The Folio Society have made their beautiful Rosemary Sutcliff Collection their prize draw for Dec. Make a free entry. I have!
Category: General
Trawling the internet, researching libraries and databases, and occasionally from material sent to me, I discover things I did not know much about, or indeed at all! There can be more than one Discovery of the Day.
Historical Fiction in rude health, thanks largely to women writers | Sunday Times Culture section
Interesting article in today’s UK Sunday Times newspaper, in the ‘culture’ section. Unfortunately for non subscribers or buyers of the paper, behind a pay-wall. Some key points and passages are:
… Few literary genres have a readership that is quite as gender-divided. Women do read male historical authors, even the ones who specialise in blood-spattered warrior adventures. Yet in a world where all the market research indicates that most men are inherently prejudiced against picking up a book written by a woman, it can be an uphill battle for a female author to reach a male readership. This is why so many women writing historical fiction publish under names that deliberately obscure their gender: Robyn Young, MC Scott, SJ Parris, AL Berridge
and, in the new year, MJ Carter have all taken this route.
… Manda Scott … saw a shift in her readership from an 80% female/20% male audience to a 50/50 one when she published her latest Rome espionage series as MC Scott …
… historical fiction appears to be in robust health. Sales are running at a three-year high, up 14% on 2012, which … is all the more exceptional when you consider that overall sales of novels are down 21%
… Without Mantel’s success, it would be hard to imagine the hoopla that recently marked the republication of some of Mary Renault’s work.
I think attention of editors and marketing departments was re-focused on what was inherently excellenty and widely-read work – like Rosemary Sutcliff’s!
… “When I started writing historical fiction, around the turn of the millennium, big literary names writing books that happened to be set in a historic period were absolutely adamant that they were not writing historical novels,” says (Manda) Scott, who, as well as being an author, is the founding chairwoman of the Historical Writers Association (HWA). “Today those same people are perfectly happy to be considered historical writers.”
… not many historic periods are considered sellable to Americans. This is why the Romans, Vikings, Crusaders, Plantagenets, Tudors and Victorians are mined for colourful historic context, while authors are discouraged from pitching series set in the 17th and 18th centuries.
… female authors have dominated 2013. Mantel holds the first and third spot, while Philippa Gregory — author of The White Queen, adapted for the BBC this summer — is responsible for 7 of the top 20 titles, 4 in the top 10. Cornwell is the only male author to make the top 5, or even the top 15.
… Another influence on the robustness of the genre is not a historic series at all, but a fantasy one … The phenomenal international success of George RR Martin’s novels has created an appetite for bloody dynastic sagas. Though they are fantasy, the books are rich in historical context: their author has always said that he was inspired by the Plantagenets.
Source: History Prejudice, Sunday Times, December 15th (behind paywall)
Rosemary Sutcliff birthday December 14th, 1920
Sad day today December 8th, my birthday, for until 1992 I always spoke with Rosemary Sutcliff: my good fortune and privilege was that she was my godmother (and indeed my first cousin once removed). Her own birthday is coming this week. It is Dec 14th.
The Falconer by Rosemary Sutcliff | 1952 miniature painting.
Young adults not invented when eleven-year old CB read Rosemary Sutcliff’s The Eagle of the Ninth
CB editions, as it says of itself, publishes “short fiction, poetry, translations and other work which, as the Guardian noted, ‘might otherwise fall through the cracks between the big publishers’ “. CB, I assume, is taken from the initials of the one-person band that is the publishing house, and who I think writes the blog Sonofabook which I have just enjoyed discovering.
Late last month a list of forty books that CB read when eleven or twelve was posted. “I found it in a shoe box after my mother died in 2004. I’ve written here about this list before, but then I put it in a safe place and lost it; now I’ve found it again, disguised as a bookmark, so it gets another airing.”
Rosemary Sutcliff features, unfortunately but understandably for a eleven-or-so-year-old , spelt with an ‘E’; the book was listed as The Eagles of the Ninth (sic), a slight if significant rewording of the title (The Eagle of the Ninth, just one eagle!). Forty years on CB knows well the author and the title:
There are just two women writers on the list, Baroness Orczy and Rosemary Sutcliff. And only one book, I think, that was specifically written for children (Sutcliff’s Eagle of the Ninth). ‘Young adults’ hadn’t yet been invented. Nor, of course, had PlayStations and Xboxes, which left a lot of time to fill.
The full list is:
Source: Sonofabook blog



