Rosemary Sutcliff historical novel Brother Dusty Feet on BBC Radio

Brother Dusty Feet historical fiction by Rosemary Sutcliff original UK coverRosemary Sutcliff‘s Bother Dusty Feet is coming to radio in the UK and on the internet. Along with his faithful dog Argos, eleven-year-old orphan Hugh Copplestone decides to leave his Aunt and Uncle’s house after one beating too many, and marches off to Oxford to seek his fortune and the New Learning. When he meets a group of strolling players along the way, Hugh joins them and becomes part of their acting troupe. He walks “with his legs straight and his shoulders back as the Players taught him”. Or as The Radio Times says:

Set in the days of the first Queen Elizabeth, Rosemary Sutcliff’s children’s novel, written in 1952, has more than a touch of ‘lashings of ginger beer’ and Wizard of Oz innocence about it. Young Hugh, an orphan, is bound for the dreaming spires of Oxford, with only his beloved dog and the stars for company, when he meets a kindly band of travelling  players, and joins them on a series of adventures and derring-do. Shaun McKenna’s adaptation is full of fanciful myths, legends and encounters with historical heroes. The whole family will be eager to find out if young Hugh finds his rainbow, somewhere along the dusty roads of southern England.

To discover what the New Learning was Read More »

Maids when you’re young never wed an old man!

Regular readers of this weblog about historical novelist and children’s writer Rosemary Sutcliff  will know my original connection is by way of being close family. Rosemary helped engender my love of traditional folk-music and ballads; but in time she had to suffer listening to my repertoire … (Actually Midland Red in the late 1970s around Leicestershire were not too shabby!) One English song I used to perform was “Maids when your young, never wed an old man”. Perhaps Rosemary would have enjoyed as much as I this award-winning rendition by the excellent Lucy Ward? (For all you traditional folk-music enthusiasts, Rosemary and I shared a love of the singing of Pete Bellamy of The Young Tradition: she because of his affection for Rudyard Kipling; I, having heard the great farewell concert for TYT at Cecil Sharp House aged about sixteen on an expedition from school with the ‘Progressive Music Society’ (sic).)

For the lyrics: Read More »

Most moving novel about Richard III | Rosemary Sutcliff on Some Touch of Pity

Jane Stemp commented on a previous post that she was reminded that she “once read a book by Rhoda Edwards which is about Richard III – and dedicated to Rosemary Sutcliff. The title is ‘Some Touch of Pity’. Courtesy of the internet I found a picture of a cover, and it includes a quote from Rosemary, calling the novel “the most moving novel about Richard III I have ever read”.

Some Touch of Pity

UK original publication details are: Rhoda Edwards, Some Touch of Pity.  Hutchinson , London, 1976.  In the US it was published as The Broken Sword.  A brief internet trawl produces this review from the Richard III Society of New South Wales, in Australia.  Read More »

Excerpt from original Rosemary Sutcliff research notebook

Amongst Rosemary Sutcliff‘s papers on her death was a notebook about costumes  in various periods of British history. This is from the section on women, in the reign of Richard the Third (1483-85).

Excerpts from Rosemary Sutcliff note book on costume

Story-telling promoted by award-winning The Moth project in USA

Yesterday I wrote briefly of an essay on the radio about  storytelling in the theatre by fascinating performer, writer and director Emma Rice, of Kneehigh Theatre, characterising her as in the same trade as Rosemary Sutcliff. (The post received the largest ever number of hits for one post on this blog, on the day of posting!) Today I read of a story-telling project in the USA which is completely new to me, but looks equally fascinating. It has just won a 2012 MacArthur Foundation Award for Creative and Effective Institutions.

The Moth is a not-for-financial-profit organisation “dedicated to the art and craft of storytelling”. It is a “celebration of both the raconteur, who breathes fire into true tales of ordinary life”, and the “storytelling novice, who has lived through something extraordinary and yearns to share it”. The Moth’s directors “work with each storyteller to find, shape and tell their story”. Read More »