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Vanora Bennett
I've been writing historical novels for the past four or five years, and those years have definitely been the best time of my life.Before that I was a foreign correspondent, working for the Los Angeles Times and Reuters and finally The Times of London in a series of far-flung places from Europe... show more

I've been writing historical novels for the past four or five years, and those years have definitely been the best time of my life.Before that I was a foreign correspondent, working for the Los Angeles Times and Reuters and finally The Times of London in a series of far-flung places from Europe to Asia to Africa to the former Soviet Union. My Russian friends used to joke that as I got more experienced, I was forever being sent to riskier places. It was hugely thought-provoking, and also tremendous fun, in some ways, but with time I began to long to go home.Writing about the past - yet another foreign country, to paraphrase LP Hartley - turned out to be the way. Who knew, back then, that hanging out in the London Library, reading books over the noise of kiddy computer football games at home, and getting the manuscript in on time, would come to seem every bit as thrilling as those scary taxi rides I used to take in and out of war zones? Yet I think my books still reflect that earlier period of conflict reporting. My first novel, for instance, is about Thomas More's family of diehard Catholics, at the time Henry VIII was turning England Protestant, and although it has a very fictional love triangle and an art-history conundrum in its foreground, the background of religious conflict, arrests, secret police, and torture and execution for your beliefs all felt very real to me too. I don't think it makes much difference whether these sorts of big, and often terrifying public events, are situated in the present or in the past - they've always cast the same long shadow over individual lives. The only difference is that more of us in the West lead more cushioned lives today, while, in the past, you were likelier to be caught up in whatever the troubles of the times were. To me, part of the pleasure of writing the books I write now is to make some kind of literary sense, a pattern, out of some of the terrible things I witnessed before - to try and understand how love, loyalty, friendship and quiet decency can, sometimes, help individuals come through, even those caught up in the larger-scale horror of war and conflict. The four novels I've written so far have gone back in time from Henry VIII (the Middle Ages being a particularly rich source of turbulent history). I've skipped back half a century or so at a time. My fourth novel deals with the poet Geoffrey Chaucer, back in the 14th century, at the time of the English Peasants' Revolt.But I'm now regrouping ... and think it's time to move forward through time again. Maybe even to somewhere around the time of the Russian Revolution, which would let me bring into my writing some of the other things I learned on my travels!
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Sorry kids, no feet.
Sorry kids, no feet. rated it 11 years ago
If I start a book, I have to finish it no matter how bad it is. There are a few exceptions. I could not finish The Host by Stephanie Meyer or The Casual Vacancy by J. K. Rowling. This book almost became an exception to my always finish rule. The plot was blah. I found myself wanting to skip pages ju...
Elysium
Elysium rated it 14 years ago
I was bored out of my mind and had trouble of wanting to pick it up. And why did all Lancastrian people had bulging eyes, frog eyes or something? Started to annoy me.
Between the Pages
Between the Pages rated it 15 years ago
I always love how I learn a part of history because I'm reading a book set in that time period (I Wiki the people and battles and such when I start the book). I loved the story of Catherine and Owain the way the author told it in her book, it's a lovely story of love conquering a whole lot of obstac...
misfitandmom
misfitandmom rated it 15 years ago
Once upon a time there was a beautiful young princess of France named Catherine who had a mad-as-a-hatter father and a scheming evil mother. The poor princess and her younger brother Charles were all but forgotten by their awful parents and wore rags for clothing and had to forage for food. One day ...
Tanzanite
Tanzanite rated it 16 years ago
Katherine of Valois and her younger brother Charles live in near poverty despite being the children of the King of France. Bennett creates a story where Owain Tudor comes to France as part of an English delegation and through the influence of the children's caretaker, he becomes friends with Kathe...
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