PRO CONNECT
Hi, I’m Winter Fox, and yes, it’s a nom du plume. There are two good reasons for this; I live on a small island, and my given name is hard to pronounce and spell.
I grew up in New Jersey, but despite that, somehow, I have become a reasonable adult and found a beautiful place to live. I graduated from Colgate University with a BA in Literature and minor in music. Since then, I have been fortunate enough to live in Europe, India, and West Africa for a few years, and worked as a flutemaker, rock musician, gardener, carpenter, and mason along the way. Writing finally came along as well, starting with letters to the editors of Maine newspapers, a blog, and then my Grace Coffin series. But, for the last several years, I have been researching and writing my Viking Age series Flight of the Wren.
Flight of the Wren is the story of the end of the Viking Age, starting with the education of our heroine as the Shaman’s apprentice in her village on the north coast of Lapland, and ending five books and thirty years later at the Battle of Sticklestadt, where Olav Haraldsson meets his end. It’s a true epic and really digs into the lives of several historical and fictional characters as they cross the cusp between the Dark and Middle Ages.
When I’m not writing, I’m gardening, playing music, building something in my yard, and wrestling piles of stone into order. You can see my stones at mr-bowen.com, and my author website at winterfoxbooks.com.
I live at home with my wonderful spouse, our 100 lb.doodle, and two fine cats.
“An impressive and intricate novel that’s rich in character and full of action.”
– Kirkus Reviews
This sequel offers a collection of Nordic historical adventures set during the 11th century.
Book 2 of Fox’s sweeping fictional epic, in which an assortment of personal quests gradually becomes woven together, opens in 1008 in Tønsberg, Norway, during an era of transition in the Scandinavian countries. Christianity is threatening to replace the beliefs and gods of the North. Olav Haraldsson, 13, one year short of adulthood, breaks loose from his training as a Viking warrior and heads off on his first spree of pillaging and plundering. He and his coterie of followers steal an old sailing vessel belonging to Lord Sigurd Syr, his benefactor and his mother’s fiance. When Lady Asta Gudbrandtsdotter learns of her son’s exploits, she consults Hekka, the Witch of Vestfold, whose magic she calls on to protect Olav. Meanwhile, Hilja of Kokolu, a young Healer from a tiny, ransacked village on the northern coast of Lapland, currently living with Hekka, decides to journey to the frigid terrain of the colonies in Greenland. Hilja hopes to find her mother and sister, kidnapped and sold into slavery many years ago by Norsemen. Able to communicate with the natural world, Hilja communes with a gull she calls Skeet. She sees what he sees, reads the winds, and observes the faces of people in far-off settlements as she searches for her family. Accompanying her as her protector is the formidable Laplander Agatha Rothskilde, trained as a warrior but prevented by her gender from fulfilling her dream. The development of friendship and mutual respect between the diminutive Hilja and the “Giantess” Agatha, so different in personality and upbringing, presents the most enjoyable, humorous episodes of this complex tale that includes voluminous plot threads. Fox provides enough grisly battle scenes to engage armchair adventurers and enough historical factoids about period lifestyles and political intrigue to satisfy those interested in Norse culture. In between are vivid ecological descriptions, romance, jealousy, and vengeance. Fortunately, the author supplies a cast of characters to help readers wade through the plethora of names and relationships.
Facts, fantasy, and mysticism skillfully intertwine in a compelling tale with memorable characters.
Pub Date: Nov. 24, 2021
ISBN: 979-8-57-049747-4
Page count: 487pp
Publisher: Self
Review Posted Online: Jan. 8, 2021
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2021
Fox’s novel of adventure and intrigue, set in Scandinavia at the turn of the 11th century, follows a young woman from Lapland on a quest to save her family.
As the story opens, 6-year-old Hilja is left alone after her mother and sister are kidnapped by Norsemen. Soon afterward, the local shaman, Taika—also called “the Lady of the Wood”—takes Hilja under her wing and trains her as an apprentice. The training gives the girl an intimate knowledge of the natural world and allows her to communicate with animals. Hilja’s final test, at the age of 14, is a journey to the Underworld, where she receives a cryptic mission from one of its spirits: “You must cross the water to save the bear, heal the devil, find your sister, and help your son unite your land!” Elsewhere, the rulers of the Scandinavian countries plot their alliances and futures. Denmark’s king, Svein Forkbeard, favors his elder son, Harald, as his heir, but he asks Thorkell the Tall, a warrior of renown, to train his younger son, Canute. In Canute, Thorkell sees the potential for greatness, but his wife, the powerful witch Hekka, has her own plans for Norway. Intrigue abounds as Thorkell and Gunnhilde, queen of Denmark, struggle to suppress their mutual attraction. Svein, meanwhile, aims to marry the widow Sigrid of Uppland, whose son is heir to the Swedish throne. Somehow, Fox manages to juggle all of these many and varied storylines with grace and even finds room to write evocatively of real-life customs and rituals of the time and place in which his characters live. The depiction of Beltane, an ancient May Day celebration, is especially vivid. Along the way, the author also artfully embroiders the novel with plenty of historical, cultural, and even religious context; for example, after a fight with a Russian warrior that partly hinges on the definition of the term “Viking,” Thorkell announces to his men, “We can either be Vikings or vassals of Rome, never both.”
An impressive and intricate novel that’s rich in character and full of action.
Pub Date: March 12, 2020
Page count: 420pp
Publisher: Self
Review Posted Online: May 7, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2020
Day job
Stone Artist, Musician
Favorite author
Ursula K LeGuin
Favorite book
The Stupidest Angel, by Christopher Moore
Hometown
Southwest Harbor, Maine
Passion in life
Excellence in many areas of interest. Integrity.
Unexpected skill or talent
Bamboo Flute Maker
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