Poppies Pressed in Parting, a Short Story

German pointer dog in a field of poppies at sunset

Pressed Poppies is a short story told through two voices, echoing across the quiet space where hearts once met. It is a story of parting. A parting that is wordless, weighted, and irreversible. Where affection shrinks under the burden of duty or pain; where all that was left is unsaid. What remains is remembrance: delicate, haunting and full of questions. And red, as the poppies once shared.

Out on Spillwords Press today!

Tracking Vlad the Impaler: A Winter Journey Through Romania’s Haunted Rails

Tihuta Pass winter

Join me on a wintry pilgrimage through the heart of Romania. Snow on the Tracks: Shadowing Vlad the Impaler to Sighișoara is a travel essay close to my heart, recently featured as a finalist in the Pilgrimages writing competition on Intrepid Times. This journey by train, from Bucharest to the birthplace of Vlad the Impaler, the medieval town of Sighisoara, threads through snow-dusted forests, ancestral echoes and the pulse of a country still shaped by its legends.

It’s a story of looking out the window. And into the past.

Read the full piece here: Snow on the Tracks: Shadowing Vlad the Impaler to Sighișoara.

With thanks to Intrepid Times for publishing my travel story and to my wonderful husband for supplying those gorgeous pictures.

Romanian Heroines from Dreamland, Women Whose Stories Made History

Dreamland, Patricia Furstenberg, Inspired by Astonishing Women from Romania’s Past too

History is often told through the stories of kings, rulers or warriors, yet behind these grand narratives are countless women whose lives shaped the country in profound and often unsung ways. We saw the surprising ways in which medieval Romanian queens shaped history, what strange laws defined women’s lives and what their life entailed.

But what about the unknown women from Romania’s prehistory, the classical era, and even modern times? The commoners who might not have held thrones or led armies but played pivotal roles in preserving traditions, influencing culture and driving change? You can read about them in my book Dreamland, which honors the legacies of these remarkable women whose impact, though often quiet, echoes through the pages of Romania’s history. Yo can discover a few of them here, on Women’s History Month.

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Citind Chiajna din Casa Mușatinilor de Simona Antonescu, Bilingual Shelf Talk

Chiajna Simona Antonescu bookreview PatFurstenberg

De Crăciun am întâlnit-o pe Chiajna. Chiajna din Casa Mușatinilor, romanul istoric scris de Simona Antonescu.

On Christmas I met Chiajna. Chiajna from the House of Mușat, a romanian historical fiction novel based on a real personality and written by Simona Antonescu (book review below and right on time for Women’s History Month).

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Daring Queens and Their Surprising Influences in Medieval Romania

Elisabeta Regina Romaniei Peles statue queen

The great halls of Wallachia’s courts echoed with the deep voices of rulers, their boyars and foreign envoys hammering out treaties, forging alliances and, more often than not, deciding the fates of women before they were old enough to understand their worth beyond the ink of a marriage contract. In Moldavia, daughters of noble houses were bartered like fine silks, their marriages securing fragile truces with the Poles, the Hungarians, the upcoming Russians and even Sultans. In Transylvania, a land where Saxon merchants, Székelys warriors and Hungarian lords vied for influence, the Romanians or Vlachs out of the way, noblewomen walked a careful line between tradition and opportunity, sometimes inheriting estates or trading privileges—but always within the confines set by men.

Continue reading “Daring Queens and Their Surprising Influences in Medieval Romania”