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we are such stuff as dreams are made on,
and our little life is rounded with a sleep.
- shakespeare, the tempest
I considered doing a post on the Assassin next, since people wanted it so badly (and since I actually know what I want to say on that subject). But that wouldn't be orderly and anyhow, I like to keep everyone guessing, so I decided instead to address the question of Tempus Regina's setting. It came up a couple times, and it seems there is as much confusion about that as there was - and probably still is - about the whole time travel business. Hopefully I can give a clearer answer this time.
...does Tempus Regina take place in the real world, or an imaginary one? You've referenced Victorian England, but on the other hand I've gotten the sense that it's fantasy.
[elisabeth grace foley]
&
do any of your characters originally come from outside of our own planet earth?
[joy]
&
do any of your characters originally come from outside of our own planet earth?
[joy]
Elisabeth, you've hit the proverbial hammer on the head. Tempus Regina is technically "historical fantasy," which means the answer is yes and yes. It deals with real time periods (Victorian England, for example) and even some real people, but it also incorporates time travel and dragons and, yes, also some "magic," so it obviously can't be marketed as straight historical fiction. It's funky.
The best example of the genre that occurs to me off the top of my head is Anne McCaffrey's Black Horses for the King, a mostly historical novel set during the time after the abandonment of Britain by Rome, when the man who became the legendary King Arthur probably lived. But we don't actually know that he lived at all, and since the story deals with legends, it's "historical fantasy." And Tempus Regina is even more fantasy-driven than that.
In answer to Joy, the story takes place entirely in the real world; there is no inter-dimensional travel, not even of the vague That Hideous Strength brand. Everyone is from Here, though whether everyone is human is debatable. This also somewhat answers the question about religion in the story, but I'm planning on giving that its own post, since it demands fuller explanation.
...so is Regina in any way related to the Arthurian legends? ...is there any connection between Morgaine and Morgan le Fay? I hope not. I love Morgaine.
[anne-girl]
Tempus Regina is, like Black Horses for the King, a novel of legends - a novel of the stuff that "dreams are made on." When she travels back in time - when she finds herself burdened with the role of time queen - Regina is tangled up in the threads of the two most fantastic and enduring legends of Western culture. Which legends those are is, for the moment, open to speculation...though I will say that those of you putting money on Arthurian legend are more likely to see a return on the investment.
As for Morgaine, she is, well, Morgaine. And not as likeable as her Beautiful People appearance has (it seems) led many to believe. In fact she's quite annoying and I'd like to hit her with a frying pan. Interpret that as you will.












