kvmmatch.blogg.se

Blood Feud by Rosemary Sutcliff
Blood Feud by Rosemary Sutcliff








Blood Feud by Rosemary Sutcliff

Sutcliff lived for many years in Walberton near Arundel, Sussex. Her The Mark of the Horse Lord won the first Phoenix Award in 1985. In 1974 she was highly commended for the Hans Christian Andersen Award. In 1959, she won the Carnegie Medal for The Lantern Bearers and was runner-up in 1972 with Tristan and Iseult. She found her voice when she wrote The Eagle of the Ninth in 1954. Rosemary Sutcliff began her career as a writer in 1950 with The Chronicles of Robin Hood. She then worked as a painter of miniatures.

Blood Feud by Rosemary Sutcliff

Her early schooling being continually interrupted by moving house and her disabling condition, Sutcliff didn't learn to read until she was nine, and left school at fourteen to enter the Bideford Art School, which she attended for three years, graduating from the General Art Course. Due to her chronic sickness, she spent the majority of her time with her mother, a tireless storyteller, from whom she learned many of the Celtic and Saxon legends that she would later expand into works of historical fiction. She contracted Still's Disease when she was very young and was confined to a wheelchair for most of her life. She once commented that she wrote "for children of all ages from nine to ninety."īorn in West Clandon, Surrey, Sutcliff spent her early youth in Malta and other naval bases where her father was stationed as a naval officer. Although primarily a children's author, the quality and depth of her writing also appeals to adults.

Blood Feud by Rosemary Sutcliff

Rosemary Sutcliff, CBE was a British novelist, best known as a writer of highly acclaimed historical fiction.










Blood Feud by Rosemary Sutcliff