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Friday, 19 June 2026

Out now - Amy Maroney - COURAGE: Tales of History, Mystery and Hope

e-book & paperback from Amazon
or order from any good bookstore

Today we feature 
AMY MARONEY

THE PORTRAIT’S SECRET by Amy Maroney

Paris, 1536

When  a woman holds a secret, does she keep it, or share it?...



trailer/animation by Jean Gill (A.I. generated)
cover graphics by  www.avalongraphics.org

(some stories have an adult content others a 'you will need tissues' warning) 

Fifteen short stories about Courage
featuring authors:
The Sentry - Noricum AD 395
The Saxon - Southern Britain AD 471
The Phoenix - a fictional country circa AD 900
Siflede - London 1066
Daisy Chain - England 1141
Stepping Between - England 1308
Confronting Plague - England 1361
Kate’s Letter - Transylvania 1478
Amy Maroney 
The Portrait’s Secret - Paris 1536
Jean Gill
Legacy - England 1558
Cathie Dunn
Darkness Rising - Venezia 1923
Helen Hollick 
A Taleteller’s Tale - The Caribbean 1709
Elizabeth St.John 
The Gate - London 1900
Antoine Vanner 
A Sack of Potatoes - The Netherlands 1954
Kathy Hollick-Bater 
Grumpy Old Grandfather – Anywhere, Present-day

with an introduction by
 
About Amy's story

THE PORTRAIT’S SECRET by Amy Maroney

Paris, 1536

A Courageous Ride to Court By Amy Maroney

I’m currently working on a novel about a fictional 16th-century woman artist caught up in the dramatic last months of Anne Boleyn’s life. As part of the research for that book, I found a passage from the French royal building accounts that describes artist Jean Clouet’s wife, Jeanne Boucault, journeying from Paris to Fontainebleau in 1537 to deliver paintings to the king.

I was immediately captivated by the image of this woman riding to court, carrying the precious portraits through inclement weather, protecting them during stops at inns and river crossings, and delivering them safely to King François I’s lavish Renaissance court.

Did she make the journey often? Why her? Did she have a hand in the creation of these portraits? Many women did contribute to the artistic output of their families’ workshops. What was it like for this daughter of a Tours goldsmith to enter King François I’s world?

I decided to make this unsung wife of King François’s favorite portrait artist the star of my story for the “Courage” anthology. Digging deeper into history, I managed to uncover a few more precious details about her. Jeanne (or Jehanne) Boucault (also Foucault…yes, records from six centuries ago are inconsistent) was not only the daughter of a skilled goldsmith. Her mother came from an illustrious family of royal metal workers and armourists. Because I love artist Hans Holbein the Younger’s jewelry designs, I decided to give this artsy-craftsy couple mad drawing skills, too. And, in turn, I had them bestow their talents upon their daughter.

Next, instead of having Jeanne Boucault ride to court in 1537 to deliver portraits to the king as stated in the royal building accounts, I turned the clocks back a year to 1536. In that year, Anne Boleyn was executed. Her powerful network of French friends and allies would have quickly learned the news. I imagined Anne de Pisseleu d’Heilly, Duchesse d’Étampes (King François’s official mistress), would have been shaken by the events in Tudor England. After all, she would have crossed paths with Anne Boleyn, as Anne was a lady in waiting for Queen Claude (King François’s wife) during her years in France. Whether they were well acquainted is a mystery, but it’s possible.

Another woman who features in my next novel is Marguerite of Navarre, at that time the most powerful woman in France. François I’s sister, she often stood in for Queen Claude at court events. My research found that Marguerite and Anne de Pisseleu d’Heilly were friendly. As an ardent religious reformer and intellectual, Marguerite was also a strong influence on Anne Boleyn. A few letters from Anne to Marguerite survive, and it’s not an exaggeration to say that Anne was a big fan of Marguerite.

With an abundance of rich fodder at hand, I crafted a story about Jeanne Boucault (I call her Minette in the story for reasons explained in the narrative) carrying portraits to court in June of 1536. But instead of delivering them to the king, she takes them to Anne de Pisseleu d’Heilly. The king’s mistress shares the terrible news about Anne Boleyn’s death, and Minette summons the courage to propose an audacious plan that would give her reason to return to court.

I’m not sure if Minette will appear in my forthcoming novel, but she has a place in my heart now. History is full of courageous women, yet only a few of them are recorded and honored. I’m grateful for the breadcrumbs left in the margins of history that led me to this brave Frenchwoman and her long-ago ride to court.

Author Bio: 

Amy Maroney lives in Oregon, U.S.A., and spent many years as a writer and editor of nonfiction before turning her hand to historical fiction.  Amy is the author of the Miramonde Series, a trilogy about a Renaissance-era female artist and the modern-day scholar on her trail; and the Sea and Stone Chronicles, which features strong, talented women seeking their fortunes in the medieval Mediterranean. To receive a free prequel novella to the Miramonde Series, join Amy Maroney’s community of readers at  https://www.amymaroney.com/  

Author Links: 

Website:  https://www.amymaroney.com/

Amazon Author Page: 

https://www.amazon.com/stores/Amy-Maroney/author/B01LYHPXEO


read a snippet

THE PORTRAIT’S SECRET by Amy Maroney

Paris, 1536

When  a woman holds a secret, does she keep it, or share it?

Minette finished changing the plaster on Jean’s chest and carefully repositioned the cushions supporting his head and neck. He coughed, a murky rattle that set her teeth on edge. She tucked another wool blanket around him, for he’d been shivering despite the fever.

“Fanou should be here,” she said under her breath, taking her husband’s limp hand in hers. “Why, by all the saints, must you and our son both be ill at the same time? And me with child.”

Under the spell of poppy milk and chamomile, Jean emitted a wheezy snore. Minette counted back the days since their son had ridden for Tours. He’d gone to visit his grandparents and developed a fever once there. She’d received word more than a week ago that he had a bad cough, but the fever had broken and he was recovering. Her capable mother had him in her care, and for that, Minette was grateful.

Even if he’s well again, it’s four days’ hard riding back to Paris. The thought of him alone on those roads, still weak... Dieu le garde!


Amy's latest release:

Faced with an unwanted marriage to a ruthless merchant, Giuliana enlists the help of a Basque pirate and flees the only home she's ever known for the dangers of the open sea.

e-book & paperback from Amazon
or order from any good bookstore


great anthologies
featuring various authors



< Previous Post
> Next spotlight tomorrow: Jean Gill

You might also like books written by 
Helen Hollick 

cosy mystery series
nautical supernatural adventure 
historical fiction:
King Arthur / 1066 era
non-fiction:
Ghost Encounters
Pirates /smugglers



Say thank you...
leave a comment on Amazon or Goodreads etc



Thursday, 18 June 2026

OUT NOW! Patricia Furstenberg - COURAGE: Tales of History, Mystery and Hope

 e-book & paperback from Amazon
or order from any good bookstore

Today we feature 
Patricia Furstenberg


Kate's Letter by Patricia Furstenberg

Transylvania, Kingdom of Hungary, 1478

One letter, sealed in dragon’s wax...



trailer/animation by Jean Gill (A.I. generated)
cover graphics by  www.avalongraphics.org


(some stories have an adult content others a 'you will need tissues' warning) 

Fifteen short stories about Courage
featuring authors:

The Sentry - Noricum AD 395
The Saxon - Southern Britain AD 471
The Phoenix - a fictional country circa AD 900
Siflede - London 1066
Daisy Chain - England 1141
Stepping Between - England 1308
Confronting Plague - England 1361
Kate’s Letter - Transylvania 1478
Amy Maroney 
The Portrait’s Secret - Paris 1536
Jean Gill
Legacy - England 1558
Cathie Dunn
Darkness Rising - Venezia 1923
Helen Hollick 
A Taleteller’s Tale - The Caribbean 1709
Elizabeth St.John 
The Gate - London 1900
Antoine Vanner 
A Sack of Potatoes - The Netherlands 1954
Kathy Hollick-Bater 
Grumpy Old Grandfather – Anywhere, Present-day

with an introduction by

About Patricia's Story
Kate's Letter

I felt the need to write Kate’s Letter to chase a single dangerous possibility: that in a life warped by rumour and accusation, one single tale might prove true, and that lone truth could unmake everything that came before it.

It is a meditation on chance and consequence, on how memory and love survive beneath fear, and on whether a second path might exist where history seemed already sealed.

At the same time, it is a deliberate turning aside from another narrative thread, a reclaiming of voice and direction, allowing the lost truth to breathe on its own terms again, shaped not by what was once told, but by what might yet be revealed if one dares to ask, what if?

In doing so, Kate’s Letter stands beside my novels When Secrets Bloom and Beneath the Snow (the first two in Blood of Kings, Heart of Shadows historical fiction series), by extending their quiet excavation of the heart. Of those unseen chambers where grief, loyalty, but also forbidden love take root.

At the same time, it reaches into the silences left by history — especially in the life of Vlad III Dracula. Chronicles record deeds in stark, often blood-dark lines — perhaps truth, perhaps the victor’s version of it. My stories dare to imagine the truthful breath between them: those missing years, those private reckonings of the man beneath the legend.

Together, my books and stories seek not to absolve or condemn, but to restore depth to a figure flattened by myth and therefore removed from reality, and to ask whether - beneath the stain of blood and gossiped history - something human still endures—and might yet be remembered

What if?

read a snippet from

Kate's Letter by Patricia Furstenberg

Transylvania, Kingdom of Hungary, 1478

One letter, sealed in dragon’s wax.

In the winter-bitten heart of Transylvania, where the Carpathians brood over every village and old faiths walk beside the cross, a young woman named Kate returns to the land that once condemned her. She carries little - only a healer’s hands, a coat drenched in memory, and a courage cracked thin by loss. But when a beggar woman unearths a letter, one sealed with the mark of a prince long thought dead, the past stirs like a creature waking from beneath snow. Bargains tighten, old ghosts rise from earth and oath alike, and a thread of hope dares bloom. What follows is the reckoning of a woman who once walked beside a man the world would name monster, and loved him too quietly to admit.

 

Kate held out the coat with both hands – courage she could no longer deny herself.

“Take this,” she said. “Please. Here.” She settled it around the old woman’s shoulders, the weight of it heavy as confession. “It remembers how to be warm.”


About Patricia:

Patricia Furstenberg is a Romanian-born, South Africa-based author of character-driven historical fiction set in medieval Eastern Europe. Her latest novel, When Secrets Bloom, part of the Blood of Kings, Heart of Shadows saga, explores the turbulent world of Vlad the Impaler, weaving meticulous research with moral complexity, faith, and the quiet resilience of women navigating power and peril. Her short stories, poetry, and travel features have appeared in anthologies and online publications. Patricia blogs about overlooked corners of history and cultural heritage on her 

website: https://alluringcreations.co.za/wp/


Amazon author page: https://author.to/PatFurstenberg



https://mybook.to/wsb  



e-book & paperback from Amazon
or order from any good bookstore


more great anthologies
featuring various authors



(celebrating publication day & spotlight on Lorna Fergusson)

> Next spotlight tomorrow: Amy Maroney
You might also like books written by 
Helen Hollick 

cosy mystery series
nautical supernatural adventure 
historical fiction:
King Arthur / 1066 era
non-fiction:
Ghost Encounters
Pirates /smugglers



Say thank you...
leave a comment on Amazon or Goodreads etc