Certain Liberties is an historical novel and the first book in the Emily Alden Trilogy.
"In this historical novel set in the 19th century, a young woman of uncommon musical talent longs for the freedom that's typically reserved for men . . . The author masterfully sets the historical stage-the United States as it devolves into the Civil War-and she addresses the issue of slavery with nuance and rigor . . . a riveting storyline. Emily is a delightfully complex mix of defiance and prudence, as she learns early in life that "there's a very narrow line to negotiate between freedom and responsibility for women." . . . Stark's prose is reliably lucid and consistently faithful to the setting . . . An emotionally affecting and historically edifying tale." -Kirkus Reviews
Author InterviewWhy do you write historical fiction?
I love exploring stories from another era so I can learn more about my own. It's fascinating to see how lives and events are shaped by the social mores and political confines of the times. What is this trilogy concerned with for the most part? The impossible challenges for 19th Century women performers in music, and female violinists in particular; as well as dysfunctional families, betrayal and bravery, commitment and sacrifice, love and friendship, and the threat of technology as it races toward the industrial age. Why do you use some real people in with your fictitious characters? The people who lived at that time add a grounding to put the reader squarely in the mid-19th century to the beginning of the 20th. My readers have said they love learning more about history while enjoying the narrative and they look to my historical fiction to provide that. Why did you choose to write a trilogy starting in the mid-1800's and spanning three