Showing posts with label Kate Mosse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kate Mosse. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 25, 2023

Dame Hilary Mantel / Rolling, Mosse and Evaristo lead tributes to late author

 

 
Kate Mosse said Dame Hilary (pictured) was "a classic writer, but living in our modern times"


Dame Hilary Mantel: Rowling, Mosse and Evaristo lead tributes to late author



Authors JK Rowling, Kate Mosse and Bernardine Evaristo have led the tributes to Dame Hilary Mantel, saying she changed the face of literature.


23 September 2022

Dame Hilary, author of the best-selling Wolf Hall trilogy, died on Thursday aged 70, her publisher confirmed.

Saturday, October 15, 2022

My hero / Walter Potter by Kate Mosse

 

Walter Potter’s stuffed guinea pigs play miniature instruments.


My hero: Walter Potter by Kate Mosse

Whether guinea pigs playing a cricket match or kittens dressed in black tie at a wedding, Walter Potter had a wonderful way of telling stories with his taxidermy


Friday 24 October 2014


Walter Potter was a self-taught, Victorian taxidermist who created an extraordinary museum of narrative, whimsical taxidermy that became famous all over the world. He was born – and lived his entire life – in the modest Sussex village of Bramber, a few miles north of Brighton. As a boy, he loved nature and wildlife. From manuals (and a trip to the Great Exhibition in 1851) he taught himself to skin, preserve and stuff the creatures brought to him by local farmers and family friends: cats, foxes, rats, frogs, his own pet canary.

Wednesday, November 3, 2021

Kazuo Ishiguro and Kate Mosse in conversation

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AfAztKEAj9o

Kazuo Ishiguro in conversation with Kate Mosse for World Book Night

Kazuo Ishiguro and Kate Mosse in conversation

Kazuo Ishiguro discussed Klara and the Sun with novelist Kate Mosse in a special event presented by The Reading Agency and the British Library. The event  marked the 10th anniversary of World Book Night, The Reading Agency’s national celebration of books and reading.

Ishiguro talked to Mosse about the inspiration for the novel, and the power of books and reading to bring people together and change lives.









Wednesday, September 25, 2019

Happening / Flotsam / The Burning Chambers / Reviews



In brief: Happening; Flotsam; The Burning Chambers – reviews

Annie Ernaux’s memoir is painful and politicised, Meike Ziervogel’s novel evokes grief in 1950s Germany and Kate Mosse delivers another intricate hit

Happening

Annie Ernaux
Fitzcarraldo, translated by Tanya Leslie, £8.99, pp80
In 1963, Annie Ernaux was a university student in Rouen when she found herself pregnant. This is her memoir, recreating the experience through revisiting diaries from that time. Her harrowing attempts to get an abortion at a time when it was illegal in France begin with seeking the advice of male friends, who only show prurient interest, and end in a life-threatening backstreet procedure. Ernaux, who was longlisted for the Man Booker International prize last week for The Years, writes with clear, controlled precision that is as vivid as it is devastating to read, and which connects the pain and indignity of her experience to class, power and patriarchy.


Flotsam

Meike Ziervogel
Salt, £9.99, pp128
Meike Ziervogel’s novel begins with a schoolgirl, Trine, the protagonist of this dark, coming-of-age drama, standing over the dead body of her brother, Carl, by the seashore. Trine lives with her mother, Anna, in a cottage on the German coast and they are grieving the loss of Carl even as Trine’s schoolfriends – and bullies – begin to question her reality: “So, was Carl real? Did he exist?” Ziervogel, who is also the founding publisher of Peirene Press, grew up in Germany and this taut, mysterious novel not only conjures female subjectivities and grief, but it also paints a haunting portrait of the country in the 1950s Germany, with its greater sense of loss, and the looming spectre of crimes committed during the war.


The Burning Chambers

Kate Mosse
Pan, £8.99, pp608 (paperback)
It is 1862 in the South African town of Franschhoek and a woman stands over the graves of her ancestors – Huguenot settlerswho “found themselves here after years of exile and wandering” – when a gun is pointed at her neck. So begins this sprawling, absorbing historical novel with its backstory in 16th-century southern France. The central adventurer, Minou Joubert, is a 19-year-old Catholic in love with a Huguenot leader. Serious themes are navigated, from the choices made in star-crossed love, to exile, displacement and religious violence but never at the expense of fast, fluid storytelling. This book – the first in a new series – confirms Mosse’s talent for writing commercial fiction that is underpinned by rigorous research, a keen intellect and vividly drawn worlds of ordinary women, and men, who find themselves in extraordinary historical circumstances.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Kate Mosse / Top 10 Ghost Stories


Kate Mosse's top 10 ghost stories

From Henry James to Susan Hill, the author of Labyrinth selects tales that deliver 'the fun of the shudder'
The Turn of the Screw
Shudders ... Rebecca Evans in English National Opera's production of The Turn of the Screw. Photograph: Tristram Kenton

Kate Mosse is the bestselling author of five novels, two books of non-fiction, short stories and a play, Syrinx, which won a Broadcasting Press Guild award in 2009. The first novel in her Languedoc Trilogy, Labyrinth, won Richard & Judy's Best Read award in 2006 and topped the bestseller lists for six months; the second, Sepulchre, was also an international bestseller; and the third, Citadel, will be published in 2011. Her current novel, The Winter Ghosts, is published in paperback this week.




             "Spirits and apparitions, headless monks and white ladies, the traditional ghost story still exerts a hold on our imaginations. Their habitat is ancient woods, ruined abbeys, isolated old houses and crumbling monasteries. But what makes a ghost story? Though purists might quibble, I'd say there are three distinct types of ghost story – as opposed to tales of horror, which have a different dynamic and purpose, or novels that have ghosts in them, such as Marquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude or Ben Okri's The Famished Road.
             "The traditional ghost story is often inspired by folklore and a sense of decaying history, and is similar in tone to the Gothic novels that came before it. In the psychological ghost story, the emphasis is on the mental state of the victim rather than the actions – the existence, even – of the ghost or poltergeist. These stories implicitly, sometimes explicitly, question the reliability and sanity of the heroine or hero, and often reference social or political issues of the day. Finally, there's the antiquarian ghost story which is associated with a certain sort of Edwardian Englishness. Like their traditional counterparts, they draw on old mythologies and folklore, but are rooted in realism and the sense of the ordinary disrupted or made extraordinary. I see the influence of all three traditions in my own books – though The Winter Ghosts is my first pure ghost story – but in the end, as with the choices that follow, what matters is that each has what the great Edith Wharton called 'the fun of the shudder'."

1. "The Tell-Tale Heart" by Edgar Allan Poe (1843)

From the master of the morbid imagination, this gem of a story blurs the edges between horror and ghost fiction. A murderer's guilty conscience gets the better of him, driving him to confess his crime. The unnamed narrator murders an old man with a "vulture eye". He plans carefully and hides the body by dismembering it, but his guilt will not let him rest. Is he imagining the beating of the heart beneath the floorboards or is there something there? Gripping and horrifying, the perfect mix of horror and Gothic, the forerunner of the psychological ghost stories that were to come into vogue.

 

2. "The Signalman" by Charles Dickens (1866)

This perfectly balanced, beautifully judged story both preys on both the anxiety provoked by the new technology of railways and deeply held beliefs that a ghost can be an alarum for events to follow. Three times, the ringing of a spectral bell is followed by the appearance of a ghost, harbinger of a dreadful accident. Creepy, clever, and has you looking over your own shoulder.

 

3. "At Chrighton Abbey" by Mary Elizabeth Braddon (1871)

Another classic of ghost-story writing, with a doomed family and a crumbling, historic house at the heart of it. The narrator, Sarah, returns to her childhood home as a guest, having been obliged to work as a governess. There, although the halls are brightly lit and the old servants delighted to see her, a sense of disaster hangs over the festivities and Sarah's glimpse of a ghostly hunt forewarns of tragedy to come.

 

4. "Canon Alberic's Scrap-Book" by MR James (1894)

This is the very first story in the first published MR James collection, Ghost Stories of an Antiquary. A young Englishman and scholar leaves his friends for the day to spend time alone in a claustrophobic, decaying French cathedral city in the Pyrenees. He is encouraged by the sacristan to buy an antique manuscript volume which is possessed of older and evil memories. Wonderfully atmospheric, wonderfully creepy.

 

5. "The Turn of the Screw" by Henry James (1898)

This is, possibly, the most exquisite and perfect of all psychological ghost stories. Again, an unnamed narrator, another governess, a different manuscript that claims to tell the story of mysterious country house, a widower and his children and two ghosts of former servants of the house. It is never clear if the ghosts are real or the product of the governess's increasingly unstable mind. And here, unlike in many ghost stories, there are several strong and engaging characters, not least of all the strange children, Miles and Flora. Simply, a masterpiece. 

6. Ancient Sorceries and Other Weird Stories by Algernon Blackwood (1912)

Blackwood is the neglected master of the Edwardian ghost story renaissance. Gentlemen travellers and scholars fill his pages, but always with a psychological – often animist – slant on things. For Blackwood, Nature always has a capital 'N' and was a living, breathing thing, sometimes benign, but often sinister. This collection is the place to start, even though my favourite story is "The Man Whom the Trees Loved", where a wife finds herself powerless to save her husband from the trees he loves. The forest does seem to be alive, getting closer and closer to the house, until the husband vanishes all together. Atmospheric, beautiful, a very subtle story of a peculiar haunting.

7. "The Listeners" by Walter de la Mare (1912)

De la Mare was a significant writer of ghost stories, publishing some 40 supernatural tales in collections such as Eight Tales and On the Edge, but I'm choosing perhaps his most famous work, this lyrical and haunting poem. It's never clear what bargain the traveller has made, and with whom, only that he has kept his word to come to the deserted house in the wood. The opening line still makes my hair stand on end: "'Is there anybody there?' said the Traveller, knocking on the moonlit door."

 

8. "Bewitched" by Edith Wharton (1925)

The celebrated author of novels such as The House of Mirth, Wharton was also a terrific writer of ghostly tales. A blend of Poe, Hawthorne and Henry James, she has a lightness of touch that belies the often very grisly tale. This story, first published in the Pictorial Review in 1925, has a fabulous sense of place and is a revenant story with a twist. It leaves the reader doubting their interpretation of events. Clever stuff.

 

9. "The Ghosts" by Antonia Barber (1969)

This is my favourite children's ghost story, a wonderful time-slip novel set during the first world war. Lucy and Jamie Allen move with their mother and baby brother to the country, where their mother has been engaged by a mysterious gentleman, Mr Blunden, as caretaker of an abandoned house until the rightful owner can be traced. One day, Lucy is walking in the garden to explore and to pick flowers when she meets Sara and Georgie. It becomes clear that the children are ghosts, children of the house who died 100 years ago in the fire that destroyed the estate. It's a gentle, thoughtful ghost story, of parallel time and the chance to make amends for mistakes in an earlier life. The novel won the Carnegie Medal and was filmed in 1972 as The Amazing Mr Blunden.

 



10. The Woman in Black by Susan Hill (1982)

For my money, the greatest of the contemporary ghost writers. Hill creates believable period characters, she creates a hermetic world that yet speaks of wider superstitions and histories, and creates plots with tension, pace and jeopardy without ever becoming heavy-handed. This is a story of vengeance, of an old curse from an embittered woman, all centred on the brooding Eel Marsh House, gloomy and isolated and cut off from the mainland at high tide. As the tension of premonition and disaster builds and builds, the ghostly screams of an accident long ago will haunt the reader's imagination long after the last page has been turned. Perfect.






Saturday, June 12, 2010

My hero / Jeri Johnson by Kate Moss

 

Jeri Johnson

My hero: Jeri Johnson

by Kate Mosse
Saturday 12 June 2010

I

arrived at university in the autumn of 1981 to a college that had only recently admitted women – the concession was to put full-length mirrors on some of the staircases – and an English course that had remained set in its ways for some few hundred years, give or take.

I had a fledgling knowledge of feminism and was starting to think about politics and the higgledy-piggledy world beyond the classroom, but my non-academic reading was more Agatha Christie than Kate Millett. Then a new tutor arrived, Dr Jeri Johnson, an American and James Joyce specialist. Looking back, I realise she was barely older than us, but at the time she seemed very grown up. Jeri transformed my experience of university. It wasn't just a matter of introducing new authors – Flannery O'Connor, Emily Dickinson, Adrienne Rich – but rather that she encouraged us to think differently, to understand the interconnectedness of things, to find the story behind the story. Placing books and their authors in a context, seeing the influences of a person's life that might or might not impact on their work, was not how I'd been brought up. She taught that sometimes, as students or artists, we would need to stand our ground. And that speaking up, whether as the sole female student in a lecture hall, or at work, mattered.

On Wednesday evening, I stood in the Royal Festival Hall in London looking out over the hundreds of people gathered to toast 15 years of the Orange prize for fiction. The prize honours literature of excellence, originality and imagination, it connects great writers with enthusiastic readers. But also it creates a space in which women can be artists and their voices can be heard, the lesson I learned 30 years ago in a classroom in Oxford. And in the crowd, standing next to my son and daughter, was Jeri, inspiring the next generation of readers and writers.

THE GUARDIAN




2009
001 My hero / Oscar Wilde by Michael Holroyd
002 My hero / Harley Granville-Barker by Richard Eyre
003 My hero / Edward Goldsmith by Zac Goldsmith
004 My hero / Fridtjof Nansen by Sara Wheeler 
005 My hero / Mother Mercedes Lawler IBVM by Antonia Fraser

007 My hero / Ernest Shepard by Richard Holmes
008 My hero / JG Ballard by Will Self
009 My hero / Alan Ross by William Boyd
010 My hero / Ben the labrador by John Banville

011 My hero / Vicent van Gogh by Margaret Drabble
012 My hero / Franz Marek by Eric Hobsbawm

2010

017 My hero / Jack Yeats by Colm Tóibín
018 My hero / Francisco Goya by Diana Athill
019 My hero / Max Stafford-Clark by Sebastian Barry
020 My hero / Arthur Holmes by Richard Fortey

036 My hero / Robert Lowell by Jonathan Raban
037 My hero / Beryl Bainbridge by Michael Holroyd
038 My hero / Charles Schulz by Jenny Colgan
039 My hero / Oliver Knussen by Adam Foulds
040 My hero / Annie Proulx by Alan Warner

041 My hero / David Lynch by Paul Murray
042 My hero / Edwin Morgan by Robert Crawford
043 My hero / Anne Lister by Emma Donoghue
044 My hero / Jane Helen Harrinson by Mary Beard
045 My hero / Edmund Burke by David Marquand
046 My hero / Shelagh Deleaney by Jeanette Winterson
047 My hero / Christopher Marlowe by Val McDermid
048 My hero / Gwen John by Anne Enright
049 My hero / Michael Mayne by Susan Hill
050 My hero / Stanley Spencer by Howard Jacobson

051 My hero / William Beveridge by Will Hutton
052 My hero / Jean McConville by Amanda Foreman
053 My hero / Alexander Pushkin by Elaine Feinstein
058 My hero / Cy Twombly by Edmund de Waal

2011
079 My hero / Gene Wolfe by Neil Gaiman
087 My hero / Alberto Moravia by John Burnside
096 My hero / Isaac Babel by AD Miller
097 Lucian Freud by Esi Edugyan
100 Thomas Tranströmer by Robin Robertson
102 My hero / David Hockney by Susan Hill

2012

190 My hero / Iris Murdoch by Charlotte Mendelson
194 My hero / René Descartes by James Kelman
199 My hero / Albert Camus by Geoff Dyer

2015
2016