Another one, now:
Hilary Mantel. Nooooooooo!
Yes, she died of a stroke on September 22. She was seventy, nine years older than me. Mantel's obit in the Economist, "The ghosts within: Hilary Mantel saw things that others couldn’t". * (I think you have to register (free) to read it.)
Picture ^ from the 2013 video "Hilary Mantel and Fay Weldon in conversation..." (youTube). I enjoyed the whole 53 minutes.
Here's Hilary Mantel, on a problem of historical drama on film:
"Empty gorgeousness.It's complete nonsense. Looks beautiful. But it's too easy."
"If you have to have an audience spoon fed or baffled,
. . . I always vote for baffled.
Give people the credit for being able to work things out. If not immediately, then when they think about it later."
Worth watching the whole thing, for how smart and funny she is––and generous (believing that if readers or viewers are baffled, we will "think about it later").
But not suffering fools...
See, at minute 43, her
response to a man's snide comment disguised as a
question--why does she turn thugs like Danton and Cromwell into likable people? Here: youtu.be/NXMHruJvI94?t=2565
Oh--I
have an index tab for Hilary Mantel, (I'm so glad I tagged blog posts
from the beginning--I really do use the index), and looking at the posts
where I mention her, I see a post about blogging --and other things--from five summers ago (2017).
I'd
probably answer much the same, but I'd like to take some time (later)
to answer again that age-old question, Why do you write (blog)?
Mantel became big-time famous with her Wolf Hall trilogy––have you read it?––but I'd stumbled on her early novel Fludd years ago, and it's been one of my favorites.
Just recently I'd pulled it out to reread--it's on my bedside table.
It's about a very
young woman thrown into her own life, like an aerealist. It leaves her
just as she's grabbing onto the other swing. Not so relevant to me anymore, but I want to reread it again, especially now.
First, though, I'm in the middle of A Hobbit, A Wardrobe, and a Great War. I picked it up from work because I recently saw the movie Tolkein, about JRR's early years, including being a soldier in WWI. Not a great movie, but it made me interested in knowing more about his war.
It's a weak book, though. Its agenda––to show how Christian the stories of Tolkein are (and C. S. Lewis's--now there's a spoon-feeder)––dominates and distorts. It has none of the subtle, sometimes baffling intelligence of Hilary Mantel.
I'll finish it though, for the bits that show what happened, when.
Much better on WWI & literature: The Great War and Modern Memory, by Paul Fussell (1975, Oxford University Press). No Tolkein.
________
*From the Economist's obit of Mantel:
"She wrote his [Cromwell's] death, in several drafts, when she had not yet finished Wolf Hall: choosing the bloodiest account of his end, three strokes of the axe, so that she could follow his consciousness to the last.
The time to write that scene announced itself when she suddenly began to cry at the checkout in Sainsbury’s: a premonition."
P.S. I never knew how to pronounce her last name: it's Man-TELL
some new authors to add to my reading list. and a glimpse of some books currently underway. always my favorite!
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KIRSTEN: Have you read the Wolf Hall trilogy? I actually only read the first two---couldn't stand the cruelty--will finish the third eventually (I did read the end--we know what happens, of course).
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