I’ve been invited by friend and
fellow author Louise Turner to join the ‘my lovely blog’ series - which asks
writers to answer a few questions about themselves under the six headings
below. You can check out Louise’s own
excellent blog here. http://www.louiseturner.co.uk/louises-blog/
Me loving my cousin Sue |
First memory
I remember being in my big pram
in the hall waiting to go out with my mum. It is a very vague collage of scents
and tastes and sounds. If I close my eyes I can see the light shining through
the net curtains, taste the rusk I had for breakfast, hear my mother singing in the kitchen, and my big sisters cooing
and fussing over me. They don’t do that now – lol.
Books
There were lots of books in our
house when I was small. I remember a colour picture book of King Arthur and the
Knights of the Round Table, and another picture book about Toys who came to
life in the cupboard and had adventures – the pictures were fabulous, really
vivid and detailed. This was combined with
Winnie the Pooh, then Enid Blyton, Robert Louis Stephenson as I got a bit
older. As a teenager I began to read historical fiction which has been my favourite
genre ever since. When I began to write seriously it was the obvious genre choice for me. The author I most admire now is Hilary Mantel; I love the way
you are in the room with her characters, part of their lives, the reader comes
to understand them so much better. I also love the classics, going back to Chaucer
because of the sense of the past they provide. Chaucer was the source for my
Joanie Toogood when I wrote The Winchester Goose.
Libraries or bookshops?
Bookshop in Much Wenlock UK |
Both please. I use a library for research, my home is
stuffed with books, mostly non-fiction but a good deal of fiction too. When I
was a teenager I was in the library every weekend (I know, geeky). We need to
save our libraries; it is short sighted to close them down. Books inform and
shape people; education is the way forward and libraries are a source of free education
accessible to everyone.
I buy a lot of books, my shelves
are bulging. I do use Amazon for convenience but still like to get lost in a
book shop and can never help buying something. Bookshops are lovely. I love how
they smell, how quiet they are. There is nothing like a bookshop for making you
lose track of time. I hate shopping but bookshops are something else. Readers need
them, writers need them, people who have yet to discover the joy of a good book
need them, our children need them and booksellers need them – keep them open.
Open more.
Learning
I was the first in my family to go to
university but I didn’t go until I was forty.
I loved school but in the seventies working class girls were not encouraged
to enter further education. We were pushed into becoming typists or shop assistance. Neither of those things were for me (although
the touch typing comes in very handy.) I was married at eighteen and a mother
by the time I was twenty. I have four lovely children and three step-children. I enjoyed bringing them
up but when the youngest became more independent I was a little bit lost. With
a friend’s encouragement I enrolled at the University of Wales and my life
changed completely. I stayed there for six years, taking a BA in English and
Creative Writing and an MA in Medieval Studies. It was a fabulous part of my
life.
Writing
Tretower Court, Powys |
It is something I’ve always done.
Those infant school ‘news’ stories evolved into short stories, poems, romances.
When I went to university my Creative Writing lecturer (playwright Dic Edwards)
encouraged me to do more with it. It was hard going at first. I wrote a couple
of novels that will forever remain in my bottom drawer and then Peaceweaver was
published in 2009. Since then I’ve written seven and am now working on my
eighth.
If I don’t do any writing for a
while I get very cranky. I like to hide myself away, imagine myself in one of the lovely castles/manor houses that we've visited and the story just flows from that. The Tudor world is a comfortable place for me, far nicer than a modern
shopping centre on a Saturday afternoon.
What's your passion?
Me at Raglan Castle last year |
Lots of things. History, writing, my husband John and our family, my
garden, my new-born grandson, walking, castles, the environment, nature,
animals, trees ...even my daft little dog. Sometimes I combine all those things like when we go to Raglan Tudor Weekend (May 24th -25th this year). I also like crafts, painting, photography,
sewing and working with wool but, apart from my vast and lovely family, writing
comes top. There is nothing like sitting down in the morning with a blank page
and coming away at lunch time with the bones of a good story. I get to
experience every medieval danger imaginable without actually coming to any harm –
hopefully my readers do too. Writing historical fiction is, for me, escapism
and I am so fortunate to earn a living indulging in my passion.
Now, I 'd better get back to it. Margaret Beaufort awaits!
Thanks for inviting me, Louise! In my turn, I pass the baton on to two more
historical novelists: Sheila Dalton and
Wendy Steele.
Judith Arnopp is the author of seven historical fiction novels, four set in the Tudor period and three in the Anglo-Saxon/early Medieval. She is currently working on the life of Margaret Beaufort. All are available in paperback and on kindle. Click here for more information.
Illustrations
Winnie the Pooh cover - "WhenWeWereVeryYoung" by Source. Licensed under Fair use
via Wikipedia -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:WhenWeWereVeryYoung.JPG#/media/File:WhenWeWereVeryYoung.JPG
Bookshop: "Bookshop in Much Wenlock" by MichaelMaggs - Own work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons - http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Bookshop_in_Much_Wenlock.jpg#/media/File:Bookshop_in_Much_Wenlock.jpg
All other photographs copyright Judith Arnopp
Interesting read, Judith. Thanks for tagging me.
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