In
the 1960s and 1970s, I read quite a few of Mary Stewart’s books. At the time,
she, along with Paul Gallico, was one of my favourite non-genre authors. She
was very popular indeed and managed to break out of genre labelling with her
suspense, mystery and fantasy works.
She
wrote about contemporary and historical periods with equal assurance, whether
the settings were Crete, Corfu, Austria, Lebanon, Provence, Northumberland, Cornwall,
or the Scottish Hebrides.
It’s
a long while back since I read her books, but I recall that my particular
favourites were:
Touch Not the
Cat
(1976) about a heroine who possesses the gift of telepathy and involves
suspense, deceit and attempted murder.
Madam, will you
talk?
(1854), her first published novel is a murder mystery set mainly in France.
And
of course the Arthurian trilogy The Crystal
Cave (1970), The Hollow Hills (1973),
The Last Enchantment (1979). (I have
still to read the succeeding books in the series, The Wicked Day (1983) and The
Prince and the Pilgrim (1995); yes, I know, I have too many books still
unread!) These books inspired the acclaimed BBC TV series Merlin. [In my as yet unpublished time-travel dystopian novel Time With A Gift Of Tears, my hero travels to Arthurian times and arrives in a crystal cave; my nod to her book).
You
can get view the original blurbs and dust-jackets of her novels here
An
excellent writer, who put you there, in the scene, and made you care about the
characters.
Now you've got me interested in her books. Thanks Nik.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Marie, nice to have you drop by. Mary Stewart was very popular indeed and worth reading.
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