Over the last few weeks I’ve teamed up with Steve, Jenny and now Jenny’s beau to compile a list of things that we love about our country. I’m English, Steve is Scottish and Jenny is American, and it’s been a really interesting experiment.
The focus of this week is writers. I love to read and it is a regular source of enjoyment that has followed me since early childhood. As an English woman, I am blessed that this country has produced some of the greatest writers of all time, and if I were to list every influential member of this group I think that I would have to create an entirely different blog in itself. I started by trying to sound intelligent – I researched lots of authors that I felt should be included on the list simply because The Guardian told me so, but then I realised that I couldn’t talk about them with any passion because, however revered their works are, I simply don’t enjoy them myself. Instead, I thought I would take a slightly different approach and discuss my own favourite writers and creators of works that I love to read, so I apologise if your favourites are missing from the list.
1. William Shakespeare (1564, baptised, – 1616): Ah, the Bard of Avon. as I have aged, my love for Shakespeare’s words have grown. Widely regarded as the greatest writer and dramatist in the english language in history, his many works have been translated into every major living language and are the source of endless hours of boredom for students the world over. I live a short drive away from his birthplace, Stratford – upon – Avon, and I am always surpised by the number of tourists, particularly American and Chinese tourists (sporting enormous cameras) that visit the city every year. I could create an entire post dedicated to the great man’s work and would still never be able to do him justice, so I’ll simply say this: his sonnets, poetry and plays express different aspects of life that simply transcend time. He demonstrated such a mastery of language, weaving words together to create layers within layers at levels that no other writer has been able to reach since.
2. Charles Dickens (1812-1870): Every year, at Christmas, The Bloke and I have a tradition which involves a movie marathon that includes of ‘Scrooged’ and ‘A Muppets Christmas Carol.’ We’ve also go and see theatrical adaptations, the last one starring Tommy Steele. It is essentially the same story each time, and yet I have never become bored or dissolusioned by it. Why? Because a Christmas Carol, as with most of Dickens novels, is written in a way that demonstrates the universal emotions that we all share while being able to transport us to a different time and place. When Dickens began writing his first novel in 1836, the literacy rate in England was less than 50%. By 1901, it was over 97%, and it is widely believed that Dickens’s novels were partially responsible for this growth. Dickens was able to appeal to the masses, taking advantage of the developments of technology to publish his works on a large scale, and as a result he became a public figure that everyone loved.
3. J.R.R. Tolkein (1892-1973): Tolkein was a writer, poet and university professor. The Hobbit was a the first novel that we read as a class at primary school. We were given a copy each, during which we had to read chapters at home, and our teacher would read large sections to us at the end of a long day. I loved it – it was exciting and intruiging, and the first time that I remember genuinely caring about a character. I found it a little more difficult to attempt Lord of The Rings admittedly, and it took me a while to finish the trilogy, but he absolutely deserves to be on the list as one of the greatest English fantasy writers of all time.
4. Jane Austen (1775-1817): I believe that my love of Jane Austen appeals to both my enjoyment of English history and the hidden romantic in me. I adored ‘Emma’ in my early teens and read it so many times that I had to buy another copy to replace my original that started to fall apart. While I admit I found the language a little difficult at first, Austen’s novels are beautiful, and she remains one of the only authors to make me cry.
5. J.K. Rowling (Born 1965): I have included J.K. Rowling in this list because she is responsible for the biggest selling book and movie franchise in recent history. While the general plot for Harry Potter isn’t entirely original (read The Worst Witch books if you don’t believe me) it’s impossible to argue with the fact that Rowling is a master of storytelling. I read the Harry Potter books in a ridiculous order – 4,3,2,1,5,6,7 – and yet I thoroughly enjoyed every single one. I think that in a world of evermore exciting technological developments, above all, Rowling should be rewarded for the fact that she encouraged a whole new set of generations to sit down and read again.
6. Caitlin Moran (Born 1975): Aside from the late Maya Angelou, who I unfortunately can’t include in the list, Caitlin Moran is by far my favourite writer. Homeschooled in Wolverhampton, she has been writing for national newspapers and magazines since the age of fifteen and over recent years has written several books and a novel, including my favourite: ‘How To Be a Woman.’ Moran is sharp, witty, highly intelligent and insightful, and her outlook on many different aspects of life make me laugh out loud regularly and rethink my perspective on my status as a woman and my surroundings.
7. Sue Townsend (1946 – 2014): As a teenager I liked to visit my local bookstore regularly, and was often given book tokens as gifts. On one of my many jaunts I discovered ‘The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole, Aged 13 3/4.’ It only took a single page for me to buy it, and my obsession was born. I followed the Adrian Mole series avidly from that moment, excitedly waiting for the next installment. What I loved about the books was that as I aged, so did he, and Townsend was extremely clever in that she wrote them almost in ‘real time,’ including all the major national and international social issues and events in Adrian Mole’s diary entries. When Townsend passed away earlier in the year, I was devastated both at the loss of a great literary artist, and my favourite character of all time.
8. Benjamin Zephaniah (Born 1958): I have a little piece of paper on my desk. It says, ‘To Suzie, thank you for your support, I love you, Benjamin Zephaniah.‘ After being a huge fan for years I discovered that one of my students was related to him and begged for an autograph. While I am not usually a poetry connoiseur (mainly because of the fact that I often don’t understand it), his poems have always challenged me – they are strong, emotive and utterly fantastic. His novel ‘Refugee Boy’ is in my list of all-time favourite books.
I have only included eight on the list, and I have discovered that a large proportion of them are both modern and from the Midlands, where I have lived for nearly fourteen years, but these are the things that I like to read. I appreciate that I have made some almost blasphemous ommissions – Orwell, Pratchett, Bronte, Chaucer, Woolf, Hardy, Wordsworth… So this is your opportunity. What are your favourite English (not British) authors?
You can also find me on Twitter and Tumblr @suzie81blog
Some good choices there Suzie. I’d have Michael Moorcock, J.G. Ballard and shame on you for not having Christina Rossetti in there. I’ll let you off seen as it’s you 🙂
Haha! Thank Richard! I’m going to embarrass myself here by admitting I know very little about any of these!
If you know the hymn ‘In The Bleak Midwinter’ that’s Christina Rossetti
Ah, I’ve played the music for that a million times…
I think there’s a lot like that where the origins are a bit forgotten.
Well I like the Brontes and Austen best of those, but also. AS Byatt (born in Sheffield?)
But I have to say Oscar Wilde trumps them all for insight, and he’s Irish 🙂
I did think about Oscar Wilde, forgetting that he was Irish. I was going to include the Bronte’s but I am not a fan of all of their works, just a select few…
My all time favourite British writer is Enid Blyton, that goddess of children’s books of the last century. Another one would be Agatha Christie with her macabre whodunit books. In the humour genre, my own personal favourite, P G Wodehouse. There are others of course, Louisa May Alcott, E. Nesbit and others.
Aww, I love Enid Blyton. In my innocence I used to devour her books, but as an adult I always find myself sniggering at the names she has for her characters. I think recent publications have changed the names for Dick and Fanny to something else… I agree with the rest of your list!
gollywogs- do children in the UK still play with them ?
Haha! No! I had a Golliwog as a child, and an English jam company had a Golliwog as their mascot – they did badges that you could collect. However, Golliwogs were understandably deemed to be racist in the 1980’s and haven’t been sold since…
Oh thanks for the reminder about Adrian Mole, I would love to read those secret diaries again. Great list by the way!
Thank you! I am in the process of re-reading them!
Great list Suzie, a few of my best loved there, too. I discovered Shakespeare in primary school at the age of eleven when I found Charles and Mary Lamb’s adaptation of his works in the library. Dickens also became a firm favourite for me in my teens. I haven’t read any of the English classics in a long time. Hmmm, I feel another winter project coming on…..
Thanks Jean! I started reading Dickens in my early teens, but I must admit I found it quite difficult at first. My love of Shakespeare developed from studying it for GCSE and A Level – analysing it was really satisfying for me…
My favorite? CS Lewis!!
Haha! I did consider including him, but I found the Narnia books really boring. Same with Philip Pullman. I feel really wrong by admitting that!
Nothing wrong with that! I did love Narnia, but his non-fiction books are really my favorite (those and the Screwtape Letters!)
HA! AWESOME, Suzie!! Our lists overlap a lot. I even have a copy of Adrian Mole sitting on my shelf, waiting for me to read it. I don’t think it made it very big on this side of the pond 😦 Nor did Eoin Colfer, except he’s Irish, so he wouldn’t count anyway.
Can I count Kazuo Ishiguro even if he was born in Nagasaki? I’ve only read one Ian McEwan but I loved it enough to put him on my list. I think they’d fill out the rest of the list for me.
Thanks Jenny. I have to admit, and I feel really bad for doing so, that I cannot stand Ian McEwan – I had to study some of his works for A Level and I was soooooooo bored!
Reblogged this on O Pie-oneers! and commented:
Suzie’s list of her favo(u)rite English wriers, which looks rather similar to what my list would look like 🙂
Great post. Again like pie lady’s it puts my attempt at this one to shame. A child could have done better than me. Speaking of children – no Enid Blyton? I’m currently crying into my magic faraway tree…
With Dick and Fanny? 😉
Ooo errr
Reblogged this on Steve Says… and commented:
If you though Scrooged was just a movie or that JK Rowling was Scottish (well, I did not sure why) then read this literary masterpiece from Suzie…
You are so very blessed with amazing authors over there!!! Great selections on this list. I love many of them and look forward to reading the ones that are new.
Thanks Anna!
Good list.
Thank you!
i don’t believe you have Benjamin Zephaniah’s autograph! That is so cool! I absolutely love him and think his performances are hilarious! x
Pingback: 14 Books I Want to Read but Never Remember to | Zezee with Books