Recommend reading Rosemary Sutcliff but with no ‘E’ in Rosemary Sutcliffe please!

I get cross when people who should know better spell Rosemary Sutcliff’s name wrong  – as Sutcliffe (sic). It is Sutcliff (sic). If you are doing research  in databases, or on the web or wherever, it is a good idea always to search for Sutcliffe (with an E) as well as Sutcliff! If I had not done that, I would not have discovered that in the UK’s newspaper of record (at that time), in a list of 50 books all children should read (The Times, 19 Feb 1988), ‘Eagles of the Ninth’ (sic)  was recommended  for 12 to 18 year olds ( the proper title is ‘The Eagle of the Ninth’), and it was said to be by ‘Rosemary Sutcliffe”.Read More »

Historical novels website on Rosemary Sutcliff

The website historicalnovels.info lists ‘over 5,000 historical novels by time and place’. There are interesting articles about books related to particular periods in history as well as items on various authors including one on Rosemary Sutcliff by ‘Annis’.  (Links in the posting connect to entries about  Rosemary’s books on an American bookseller’s site.)Read More »

Rosemary Sutcliff’s The Eagle of the Ninth | A Review

Rosemary Sutcliff’s classic children’s novel The Eagle of the Ninth (now a film The Eagle) was given a fantastic review on the historical novels website. Margaret Donsbach wrote:

The Eagle of the Ninth is about a young Roman centurion posted in Roman Britain. Marcus Flavius Aquila is discharged from his legion after being badly injured in his first battle. Years ago, his father was lost when the Ninth Legion mysteriously disappeared in northern Britain. When this novel was first published in 1954, the Ninth Legion’s disappearance in Britain was believed to be fact. More recent evidence shows the legion was actually moved to the Rhine River after serving in Britain. Whether the legion’s disappearance is fact or fiction, though, makes little difference to a reader’s enjoyment of the novel.

Crippled, his military career gone forever, Marcus thinks his useful life is over. Still, he makes friends with a native Briton in spite of unpromising circumstances. He acquires a wolf. He attracts a girl. And he sets off on a dangerous adventure in quest of the golden eagle standard of his father’s legion. Without it, the disbanded legion can never regain its honor and be revived. Worse, in the hands of hostile British tribes the eagle could become the focus of a serious uprising …

Falco writer Lindsey Davis’s top 10 Roman books

The classical thriller writer, creator of private investigator and poet Falco, lists her top ten books from shelves and shelves of Roman material. She includes Rosemary Sutcliff. 

Rosemary Sutcliff appreciated by one of her editors

Led there by the excellent appreciative but disappeared bluerememberedhills.blogspot.com I found this posted in 2003 to an ancient history website (which I also cannot find now) about Rosemary Sutcliff.

 I knew Rosemary as a friend and, briefly, as her editor…most of her best writing was done in the 50s and 60s, beginning with The Eagle of the Ninth and ending with The Mark of the Horse Lord, which is my own favourite. What she really wanted to do, however, was to write romantic novels full of sex, but here her experience, and imagination, let her down. She was crippled by Still’s disease, contracted as a child – She had no movement in her legs, and hands whose work (including writing and miniature painting) was done with just a forefinger and a tiny, rudimentary thumb.Read More »