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Hilary Mantel

    Hilary Mantel

  Born: 6 July 1952 (age 60)

  Nationality: British

  Notable works: Wolf Hall,

                     Bring Up The Bodies

     
     Hilary Mary Mantel is an English novelist, short story writer, essayist and critic. She was born on 6 July 1952. She has an incredible style of writing.  Her work, ranging in subject from personal memoir to historical fiction, has been short-listed for major literary awards. In 2009, she won the Man Booker Prize for her novel Wolf Hall. Her latest book, Bring Up the Bodies, the second installment of the Thomas Cromwell Trilogy, won the 2012 Man Booker Prize. She is the first woman to receive the award twice.             
                                                                                               
      Hilary Mary Thompson was born in Glossop, Derbyshire, the eldest of three children, and was brought up in the mill village of Hadfield. She has explored her family background, the mainspring of much of her fiction, in her memoir, Giving Up the Ghost (2003). She attended Harry town Convent in Romiley, Cheshire. In 1970 she began her studies at the London School of Economics to read law. She transferred to the University of Sheffield and graduated as Bachelor of Jurisprudence in 1973.

     After university, Mantel worked in the social work department of a geriatric hospital, and then as a sales assistant in a department store. In 1972, she married Gerald McEwen, a geologist. In 1974 she began writing a novel about the French Revolution, which was later published as A Place of Greater Safety. In 1977, Mantel went to live in Botswana with her husband. Later they spent four years in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. She published a memoir of this time, Someone to Disturb, in the London Review of Books

     Her first novel, Every Day is Mother's Day, was published in 1985, and its sequel, Vacant Possession, a year later. Her novel Eight Months on Ghazzah Street (1988), which drew on her first-hand experience in Saudi Arabia, uses a threatening clash of values between the neighbors in a city apartment block to explore the tensions between Islamist culture and the liberal West. Her Winifred Holtby Memorial Prize-winning novel Fludd is set in 1956 in a fictitious northern village called Fetherhoughton, centering on a Roman Catholic Church and a convent. A Place of Greater Safety (1992) won the Sunday Express Book of the Year award, for which her two previous books had been shortlisted. A Change of Climate (1994), set in rural Norfolk, explores the lives of Ralph and Anna Eldred, as they raise their four children and devote their lives to charity. An Experiment in Love, which won the Hawthornden Prize, takes place over two university terms in 1970. It follows the progress of three girls – two friends and one enemy – as they leave home and attend university in London. Her next book, The Giant, O'Brien, is set in the 1780s, and is based on the true story of Charles O'Brien or Byrne. In 2003, Mantel published her memoir, Giving Up the Ghost, which won the MIND ‘Book of the Year’ award. That same year she brought out a collection of short stories, Learning To Talk. All the stories deal with childhood and, taken together, the books show how the events of a life are mediated as fiction. Her 2005 novel, Beyond Black, was shortlisted for the Orange Prize. Set in the years around the second millennium, it features a professional medium, Alison Hart, whose calm and jolly exterior conceals grotesque psychic damage. The long novel Wolf Hall, about Henry VIII's minister Thomas Cromwell, was published in 2009 to high critical acclaim. The book won that year's Man Booker Prize.

     The sequel to Wolf Hall, called Bring Up the Bodies, was published in May 2012 to wide acclaim. It won the 2012 Man Booker Prize. Mantel is working on the third novel of the Thomas Cromwell trilogy, called The Mirror and the Light. She is also working on a short non-fiction book called The Woman Who Died of Robespierre, about the Polish playwright StanisÅ‚awa Przybyszewska. Mantel also writes reviews and essays, mainly for The Guardian, the London Review of Books and the New York Review of Books. The Culture Show programme on BBC Two broadcast a profile of Mantel on 17 September 2011.


     Article By: Sayooj Samuel
                              VIII-A
                              S4617

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