Stones & Bones
Almost two-thousand years ago, a Celtic queen proved the truth of the famous saying “Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned.”
info_outline LondiniumStones & Bones
Samuel Johnson, considered England’s greatest man of letters, famously said: “When a man is tired of London, he’s tired of life.” London’s fascinating history is one reason why.
info_outline The GameStones & Bones
Chess is battle on a board. There can only be one winner.
info_outline The MentorStones & Bones
Any mentor can only go so far. Eventually the hero – or heroine – MUST face the unknown ALONE.
info_outline The NorthamptonStones & Bones
Of Emma of Normandy, Sir Winston Churchill wrote: “Few women in history have stood at the centre of such remarkable converging forces.” But another powerful woman stood in her way.
info_outline Birth of a ConquerorStones & Bones
How did one of history’s most famous kings come to be? Yet without Emma of Normandy, he would be a fleeting figure through time.
info_outline IronsideStones & Bones
This figure is indispensable to British history and to Emma's story. But he didn't last long on her chessboard.
info_outline Winter QueenStones & Bones
Even in the winter of life, love knows no yesterdays.
info_outline Emma’s PlaceStones & Bones
It’s been said that home is where the heart is. But for Emma, only one place will do.
info_outline The OathStones & Bones
A woman desperate for her bloodline to continue fights at every turn for her sons to rise as kings. But first, she needs the oath.
info_outlineWhat was crazy bread and why was it eaten by peasants to stave off hunger and give them a summer of love? Welcome to Y1K and the world of young Emma of Normandy.