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Sir Godfrey Tallboys was a knight-errant, famous for his success at tourneys, but far from wealthy. In an attempt to make his fortune he left his wife Sybilla and travelled to Spain to fight a minor crusade against the Moors. But treachery lurked in that far distant land and soon Sir Godfrey became a prisoner, a helpless slave in a hostile country. Back in quiet Suffolk he was reported dead. And so it fell to Sybilla to fend for the whole family. The modest house of Knight's Acre became the show more scene of much hardship and poverty, and only someone with Sybilla's determination could triumph at last. But Sybilla was to find that life still held many surprises for her... show lessTags
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Norah Lofts was an extremely popular writer of historical fiction where I grew up in England. I remember picking up this book up from my mother’s coffee table when I was bored one Sunday fully expecting to toss it aside within the hour, only to become engrossed in the tale.
Knight’s Acre (the first of a trilogy) tells the story of Godfrey Tallboys and Lady Sybilla who set out to build a manor home. Godfrey is a man of many qualities, including his martial prowess, loyalty, and honesty, but he is also gullible and recklessly naïve. Soon after moving into their new home, Godfrey is hoodwinked into fighting in a disastrous foreign war that ends with him being imprisoned, leaving Sybilla to fend for herself and her children as best she show more can.
Some of the difficulties Sybilla faces are quite mundane—planting a garden, growing a crop, furnishing the house, figuring out where everyone should sleep, and choosing what cakes to serve distinguished guests. But she must also fend off unwanted advances from suitors who presume her husband to be dead, and protect her family from brigands wandering the countryside, all whilst Godfrey seeks to engineer his escape and make his way back home.
From the cover, I expected the book to be a bit of a saccharine romance, but it wasn’t at all. There was romance, sure, but it was not the heart of the story. The author’s world is not a world full of swooning damsels. Rather, it is a very real world, as befits her almost scholarly attention to historic detail. It is harsh, unfair, and at times brutal. You cannot presume a happy ending with Lofts. And for any happy ending that comes, there may be a heavy price to pay.
Norah Lofts seems to be a somewhat forgotten writer, given the quality of her work, and how prolific and popular she once was. She deserves more attention.
I have enjoyed other books by this author (notably Gad’s Hall), but for some reason this one novel has stuck with me. show less
Knight’s Acre (the first of a trilogy) tells the story of Godfrey Tallboys and Lady Sybilla who set out to build a manor home. Godfrey is a man of many qualities, including his martial prowess, loyalty, and honesty, but he is also gullible and recklessly naïve. Soon after moving into their new home, Godfrey is hoodwinked into fighting in a disastrous foreign war that ends with him being imprisoned, leaving Sybilla to fend for herself and her children as best she show more can.
Some of the difficulties Sybilla faces are quite mundane—planting a garden, growing a crop, furnishing the house, figuring out where everyone should sleep, and choosing what cakes to serve distinguished guests. But she must also fend off unwanted advances from suitors who presume her husband to be dead, and protect her family from brigands wandering the countryside, all whilst Godfrey seeks to engineer his escape and make his way back home.
From the cover, I expected the book to be a bit of a saccharine romance, but it wasn’t at all. There was romance, sure, but it was not the heart of the story. The author’s world is not a world full of swooning damsels. Rather, it is a very real world, as befits her almost scholarly attention to historic detail. It is harsh, unfair, and at times brutal. You cannot presume a happy ending with Lofts. And for any happy ending that comes, there may be a heavy price to pay.
Norah Lofts seems to be a somewhat forgotten writer, given the quality of her work, and how prolific and popular she once was. She deserves more attention.
I have enjoyed other books by this author (notably Gad’s Hall), but for some reason this one novel has stuck with me. show less
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84+ Works 6,087 Members
Celebrated novelist Norah Lofts perfected the art of bringing the past alive in her works of historical fiction. She remains one of England's most distinguished and best loved women of letters, selling more than a million books and captivating generations of readers. Lofts' first novel, "I Met a Gypsy", won the American Booksellers' Award for show more 1935. In her long and prolific career, she wrote more than 60 books of nonfiction, biography and historical fiction, animating history and yet preserving historical accuracy. In works such as "Scent of Cloves" (1940), "Bless This House" (1954), and "Crown of Aloes" (1979), period detail and language are blended with a masterful storytelling technique. Lofts is also well known for biographical novels about great and fascinating women of history such as Anne Boleyn and Catherine of Aragon. In addition, Lofts has written thrillers under the pseudonym Peter Curtis and novels as Juliet Astley. Norah (Robinson) Lofts was born in Norfolk, England on August 27, 1904. She credited her history-teaching years, 1925 to 1936, for developing a sense of history which became the foundation for her writings. Married and the mother of two sons, she lived in an ancient English city, among medieval ruins, in a 250-year-old house. She died there on September 10, 1983. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Common Knowledge
- Original publication date
- 1975
- People/Characters
- Sir Godfrey Tallboys; Sybilla; Tana
- First words
- When Sir Godfrey Tallboys decided to build his house he was thirty-five years old and at the very peak of his career as knight errant.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)The gleam faded; twilight flooded the yard as Sybilla though: and the child - his child - shall be welcome, too.
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- Members
- 136
- Popularity
- 239,633
- Reviews
- 1
- Rating
- (3.63)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 18
- ASINs
- 4




























































