Ask the Author: Philippa Gregory
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Philippa Gregory
Alas, poor me! I really hate the sort of trolling that occurs from time to time, and I am amazed at the tone that people think appropriate to write about someone, or even to write to them. A lot of the most spiteful people are not trained historians – so they haven't learned the habit of detachment from the subject – they write as if they are defending an unjustly accused personal friend, whereas the reputation of these characters is something which can be rightly and carefully considered, and the people lived 500 years ago! At all the universities where I have taught or studied there is an absolute commitment to scholarly discussion which should never be personal or rude, and is supposed to get you – by the exchange of views and information – to a greater truth. So it is surprising and even shocking when people just rant. But often they forget that the books are novels, they are fiction and though based on fact they are supposed to be works of literature with their own narrative arc and language. I am not obliged to record everything that happened or even the whole of the life. The other thing that people seem to forget is that the books are almost all written from a point of view – often it's not what I think of a character, but what the narrator thinks of a character. You can see this really well in the contrast between The White Queen which was written from the point of view of Elizabeth Woodville, and The Red Queen which was written from the point of view of Margaret Beaufort. Their opinions of each other are those of rivals and sometimes friends and ultimately enemies – but I don't think of Elizabeth Woodville as a conniving sexually manipulative witch – that's Margaret Beaufort's opinion. My job is to get into her head, so as to invite the reader into her head and let the reader see the world through Margaret Beaufort's eyes with her prejudices and her mistakes. AND (as if this weren't complicated enough) Margaret Beaufort does not know all the history that I know, she does not know what happens after her death, so her account of the times is not what I would write if I were writing history. She's a fictional character in my novel and her view is a fictional account from a very limited idiosyncratic point of view. And finally – sorry for such a long answer – I think the controversy is the downside of success. More than 9 million people read my books – naturally a proportion of them won't enjoy them, or prefer one to another, or prefer the tv or the films. But on the other hand I enjoy a lot of praise and I get great reviews and I number some of the great historians of the period among my personal friends. The best response is from the readers who have been inspired to study history and read the records that I use for research so that they can find out for themselves what they think a character was like. That's so much more interesting than trying to shout other people down.
Philippa Gregory
You're right, she's a wonderful character for a historical novel and I know I would enjoy researching her marriage and then her love-story. I'll put her on the list, but there are a few women that I want to write about before I come to her!
Lindsay
Dear P. Gregory: you have written about all Henry VIII's wives. Will you being writing about Jane Seymour? I hope so! :) I love your books, esp. the T
Dear P. Gregory: you have written about all Henry VIII's wives. Will you being writing about Jane Seymour? I hope so! :) I love your books, esp. the Tudor series.
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Oct 24, 2015 01:58PM · flag
Oct 24, 2015 01:58PM · flag
Philippa Gregory
The Seymours are completely fascinating and I have quite a lot about Thomas Seymour who was Kateryn Parr's lover and then husband in my new novel The Taming of the Queen. You are right, they are a fascinating family and Jane Seymour's two brothers really deserve a novel to themselves. But if I were going to write a book from a male viewpoint of this cohort of Tudors I think I would write about George Boleyn who seems to me to be a young man of really wonderful potential whose life was sacrificed in the plot to bring down his sister. The trouble with this period is that there are so many interesting characters!
Philippa Gregory
Prince Richard's story and the likelihood of his survival has been wonderfully analysed by historians, especially David Baldwin, and Ann Wroe has written a beautiful account part fiction-part speculation-part fact which persuaded me of his survival and return to England in an unsuccessful attempt to claim his crown, and showed me also how wonderful a hybrid book like this could be. I do think that the young man that Henry VII named as Perkin was probably Prince Richard – at any rate he clearly was not called Perkin Warbeck, as there was nobody of that name living at Tournai, and his 'confession' seems as if it were dictated by his captors. (He gets his own mother's name wrong!) How he got to be accepted by all the crowned heads in Europe and to live at Henry's court as an honoured guest is part of the mystery of his life.
Philippa Gregory
Actually, I wouldn't ask him anything, because I don't think he's fit to plead. I would get a full medical check up including mental health and testing for Kells disease (a rare inherited blood disorder). When he is young he is such a wonderful prince, his deterioration is terrible to observe. I think there must be a physical reason.
Bonnie Landino
Absolutely, in today's time, he would be diagnosed with mental illnesses, of course physical problems galore. He was a very sick man, mentally and phy
Absolutely, in today's time, he would be diagnosed with mental illnesses, of course physical problems galore. He was a very sick man, mentally and physically. It's a shame they knew nothing in that day and age. I often wonder how he would have been, had he had no mental or physical issues. He was obviously crazy , and in constant pain later on in his life. A sad mess, Bonnie
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Dec 19, 2015 12:22AM · flag
Dec 19, 2015 12:22AM · flag
Lindsay
Inside The Body Henry VIII (video) please watch Philippa Gregory. :) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ghZZP...
Inside The Body Henry VIII (video) please watch Philippa Gregory. :) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ghZZP...
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Mar 26, 2017 05:59PM · flag
Mar 26, 2017 05:59PM · flag
Philippa Gregory
Some of my favourite men in history would be the gardeners John Tradescant (father, son and grandson). I write about them in Earthly Joys and Virgin Earth – my only 2 books with male narrators. In those novels you will also find my complete hero: John Lambert, one of Oliver Cromwell's most brilliant radical generals. I will confess also to a total girly crush on Robert Dudley who I write about in The Queen's Fool and in The Virgin's Lover. He is very attractive but the hero of The Virgin's Lover is probably the brilliant, selfless and under-rated William Cecil, who also appears in Earthly Joys.
madi!
you know what- i am with you. i confess to an absolute hammering crush on robert dudley. and i am not ashamed. i am glad to find someone who shares my
you know what- i am with you. i confess to an absolute hammering crush on robert dudley. and i am not ashamed. i am glad to find someone who shares my admiration.
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Aug 12, 2022 09:34PM · flag
Aug 12, 2022 09:34PM · flag
Philippa Gregory
You can't help but see the similarities though you wouldn't expect it from a modern government – it's one of the most shameful things we have done. I have been thinking about how to write about their struggle but it's not really my story to tell. We have provided funds for English classes for the displaced communities and, perhaps, a Chagossian might tell their own story.
Philippa Gregory
Hi Latisha – I hope you do achieve your dream of becoming a historian or an archaeologist. I've been lucky enough to work with the Time Team specialists on a couple of digs and it's fascinating. The White Princess is in production with Starz and we are working on scripts now.
Malia
Lara wrote: "You obviously haven't watched Tudors or Borgias if you say people want just good relationships on screen. Those series worked just fine a
Lara wrote: "You obviously haven't watched Tudors or Borgias if you say people want just good relationships on screen. Those series worked just fine and they were historical fictional dramas, not documentaries...."
Agreed. I hope Bess will be portrayed with a bit more agency, though. ...more
Aug 08, 2015 02:41PM
Agreed. I hope Bess will be portrayed with a bit more agency, though. ...more
Aug 08, 2015 02:41PM
♡ Eri ♡
Not sure why people have to be so mean and make ugly comments like the ones above. If I was a writer, I would chose to write about what I want and how
Not sure why people have to be so mean and make ugly comments like the ones above. If I was a writer, I would chose to write about what I want and how I want. If Ms. Gregory decided to write the way she did, it is her freedom to do so. She is the writer, not you. When you decide to write a book, you can decide how to portray anyone or anything. People need to relax and stop being so ugly.
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Jun 18, 2020 01:37PM
Jun 18, 2020 01:37PM
Philippa Gregory
Thank you, I am so glad that it was powerful for you. I think it was a major book for me to write, it came at a time when I was at a crossroads in my personal life and I think I was thinking about how a woman should be – in this world as well as the medieval one. The supernatural element in it frightened me while I was writing it, and I really don't know where it came from. Of all my books it is the least consciously written and plotted and I think this may be why it engages deeply with unconscious fears and symbols. I once lived in the cottage that I give to Morach and I knew the river that runs underground. It is a powerful primeval landscape and I loved writing about it. I am so glad that it spoke to you.
Amanda Smith
Thank you so much for your answer! Truly it was frightening. Never have I ever put a book down because I was given chills. And I definitely felt that
Thank you so much for your answer! Truly it was frightening. Never have I ever put a book down because I was given chills. And I definitely felt that struggle, that conflict of what it means to be a women. It spoke to me on that level, and as a result I insisted that my best friend read it. After she finished it she told me that she cried. Also, I want to clarify that when I say a book has never affected me so much, I mean to say that no book ever, as opposed to just one of your books. Also, Anya Seton is one of my favorite authors (along side you) and I was touched at your forward in Katherine. I'll never get the chance to tell her how much I appreciate her, so I'm elated that I can tell you! I'm sure you're not lacking in praise as you are (in my opinion) one of the most well known authors.. But truly your works have touched me and left me changed. So thank you!
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Aug 06, 2015 03:05PM
Aug 06, 2015 03:05PM
Philippa Gregory
I am sorry that you read this is 'violent and hateful'. I was trying to write a realistic description of a marriage which started after a really terrible battle but ended with a genuine union. I thought that Elizabeth of York – raised as a princess of England who knew her mother-in-law as a lady-in-waiting and then realised that she was a treasonous plotter, in love with Richard III and thus opposed and fearing his enemy and killer, would have genuine issues with marrying him. We know that he delayed the wedding so that she would not be crowned with him, which I think she would have found very insulting. We know that he was prepared to marry her sister instead of her – since for him it was a political marriage and any York princess would do. And all of the records that we have of their married life (and that is very little material) mention that it was his mother and not his wife who had the adjoining rooms, his mother who advised him. Elizabeth of York seems to have been short of money, and her own mother was under house arrest. Enough here for trouble in any marriage of love and theirs was definitely not a marriage of love in the beginning. Later, I think they came to be on good terms, as many arranged marriages end up, but he was unfaithful to her during the marriage and he proposed to a number of women after her death. I don't doubt that he felt her loss very painfully, I am certain she was a good wife. I believe that wars rarely have nice conclusions, and the Tudor murder of their rivals which went on till the line ended would suggest that the wars did not end.
Liz
Puro ignorante defendiendo a la autora. Leí los comentarios y no veo insultos, solo correcciones históricas que la autora y todos sus seguidores deber
Puro ignorante defendiendo a la autora. Leí los comentarios y no veo insultos, solo correcciones históricas que la autora y todos sus seguidores deberían agradecer
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Sep 21, 2018 12:53PM · flag
Sep 21, 2018 12:53PM · flag
Philippa Gregory
I'm sticking with the Tudors for now. My next novel will be on Henry's sisters. So happy to hear you enjoy my novels.
Philippa Gregory
Have a look on my website Mandy, you'll see I have covered all of the queens. They are all listed in chronological order so you should be able to find the ones you're looking for.
Philippa Gregory
The daughter of Kateryn Parr almost certainly died in childhood, infant mortality was very high then. Thomas Seymour did not keep her at his home, and in any case he was executed shortly after. As to paintings of Jacquetta – I am not aware of anything though we know that she was famously beautiful. She owned a beautiful book of hours which had been made for her predecessor the Duchess of Bedford (John of Lancaster's wife) and she would have stayed at Penshurst Place, which he renovated during his time in England. Jacquetta would have lived at Grafton in the manor house which was excavated a few years ago by Time Team. I was lucky enough to be there when they found a prayer book clasp, which may have been hers.
Philippa Gregory
Thank you, I do think that she was a powerful actor in her own life, and clearly she had her own ideas about religion and politics which we see her bring to the king. When I wrote the novel there was very little known about Mary Boleyn and there was very little evidence on birth order. One family will named Anne as the senior girl, and she seems to have been first choice for work in France and then for a great marriage. Since writing, other historians have researched Mary and now some think that she was the older daughter. It is interesting, but it is not really material, they were very close in age in any case. I am so glad that you enjoy my work so much, it is deeply absorbing for me too!
Philippa Gregory
The discovery that Jacquetta Rivers (Elizabeth Woodville's mother) had this fantastic family history with a family tree drawn up in complete seriousness that takes her back to a water goddess: Melusina. I already knew that her life was extraordinary and dramatic but to find this powerful myth at the heart of her story was a complete delight.
Philippa Gregory
I think the death of Margaret Pole and the persecution of her family by Henry VIII was the most shocking. Also, Henry's breaking his promise of pardon and the terrible punishments after the Pilgrimage of Grace. I describe these in my novel The King's Curse, and I think the whole novel shows the shocking deterioration in Henry from golden prince to merciless tyrant.
Philippa Gregory
I think it is very likely but I did not use it because I was writing from Elizabeth's point of view and I think that she might not have been consulted at this stage. I focussed on her story which was complex and full enough.
Philippa Gregory
Dear Maureen, I am sorry that you have misread my intentions in The Kingmaker's Daughter. I think the novel is a very affectionate and respectful re-telling of Anne's story in which she is shown as loyal (especially to her sister) loving (to her second husband, Richard), brave (throughout her father's campaign) and enterprising (when she runs away from George Duke of Clarence's control). Certainly I rather admire what we know of her, and I liked the character that I created. If you think that I have shown her as cruel to her mother then that is the history: she colluded in her mother's imprisonment so that she could inherit the fortune. But I don't think I suggest that she is overall an unlikeable person. I based the novel on the Michael Hicks biography and there are other fictional accounts that you might prefer. But I don't dislike her and I certainly don't 'hate' her, or any of these historical characters.
Philippa Gregory
It's one of the very interesting questions around Richard III. Certainly he had her and her sisters at his court and it was remarked that she wore gowns to match the queen – which seems odd. People gossiped that he was paying her a lot of attention, and after the death of his wife he was advised to publicly declare that he was not going to marry her, because Anne Neville's important family and connections would have been offended if he had been seen to slight his wife's memory. He would have had good reason to openly flirt with Elizabeth and give rise to the idea that they might marry, because one of Henry Tudor's claims for support was that he was betrothed to her, and would invade and put a York princess on the throne as his wife. If Richard could make it appear that she might marry him then he would win the old York/Woodville supporters to his side. Finally, and perhaps it is a strong piece of evidence, the historian George Buck recorded reading a letter from Elizabeth to the Duke of Buckingham asking him to support her attempt to marry Richard III in which she says that has given him 'her all'. This sounds rather like a love affair. The letter is now lost and of course it doesn't tell us anything about Richard's intentions towards Elizabeth – only about hers to him. Overall, I think that it is likely that he was thinking of marrying her for good political reasons, and he had engaged in a flirtation and perhaps a love affair with her which was all interrupted by the Battle of Bosworth. Perhaps the winner of the battle won the princess – and that was Henry Tudor.
Malia
I would simply like to add that if anyone seriously believes that these women were doing real magic in the 15th century thanks to these works of ficti
I would simply like to add that if anyone seriously believes that these women were doing real magic in the 15th century thanks to these works of fiction, it's hardly Ms. Gregory's fault.
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Aug 10, 2015 08:03PM · flag
Aug 10, 2015 08:03PM · flag
Rebecca
@Malia-I think what is being misunderstood is the times that Ms Gregory writes in. In the 15th century the majority truly believed in magic, spells, c
@Malia-I think what is being misunderstood is the times that Ms Gregory writes in. In the 15th century the majority truly believed in magic, spells, curses and witches; they believed them to be real. And as PG is writing from their perspective; Jacquetta and Elizabeth truly believe that their contact with Melusina is real and the magic that is incorporated into the story is from these two ladies and Elizabeth of York.
Now this is not artistic licence because in that time frame magic was real to those ladies and so the author has written it as such.
I think that those who disagree with the way Ms Gregory writes fail to understand the times in which she writes and the fact that often it is from only ONE person's perspective, so you see how they perceive an action and another's perception of an event is often a case of smoke and mirrors.
When it comes to Ms Gregory's credentials as one person said she has a PHD but the what she chooses to include and exclude in her written works is entirely the authors choice.
Like you, I just don't understand the depth of grievance that some have shown towards an author who gave her time to do this Q&A and it is a real shame that for many it has been spoilt.
Philippa Gregory has her own style of writing, you and I appreciate that and I read her books because I enjoy them, some more than others but that goes with any author.
I do hope that those who dislike the author will hopefully take their discontent somewhere else and hopefully learn that even if you disagree with an authors viewpoint or where the author has failed that it needn't lead to this badgering and at times bullying behaviour.
Perhaps it is time that these young ladies let it go and move on....don't you think? ...more
Aug 10, 2015 08:41PM · flag
Now this is not artistic licence because in that time frame magic was real to those ladies and so the author has written it as such.
I think that those who disagree with the way Ms Gregory writes fail to understand the times in which she writes and the fact that often it is from only ONE person's perspective, so you see how they perceive an action and another's perception of an event is often a case of smoke and mirrors.
When it comes to Ms Gregory's credentials as one person said she has a PHD but the what she chooses to include and exclude in her written works is entirely the authors choice.
Like you, I just don't understand the depth of grievance that some have shown towards an author who gave her time to do this Q&A and it is a real shame that for many it has been spoilt.
Philippa Gregory has her own style of writing, you and I appreciate that and I read her books because I enjoy them, some more than others but that goes with any author.
I do hope that those who dislike the author will hopefully take their discontent somewhere else and hopefully learn that even if you disagree with an authors viewpoint or where the author has failed that it needn't lead to this badgering and at times bullying behaviour.
Perhaps it is time that these young ladies let it go and move on....don't you think? ...more
Aug 10, 2015 08:41PM · flag
Philippa Gregory
It most certainly does! Its a very beautiful spot, not far from my home in Yorkshire. Here's a short video of me speaking there https://youtu.be/gS7mV_z71gU
Philippa Gregory
36,223 followers
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