Hilary Mantel

2022 - 9 - 23

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Image courtesy of "Sky News"

Hilary Mantel, author of Wolf Hall trilogy, dies aged 70 (Sky News)

Dame Hilary Mantel won the Booker Prize for Wolf Hall, and its sequel, Bring Up the Bodies. The conclusion to the trilogy, Mirror and the Light, ...

Actor Ben Miles, who played Cromwell in both stage and screen adaptations of Wolf Hall and helped Mantel adapt the third book in her trilogy for the West End stage told Sky News: "She was an extraordinary woman. I shall dearly miss her kindness, her humour and the indisputable genius of her words." We will miss her immeasurably, but as a shining light for writers and readers she leaves an extraordinary legacy. It was an instant number one fiction bestseller and longlisted for Booker Prize the same year, winning the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction, which she first won for Wolf Hall. "And all of that against the backdrop of chronic health problems, which she dealt with so stoically. Dame Hilary Mantel won the Booker Prize for Wolf Hall, and its sequel, Bring Up the Bodies.

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Image courtesy of "The New York Times"

Hilary Mantel Books, Reviews and Interviews: A Reading Guide (The New York Times)

Mantel's body of work spanned memoir, short stories, essays — and, of course, historical fiction. Here's a guide to her writing.

In 1998, Mantel cut to the chase in the first line of her review of Mary Gordon’s novel, “Spending”: “Sex, art, money: That’s what it’s all about,” she wrote. In this novel, a woman tries to reconstruct her dead mother’s emotional history using a handful of objects — a pink kimono, a notebook with cryptic scribblings. In 2012, Mantel contributed a tart, honest and witty essay about working as an English teacher in Botswana in the 1970s. “Once those voices begin,” said Mantel, who had been fascinated by the life of Thomas Cromwell since she was a child, “it’s like having the radio on in the background for 15 years. What is it like for an author to shepherd her story onto the stage? In this interview, brimming with marvelous, craggy detail about writing and reading, Mantel told The Times that the best part of working on a book was “the moment, at about the three-quarter point, where you see your way right through to the end: as if lights had flooded an unlit road. Mantel’s seventh novel, and her second to be published in the United States, follows the adult Carmel McBain, who, in a “Proustian time-warp experience,” Margaret Atwood wrote in her review, falls down a rabbit hole of memories of her Catholic childhood and coming-of-age. [died on Thursday](https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/23/books/hilary-mantel-dead.html) at age 70, left a wide-ranging and hard-to-classify body of work that encompassed memoir, story collections, contemporary novels and brilliant, querulous literary essays. This collection of work from The London Review of Books contains Mantel’s most incendiary essay, “Royal Bodies,” which compared Prince William’s wife, Catherine, to a plastic doll. It scalds.” The eldest child of poor Irish Catholic parents living outside Manchester, Mantel suffered fevers and “the crippling tedium and unintelligible torments of a rough Catholic primary school,” and was separated from her father at a young age. “The wonder of Ms. This fictional portrait of Henry VIII’s scheming aide Thomas Cromwell — the first volume of Mantel’s celebrated trilogy — won the Booker Prize in 2009.

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Image courtesy of "The New York Times"

Hilary Mantel Stared Down Her Past, and the World's, With Steely ... (The New York Times)

This fictional portrait of Henry VIII's scheming aide Thomas Cromwell — the first volume of Mantel's celebrated trilogy — won the Booker Prize in 2009. “'Wolf ...

But for now I am thinking of the poignant ending of “The Mirror and the Light,” the final book in the Cromwell trilogy. (For her part, Mantel said she was “bemused” at the suggestion that “the police should interest themselves in the case of a fictional assassination of a person who was already dead.”) Having helped effect the deaths of so many of Henry’s enemies, Cromwell finds that he is to meet the same fate. He feels for an opening, blinded, looking for a door: tracking the light along the wall.” As her agent, Bill Hamilton, said upon the news of her death: “She had so many great novels ahead of her.” There is a lot more to read, and reread. Though the themes of women suffering from pain, isolation and domestic weariness recur in her fiction, she didn’t make her own history the focus of her persona; she was not one to seek pity. For me, her books show that great literature, the kind that marries meticulous craft and deep understanding of human nature, can require work on the part of the reader. It was a shock to see her speak in person and realize how funny she was. Dead for more than 400 years, reduced to caricature as a thug and a brute in the famous Holbein portrait that hangs in the Frick Museum, Cromwell here feels shimmeringly alive, full of pathos. There were nine other novels, demonstrating her ability to write in a range of styles about various subjects and in various time periods. She brings great precision to her writing, as opaque as it sometimes feels, and asks the same of us in our reading. At first, the prose is disorienting.

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Image courtesy of "BBC News"

Hilary Mantel: Friend and broadcaster Jan Rogers pays tribute (BBC News)

A close friend of Dame Hilary Mantel has paid tribute to the "attentive, generous and very funny" Wolf Hall author, following her death, aged 70.

"We went to an Italian restaurant where I quoted huge tracts of her work back to her. "She was tremendously accurate whenever she did write anything that was based on truth. I think she was probably one of the most attentive people you could meet. No two books were alike, she was very interested in people's minds. "I watched peacefully at the back of the talk and the librarian who booked her said to me: 'I never know to say to authors', so she asked me to go to dinner with them," she said. "She was very aware of what the other person was going through, she never forgot to ask what was going on, she was extremely kind, generous and very funny.

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