You are the light of the world. A town built on a hill cannot be hidden. Neither do people light a lamp and put it under a bowl. Instead they put it on its stand, and it gives light to everyone in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven. Matthew 5:14-16
Showing posts with label Cassia by Susan F. Craft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cassia by Susan F. Craft. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 1, 2015
Cassia Nominated for Christy Award
In Cassia, the third novel in the Xanthakos Family Trilogy, Lilyan and Nicholas and their three children are attacked by pirates in the North Carolina Outer Banks in 1799.
Here's a review by Elaine Marie Cooper, author of the Deer Run Series.
It’s difficult to pinpoint what I appreciate the most about Susan Craft’s latest release entitled “Cassia.” Is it the well-crafted and impeccably researched story? The amazing tale filled with love and adventure? Or the fact that the author describes the true face of evil, not falling into the unrealistic device of romanticizing pirates who seek to kill and destroy? It is each of these aspects of this third book in her series (that includes “Chamomile” and “Laurel”) that had me riveted to my kindle late into the night.
I am just saddened to bid farewell to these precious characters, so skillfully created by the author. But I applaud Ms. Craft’s satisfying finish to an amazing family saga. And I never fear that the author has short-changed us on getting the historical facts correct. Her amazing ability to blend details from the past with an enticing story for present day readers never ceases to amaze me.
Another five star novel to satisfy this historical romance reader. Well done!
Thursday, October 8, 2015
Cassia and Ships Throwing Slaves Overboard
In my novel, Cassia, the Xanthakos family come across a ship at sea that is dumping dead and dying slaves overboard.
This happened a lot when ships packed what they considered their "cargo" too tightly.
For example, the British slave ship Zong threw 54 sick and dying women and children into the sea. Two days later 42 male slaves were thrown overboard; 36 slaves followed in the next few days. Another ten, in a display of defiance at the inhumanity of the slavers, threw themselves overboard.
On 22 December, 1781, the Zong arrived at Black River, Jamaica, with 208 slaves on board, less than half the number taken from Africa. The King’s Bench Trial Reports.
Cassia is a historical romantic suspense that spans from 1799-1836 and from the Blue Ridge Mountains to Charleston, SC, and to the NC Outer Banks. It is the third book of the Xanthakos Family Trilogy. The first two are The Chamomile and Laurel.
Labels:
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Sunday, August 16, 2015
My Novel Cassia and Colonial Medicine
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A couple of months ago, I saw my family doctor for a problem I’d been having. The night before, I’d been reading a resource book for my upcoming novel Cassia. The name of it is Indian Doctor – Nature’s method of curing and preventing disease according to the Indians.
I took the book with me to show the doctor the Indian cure for my problem. What a hoot! We had such fun looking through the book. Seems as if every cure involved mixing something with wine, ale, beer, or liquor. We came to the conclusion that with enough of the “cure,” even if you still had the problem, you wouldn’t care anymore.
Here’s what the book says for my problem, “Take some pounded panic (panic is another name for powdered corn), and give it to the patient to drink with wine, and he will recover. The same panic, being boiled with goat’s milk, and eaten twice a day, morning and evening, will operate the same.”
Seriously, knowing the right herbs and natural cures was extremely important in an era where there were very few, if any, doctors available. And, most of the time, those doctors weren’t classically trained.
Lilyan Xanthakos, the heroine of Cassia, is not only a portrait and mural artist she is a healer who carries her medicine kit wherever she goes. In Cassia I mention an incident in Swansboro, NC, where pirates blockaded the port not for money or other booty, but for medical supplies (which were worth their weight in gold.)
There’s also a scene where the ship’s cook, because there is no doctor on board, applies a camphor-based ointment to the scratches on Lilyan’s face.
While she's being cared for, Lilyan checks out the cook's medicine kit that has: jalap for purging, mercury salves for the Foul Disease, autumn crocus and meadow saffron for gout, and St. John’s Wort for insomnia, all carefully wrapped in oil-soaked paper.
Lilyan, along with most colonial women, maintained a medicine kit that might have included the following: (Some of the items in this list that may seem misspelled come directly from Nicholas Culpepper's The English Physician, Enlarged in 1653.)
-
Valerian root, combined with hops and lemon balm; a sedative for sleep disorders, insomnia
valerian root - Sweet gum bark, boiled; for sore eyes, wash eyes three times a day
- Rum or brandy; for a burn apply a wet rag doused; Two or three swallows of cold water before breakfast; for heartburn
- Feverfew; for headaches/migraines, body aches, and fever
- Southern Wood; for upset stomach (also used as an insect or moth repellent
southern wood - Calendula, dried, ground and mixed with animal fat; for cuts
calendula - Tansy; for indigestion, cramps, sunburn, and to remove freckles
- Basil; draw poison out of animal bites
- Black Cohosh; for menopause
- Boswellia; for arthritis
- Chamomile tea; for digestive problems
- Flaxseed; for menopausal discomfort and osteoporosis
- White Willow Bark; for back pain
- Ginger; for nausea and vomiting
- Lavender flowers; for anxiety
- Fleabane; for venomous bites, smoke from it kills gnats and fleas; dangerous for women and children
- Hellebore root snuffed up the nose; for sneezing and melancholy and to kill rats and mice
- Penyroyal; for vomiting, gas, and vertigo
- Fox’s tongue softened in vinegar; applied topically, draws out a thorn or splinter
- Rose petals steeped in vinegar; applied topically for headache
- Chalk; for heartburn
- Calamine; for skin irritations
- Cinchona Bark (contains quinine); for fevers
- Garden celedine, pile wort, or fig wort; for boils
- Cottonweed, boyled in lye; it keeps the head from Nits and Lice; being laid among Cloaths, it keeps them safe from Moths; taken in a Tobacco-pipe it helps Coughs of the Lunges, and vehement headaches.
- Take howse leeke Catts blod and Creame mixed together & oynt the place warme or take the moss that groweth in a well & Catts blod mixed & so aply it warme to the plase whare the shingles be; for the shingles.
I’ll stick with the antibiotics.
The Xanthakos Family Trilogy
Labels:
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