As March is
National Women’s History Month, celebrating women of character, courage and
commitment and also coincides with the paperback publication of my novel
QUEEN’S GAMBIT I felt it apt to take a look at my protagonist Katherine Parr,
best known for being the wife who ‘survived’ marriage to England’s best known
Tudor tyrant, Henry VIII.
I am often
asked why I chose to write about Katherine Parr and it is true that
superficially she seems less interesting than some of her more obviously
glamorous predecessors. But scratch the surface of her story and a dynamic,
charismatic woman emerges. She may not have been born a princess to make a
great alliance, nor did her life come to a truly dramatic climax with
execution, but she was a highly intelligent well-loved woman and an astute
political operator who understood how to play the game of power in a
dissembling court, using her position to support religious reform at great
personal cost. This is a woman who managed to out-fox her powerful adversaries
and survive a plot on her life. She was an author too, publishing two books at
a time when to publish at best risked ridicule and at worst might seriously
compromise a woman’s virtue. She was canny enough to wait until after Henry’s
death to publish her second book, a highly political and unashamedly reformist
tome. She might not have become known as the wife who ‘survived’ had she not
had the sense to defer publication.
Katherine Parr NPG |
There is much
to admire about Katherine Parr’s dynamism, intellect and ability to survive.
She was also married no less than four times.
But one of the things that most appealed to me about her story was that
she was also flawed. She made a disastrous decision in the name of misguided
romance with devastating consequences, and it is this picture of a truly
accomplished woman becoming a fool for love that fascinated me. The
contradiction in her character makes her, for me, so very human and relatable
to us today. Who doesn’t know of a clever woman who has fallen foul of romance?
But QUEEN’S
GAMBIT does not only tell of a remarkable queen. There are so many women’s
lives; lives lived with character, courage and commitment, which went
unrecorded. I wanted to explore another view of the Tudor court through a
forgotten woman, endowing her with these characteristics. Katherine Parr’s maid
Dorothy Fountain allowed me to do this. Dorothy, or Dot as she is named in the
novel, is largely a creation of my imagination, a kind of everywoman who
embodies all those forgotten lives. We know almost nothing about her; only that
she served as maid to Katherine Parr’s stepdaughter Margaret Neville during her
second marriage. We know she remained with the family, serving Katherine Parr
when she was Queen, that she was left four pounds a year in Margaret’s will and
that she married a man named William Savage who might have been a musician. She
is little more than a name on a list in the annals of history.
An unsung woman like Dot |
It is not
much to go on and for the purposes of QUEEN’S GAMBIT I made Dot lower born
than she was likely to have been in reality, as I wanted to offer a different
perspective on the court – a 'below stairs' view. In the novel, she is visited
by exceptional circumstances and comes to move in an elevated world, but her
experience of it is utterly different to those born into the nobility.
Through the
eyes of these two women whose lives intersect and yet are so different, I hoped
to convey something of what it was like to be a woman living in the court of Henry
VIII at a tumultuous time in history.
QUEENS GAMBIT
by Elizabeth Fremantle is published in paperback on March 13th
7 comments:
Those paintings are wonderful!
I have it and am looking forward to reading it. Her romance with Seymour fascinates me.
This is now on my 'must buy' list. I can't wait to read it.
I love the theme of literacy and literature in this book. Katherine Parr was a pioneering female author, and Dot, a beloved 'full-stop', makes a great counterpart. Congratulations on the paperback publication today!
Congrats on paperback pub day Elizabeth! It's now on my booklist.
I really loved the characterization of both Katherine and Dot . . . but especially Dot. I thought her perspective added so much.
I very much enjoyed this book. Katherine is such an interesting character - far more so than the way she is usually, rather dismissively, portrayed.
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