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Plague!

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Which of these doctors would you prefer to come to your bedside as you writhe around in pain, the one in 21st century PPE or the 17th century masked man? Why the beak, you ask? It was both a way to identify him as a plague doctor and into which he could cram the herbs that were supposed to ward off the poisonous miasma people believed carried the disease. Surprisingly, his historical garb, a gown of waxed leather and a long stick with which to social distance himself, isn't that different from today's! How are you coping with the strangeness of our new pandemic normal? I would argue that it is tougher for us now to take all these weeks of trying to avoid COVID-19 than it was for those who went through the Black Death in 1340s and the Great Plague in London in 1665. Here are my theories, whacky though they may be! Disease was a way of life back then, and it was why when you look at the statistics of life expectancy in, say, medieval times, it is much lower than today

Support from an idol!

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I was lucky enough to be on a panel with Margaret George and Sharon Kay Penman at the 2015 Historical Novel Society Conference in Denver when we discussed writing about the "bad boys" of history!) The great Sharon Kay Penman has graciously posted a Q&A with me on her blog! You have no idea how special it is to have the author of one of my favorite books give "This Son of York" such support. http://sharonkaypenman.com/ blog/?p=709 Sharon's own new book "The Land Beyond the Sea" comes out in March, so be sure to check out your favorite bookstore or library!