"St.
Petersburg is a maritime city, so it never gets truly cold…if you're Russian or
an Emperor Penguin from the South Pole, that is. By mid-April the snow has
melted, and the Neva River, which averages five hundred meters in width and
eleven meters in depth, is no longer frozen solid. Now, that is one
massive chunk of ice."
From
"All For Spilled Blood" by R. Ann Siracusa
Baby, It's Cold Outside
St. Petersburg, Russia, called
the Venice of the North, may be one of the most romantic cities in Europe and a
fabulous place to visit, but it's also one of the coldest. In February, the
average low is -11° F and the average high is -3° F with an average of 17 snow
days. Yes, those are minus signs. It's no wonder the Neva River freezes over. And
there are only 6 hours of sunlight.
My suggestion: Don't go
there in the winter. My heroine in All For Spilled Blood goes there in early
May and the ice in the river has just broken up…but she finds out how cold it
is.
Breaking Ice on the Neva River A/P photo by Dmitry Lovetsky |
But not to worry. Thousands of Russian Orthodox followers
celebrate the religious holiday of Epiphany (January) by taking a dip in the icy
rivers and lakes, cleansing themselves with water blessed by a cleric and deemed
holy and pure. Some believe it holds special powers of protection and healing. Since
this is a common yearly practice, it must keep them from getting the flu and hypothermia.
Read more about this at: http://nightfame.com/style/2011/01/thousands-of-russians-jump-in-ice-holes-for-holiday/
The longest days of the year come in June, with approximately
19 hours between sunrise and sunset, and I've read that during this time of the
year, the few hours of night are like twilight and it never really gets dark,
allowing many hours of sightseeing. The photo shows the Neva River at 11 pm.
Photo
by James Hill of the NY Times
Venice
of the North
Before I travel in Russia, the
term “Venice of the North” meant nothing to me. Color me dense. A great deal of
St. Petersburg's charm derives from being built around a network of canals and
rivers, and the most incredible bridges you can imagine to bring pedestrian and
vehicle traffic across those canals. In addition to being the main lifeblood of
the city, the waterways help define the unique atmosphere by creating eerie
mists which rise from the frozen water in the winter and glimmering mirror
facades in the summer.
English Bridge in Fog |
Zimnaya Kanavka Canal |
Founding
of St.Petersburg
Founded by Tsar Peter the
Great in 1703, the first buildings of the city were situated on ten islands to
the north side of the Neva in the river delta, but as the city grew, the center
moved south of the river. Today St. Petersburg spreads over more than forty
islands, with 342 public bridges cataloged, all sizes, types, and designs. It’s impossible to walk more than a few
hundred meters without crossing a bridge.
Anichkov Bridge |
Tsar Peter the Great created
St. Petersburg to be as much like a European city as possible. While the older
parts of the city have the definite "feel" of a European city, the
buildings themselves take on some of the special expansive qualities typical of
Russian architecture. But nothing there is really old by European standards.
The Tsar expected residents
of the city move around during the summer months by boat on the canals. In the
winter, when the canals are frozen, they were to expected to use the canals
with sleds. I guess that didn’t work out. After Peter’s death, they started
building bridges. The first permanent bridge of bricks and stone across the
main branch of the Neva was constructed in 1850.
Griboyedova Canal |
The Resurrection Church of
Our Savior
Better
known as Church On Spilled Blood, The Resurrection Church of Our Savior is
built on the spot where Tsar Alexander II was assassinated in 1881. This
church, in the Russian Revival style, is one of the most outstanding structures
I saw in Russia.
As you can guess from the name of my novel, All For Spilled Blood, this church plays
a role in my novel. You can't imagine how many times people have corrected my
references to it using the word "of" instead of "on", but
it's definitely "on Spilled Blood".
Russia is a fascinating
country with a rich cultural background and history. If you read or write historical fiction,
Russia is a vast source of inspiration. It
is also home to twenty-four world heritage sites, fifteen cultural nine
natural. That makes it worth visiting.
All
For Spilled Blood
This novel, due for release
by Breathless Press on February 22, 2013, is the fourth of a five book romantic
suspense series featuring a spy and a tour director. It's set in St.
Petersburg, and I've tried to capture in the writing some of the flavor of the city.
Cover Blurb
Harriet Ruby, tour director
extraordinaire, and her fiancé and favorite spy, Will Talbot, travel to Russia
undercover as tour directors for the US delegation to an international youth
conference. Harriet tackles her first covert assignment to investigate smuggled
artwork while Will’s mission is to locate and destroy a group of terrorists
recruiting young computer experts.
Their
marriage plans hit a snag when Will locates a long-lost cousin with startling
news about his heritage. When the artwork being smuggled has particular
significance to one of the terrorist sympathizers, their missions entangle and
begin to unravel, leaving Will at the mercy of terrorist kidnappers and Harriet
holding the bag.
Excerpt
Without warning, a
mud-spattered Chinese-made Chery careened around the corner and, with shrieking
brakes, slowed behind us. The plates were so filthy I couldn't tell if they
were Russian or not.
"Take it easy,
buddy." I pulled the car close to the sidewalk to give the anxious driver
room to get around me. No way did I intend to speed up.
As the other vehicle pulled
alongside to pass, I cast it a sideways glance and caught the fleeting
silhouettes of three men. The gaze of the passenger in the front seat fixed on
mine. Young kids. Even with our windows rolled up, I heard loud music.
Figures.
Wham. The
other car veered into ours, smashing against the driver's door.
"Hey!"
Terrified, outraged cries
filled the car as the blow threw my chest against the steering wheel. The air
whooshed from my lungs in a single burst, and I bounced sideways into David.
Startled and frightened, a surge of adrenaline sent cold shivers through me,
but my tingling hands managed to hold onto the wheel. I whipped the car to the
right, away from our attackers and slammed on the brakes.
The air filled with shrill
squealing and the odor of hot tires.
Cr-runch.
The vehicle smashed into us again, more to the rear. We bumped over the curb
and across the sidewalk. The front of the car rammed into the waist-high
barrier wall, the momentum propelling it through the concrete and halfway over
the edge. The vehicle teetered above the uncaring river, the broken wall acting
as a fulcrum.
My heart pounded from fear.
Blood roared in my ears. I half-turned toward the back seat and scream at the
kids. "Get out!"
The car shifted, its torn
metal groaning. Steam poured from under the hood, condensing in the cool air.
My eyes stung and watered.
Carla already had the rear
door open.
"Hurry!" She tumbled out onto the sharp stones and
bent reinforcing bars from the wall, pulling a wailing Sienna Dawn with her.
The car shuddered as they moved.
I
battered my shoulder against the bent driver's door. "Open, dammit!"
Crushed inward and held in
place by the wall outside, it refused to budge. Beside me, David struggled with
the other one and cursed. I twisted to look behind me.
Ohmigod! My
ribs screamed in agony, and my eyesight blurred with pain. Gripping the
steering wheel with all the force I had in my hands, I tried to ground myself
against the pain, and yelled. "Andy. Charlie. Get out!"
"It's stuck."
"Use your
legs!" Andy hollered as he scooted
across the seat to the already-open rear door and followed Carla.
Charlie leaned back on the
seat and kicked with both feet. The door scraped open and he scrambled out.
With the shift of weight, the car groaned and tipped forward.
The shriek of tires nearly
broke my eardrums. Carla screamed. "Get back."
I couldn't see her, but the
roaring engine told it all in the split second required for the other car to
hit us again from behind.
With an ear-shattering
whine, the Siber lurched forward. The trunk rose into the air. The rear doors,
forced into the jagged opening in the stone wall, slammed shut as the car
dropped like a detached leech and hit the frigid water, grill first.
□
It sounds like a nice place to visit... in the summer! :) I've seen a television show on rail travel through Russia and found it to be a unique place and one on my visit list.
ReplyDeleteMelissa, I took a cruise on the Volga River from Moscow to St.Petersburg. But Russia is huge and to really see it would take many trips. Travel is my inspiration for writing. Ann
ReplyDeleteThe excerpt sounded exciting and scary. Great pictures.
ReplyDeleteHey, girl, I'll comment on your blog if you comment on mine...Deal?
ReplyDeleteThis one sounds great and congratulations on a new release.
I would love to visit anywhere in the summer, lol! And this book sounds wonderful!
ReplyDeleteWhat beautiful pictures. It's a magnificent city, but that cold will keep me away. I prefer the tropics. Your book sounds excellent.
ReplyDeleteWhat beautiful pictures. It's a magnificent city, but that cold will keep me away. I prefer the tropics. Your book sounds excellent.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a lovely city to visit in the summer.
ReplyDeleteLoved your excerpt, so exciting.
Janice~
I'm going to have to take a look at this series and have added to my tbr wishlist. I have a friend that has been to Russia and St. Petersburg. Because of what she has said, it is on my lit of places to visi in the future.
ReplyDeletePatricia