBO

His summer research trip cancelled, Colan Yeats, veteran of the war in Afghanistan and PhD student, seizes with enthusiasm the offer to act as skipper and navigator aboard a sailboat travelling from Marblehead, Massachusetts, to Falmouth, in Cornwall. It is a position he is well qualified to fill, but his greatly-anticipated voyage sails him instead into limbo -- and misery.
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