A Cemetery in Bodmin, Cornwall
inspired the idea for my Time Travel, Beyond the Fall.
Ebook on sale for .99.
Over
a decade ago my husband and I visited Cornwall, England so I could research a
novel. In the city of Bodmin we explored the eighteenth century courthouse and
the Bodmin church, St.
Petroc’s.
A ruin—which
could have been the chapel of St. Thomas Becket from the 1300s—was next to the
church were a woman in a large hat and loose gown walked through the
overgrowth. When next we looked, she was gone. My husband and I laughed that
perhaps she was a ghost.
The
church, a wonderful gothic structure, dates back to the fifteenth century. We
entered the dim, cool interior, where we inspected the twelfth century Norman
font, carved with eyes that are supposed to open during baptisms. The effigy of
Prior Vyvyan—a Cornish bishop in the 1500s—lies on a chest, both carved from
Catacleuse stone and grey marble. Fine woodwork, a rood screen and bench ends
were constructed around this time.
To the
side of the church was a cemetery of weathered headstones and Celtic crosses, crooked
and ancient-looking in the shadows.
Years
later when I looked at the photograph my husband took, inspiration struck. What
if a woman researching her ancestors poked through a neglected cemetery, moved
a fallen headstone and was whisked back in time to 1789? How would a modern
woman survive in the more primitive eighteenth century where women had few
rights? Miners out of work, grain riots, and the French Revolution, all
happened in this year. Would she be condemned as a spy, or a witch, with her
strange ways and odd clothing?
My
novel, Beyond the Fall,
a time travel adventure, tells that story.
Blurb: In 2018, Tamara is dumped by her
arrogant husband, travels to Cornwall, England and researches her ancestors. In
a neglected cemetery, she scrapes two fallen headstones together trying to read
the one beneath, faints, and wakes up in 1789, the year of The French
Revolution, and grain riots in England. Young Farmer Colum Polwhele comes to
her aid. Can a sassy San Francisco gal survive in this primitive time and fall
for Colum, a man active in underhanded dealings or will she struggle to return
to her own time?
For more information on me and my books, please visit my
website:
www.dianescottlewis.org
Diane Scott Lewis grew up in California, traveled the world
with the navy, edited for magazines and an on-line publisher. She lives with
her husband in Pennsylvania.
2 comments:
It's on my Kindle waiting for its turn. I'm looking forward to reading it. Good luck, Diane!
Cornwall is a beautiful landscape, Diane. I was fortunate to visit years ago. Wishing you all the best!
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