About me
The Anglo Saxons have fascinated me ever since I studied history at Oxford University. But when I graduated, my focus shifted from the past to a path that glistened enticingly with gold, and I went into business. Eventually starting my own enterprise, I learned that even successful start-ups don’t pay the bills for quite some time. To supplement my income, I tried writing and took an idea to a publishing friend of mine. He said I should get a day job, preferably one where I could practice my writing. Following his advice, I became an academic and discovered that there was no good textbook in my subject for my students. So I wrote one of my own which was published in 1992 and is still going strong in its 8th edition over 30 years later, entitled ‘Small Business Management and Entrepreneurship’. I wrote several other textbooks, before turning my hand to fiction.
Creative writing was harder than I thought, so I took a course where I learned of the importance of finding a ‘unique voice’ in your writing. At the time I was a long-distance carer for my dad who was nearly 100 years old but remarkably healthy and living on his own. I phoned him often and, as he liked to talk, I was listening to his ‘unique voice’ for over an hour every day. I used our conversations to not only write up his autobiography, ‘A Century of life’, but also to create a fictional story using many elements of his character and life-history. The result was my first novel about a 20th century man who becomes involved in the 21st century problem of human trafficking, ‘The Happy Ending’. (Yes, the double meaning is intentional).
That got me into writing stories about characters from the past - which led me back to the Anglo-Saxons, and historical fiction. I thought I would write about immigrant warlords carving out fiefdoms amongst the native Britons to create ever-growing kingdoms that finally became England. Yet I found myself more interested in the unsung characters without whom the kings would never have drawn breath – the Anglo-Saxon women overlooked by the historians of the time who were nearly all monks.
Although my first Anglo-Saxon novel, ‘Angles or Angels?’ is the story of the showdown between competing warlords in northern England, it is also the story of Acha, the peace weaver who arbitrates between them and is mother to Oswald, the great king of Northumbria who succeeds them.
My latest book tells the story of another unsung heroine, Æthelflæd, Lady of the Mercians. In ‘King Alfred’s Daughter’, you will read about the many crucial roles she played: war leader, town builder, church founder and nurturer of the future first king of all England.
Like the Anglo-Saxon warriors, I couldn’t have done any of this without the support of a strong female in my life. I married Sue in the 70’s, we had children in the 80’s and she developed a career in the NHS. Lately our paths have converged, and she is now an osteo-archaeologist. Together, we are digging up the past.
Our children have all taken it upon themselves to save the planet through their work. For a while I was content to leave it to them. Their generation seemed capable enough of sorting out the mess they’d inherited from us. When I realised the extent of the problem, I felt I had to do something and have become a bit of an environmental activist myself. To illustrate the issues for younger people, I wrote ‘The Singing Bowl’ which tells of a parallel world inhabited by competing ancient species that are encountering similar issues to climate change on Earth.
See more and pictures on davidstokesauthor.com
King Alfred is dead and the achievements that made him great are in jeopardy. Rebels challenge the succession of his son Edward to the Wessex throne, and his old ally in Mercia is sick. The Vikings in the Danelaw sense the time has come to complete their conquest of England.
It falls on Alfred’s firstborn, his daughter, Æthelflæd, to unite the Anglo-Saxons. Reluctantly, she takes up the challenge. But can a woman rebuild ruined towns and lead men into battle against hardened Viking warriors? And can Æthelflæd fulfil her father’s dream of uniting England?
Based on contemporary sources and archaeological evidence, King Alfred’s Daughter is rich in drama, family conflict and historical achievement.