Ahead of the publication
of the final instalment of Hilary Mantel’s double Booker prize-winning Tudor
trilogy – The Mirror & the Light,
due out in March – I’ve been re-reading the first two books of the series: Wolf Hall
and Bring Up The Bodies.
These are two of my
favourite historical novels, so I’ve been reading them both for pleasure and also
as a writer, trying to pin-point exactly why they transport me to a world I
don’t want to leave.
The protagonist’s character
is unquestionably one reason. Thomas Cromwell is plausible, nuanced,
thoughtful, decisive: a modern man yet still of his time.
Personally, I’m happy to
buy into Mantel’s version of Crowwell, a blacksmith’s son who rises to become a
power-broker in the court of King Henry VIII, regardless of objections from some
historians about the accuracy of her account.
As Mantel says in her 2017
BBC Reith Lectures, her job as a fiction writer is to resurrect the dead, to recreate
them as living, breathing, rounded people. Just like any historian, she fills
in the gaps in the written record with intelligent speculation – and then adds imagination.
Mantel’s writing enchants
me too. She breaks rules that some of my favourite writing gurus insist are
sacrosanct (at times, it’s unclear whether it is Cromwell who’s speaking) and
her flashbacks are complex and layered.
She tells (rather than
shows) a lot. Her prose are beautiful, pithy, witty, with surprising psychological
insights delivered with swift assurance. Her grammar at times feels unique; I’d
love to hear her take down Michael Gove, with his absolutist approach to
‘correct’ school English.
Thanks to the depth of her
telling, the slowly unfolding plot remains absorbing without any requirement
for suspense, of which there can be none, really, since its main events are part of the fabric of British culture:
Henry’s manoeuvring to rid himself of his first queen, Katherine of Aragon, followed
by the catastrophic fall from grace of his second wife, Anne Boleyn.
As historical novelist
Vanora Bennett put it in her 2009 review of Wolf
Hall for The Times, it is the
originality of Cromwell’s perspective which, in Mantel’s expert hands, “makes
the drama unfolding nearly five centuries ago look new again, and shocking
again, too.”
For all its religious and
political ramifications, the drama is essentially intimate: marriage is
marriage, even when it is also dynastic. I think this, perhaps, is the key to
the story’s success for me as a reader.
On every page, I feel as
if I’m eavesdropping on the powerful dead, alive again in their own domestic
spaces. I’m seeing their failings and hurts, their successes and excesses, through
the eyes of a man who is at once sympathetic to the human condition and also in
control of destinies.
On re-reading these tales,
I’ve also been struck how respectful Mantel’s Cromwell is of women — be they his
wife, sister or daughter, or abandoned Queen Katherine, still fighting her
corner, or used Mary Boleyn or ambitious Anne or quietly observant Jane
Seymour. He recognises their intelligence, their battles to gain agency in a
man’s world, without relinquishing one iota of his own calculating masculinity
and ruthless ambition.
For Christmas, I was given
the dedicated ‘credit’ card the publishers and booksellers have issued for The Mirror
and the Light. As soon as
it’s out, I’ll be buying a hard back edition as I’m sure I’ll read it again and
again for inspiration and delight.
Happy reading, everyone.
I’d love to hear your views on Mantel or any other author who’s drawn you back into
their worlds time and again.
Website: rowenahouse.com
Twitter: @houserowena
Facebook: Rowena House
Author
5 comments:
Thank you for reminding me that the new Mantel novel will be out in March. What a treat to look forward to. Maybe I can pre-order it through my local library?
Though others may not be lucky enough to have thriving libraries near them.
Hmmm. The damage from a different kind of cut to the blades and blows imposed on His Majesty's poor wives?
I agree, Penny. March, eh? Got to get that book.
She was talking about The Mirror and the Light during the 2017 Reith Lectures, which I've been listening to again recently as well. I think it might have a different tone to Wolf Hall and Bring Up The Bodies, but I'm sure it will be fantastic. Would love to hear your thoughts,Penny & Susan, when we've all devoured it!
Scarlett Johansson ( Mary Boleyn ) to Eric Bana ( Henry VIII ),
overheard during a break in filming of 'The Other Boleyn Girl'.
" Can I rest my coffee on your codpiece... ?".
Ashamed to say I haven't read either of the first two novels - maybe time to get in there quick before the third one comes out!
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