Mantel pieces Royal bodies and other writing from the London review of books

Hilary Mantel, 1952-

Book - 2020

A collection of twenty reviews, essays and pieces of memoir selected from three decades of the author's contributions to the London review of books. Subjects include Robespierre and Danton, the Hite report, Saudi Arabia (where she lived for four years in the 1980s), the Bulger case, John Osborne, the Virgin Mary as well as the pop icon Madonna, and Helen Duncan, Britain's last witch. There are essays about Jane Boleyn, Charles Brandon, Christopher Marlowe and Margaret Pole, Her famous lecture, 'Royal Bodies', which caused a media frenzy, explores the place of royal women in society and our imagination. Here too are some of her LRB diaries, including her first meeting with her stepfather and a confrontation with a circus ...strongman. Interleaved with letters and other ephemera gathered from the archive.

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2nd Floor 824.914/Mantel Due Dec 3, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Essays
Literary criticism
Reviews
Autobiographies
Diaries
Published
London : 4th Estate 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Hilary Mantel, 1952- (author)
Item Description
All pieces previously published in London review of books.
Physical Description
335 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780008429973
  • Introduction: Hilary Mantel
  • Letter from Hilary Mantel to Karl Miller, 1987
  • American marriage, 1988
  • Letter from Mary-Kay Wilmers to Hilary Mantel, 1988
  • Bookcase shopping in Jeddah, 1989
  • Postcard from Hilary Mantel to Mary-Kay Wilmers, 1989
  • John Osborne's memoirs, 1991
  • Draft of a cover caption by Mary-Kay Wilmers, 1992
  • In bed with Madonna, 1992
  • 'LRB' cover, 28 May 1992
  • On Théroigne de Méricourt, 1992
  • Postcard from Hilary Mantel to Mary-Kay Wilmers, 1997
  • On Christopher Marlowe, 1992
  • Fax from Hilary Mantel to Mary-Kay Wilmers, 1994
  • A Mohawk captive, 1994
  • Fax from Hilary Mantel to Mary-Kay Wilmers, 1997
  • The murder of James Bulger, 1997
  • Postcard and fax from Hilary Mantel, 1999
  • On Marie Antoinette, 1999
  • Email from Hilary Mantel to Mary-Kay Wilmers, 2001
  • Britain's last witch, 2001
  • Email from Hilary Mantel to the editors, 2003
  • Meeting my stepfather, 2003
  • Card and email from Hilary Mantel to the editors, 2003
  • The Hair Shirt Sisterhood, 2004
  • 'LRB' covers, 24 March 2004 and 20 April 2006
  • The People's Robespierre, 2006
  • Email from Hilary Mantel to Mary-Kay Wilmers, 2005
  • On Jane Boleyn, 2008
  • Email from Hilary Mantel to the editors, 2006
  • 'LRB' cover, 9 April 2009
  • Marian devotion, 2009
  • On Danton, 2009
  • 'LRB' cover, 4 November 2010
  • Meeting the Devil, 2010
  • Email from Hilary Mantel to Mary-Kay Wilmers, 2012
  • Royal bodies, 2013
  • Emails from Hilary Mantel to Mary-Kay Wilmers, 2013
  • On Charles Brandon, 2016
  • Fact-checking correspondence, 2016
  • The secrets of Margaret Pole, 2017
  • Email from Hilary Mantel to Mary-Kay Wilmers, 2019.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Adroit essays from the two-time Man Booker Prize--winning novelist. From the late 1980s, Mantel has contributed reviews, essays, and memoirs to the London Review of Books on topics that range from Madonna to Robespierre, from playwright John Osborne's "ferociously sulky" memoir to the cult of the Virgin Mary, and including a hefty dose of the Tudors. Interspersed with the essays are ephemera: brief letters to the journal's doting editors, especially Mary-Kay Wilmers, to whom Mantel once confessed having "critic's block"; postcards, emails (her own email address is redacted); and covers of the LRB that announce her contributions. The collection, then, serves as much as a display of Mantel's shrewd eye and stylish prose as a testimony to her long, fruitful association with the LRB. Her reviews are capacious, erudite, well informed, and exacting. "To accept an untruth, to assent to a lazy version of history, is not just negligent but immoral," she writes in praise of Charles Nicoll's book on the death of Christopher Marlowe. Likewise, she sees in historian John Demos' work about a woman taken captive by Mohawks "an exercise in scrupulous scholarship and imaginative sympathy." Admitting a "penchant for regicides," malice, and a bit of gore, Mantel has been drawn to books on the doomed and the damned: Marie Antoinette, Jane Boleyn, Georges-Jacques Danton, and Helen Duncan, a woman condemned for witchcraft in Britain in 1944. Besides being a revelatory examination of class, desire, and the phenomenon of spiritualism, Malcolm Gaskill's book on Duncan, Mantel writes, "is also in a wider sense an inquiry into 'how we know the things we know' and how what we can know or choose to know is circumscribed by our culture." That inquiry, of course, underlays her own forays into the past, including her memories: first meeting her stepfather, living in Saudi Arabia for several years, and suffering hallucinations after protracted recovery from surgery. A captivating collection. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.