Bangkok Post

Hilary Mantel unveils final volume in awardwinni­ng Thomas Cromwell trilogy

- ELIZABETH HOWCROFT

British novelist Hilary Mantel unveiled the final instalment on Wednesday of her Tudor trilogy about Thomas Cromwell, the blacksmith’s son who rose to be King Henry VIII’s most powerful adviser only to fall from grace and meet a gruesome end.

Eight years in the writing, The Mirror & The Light is one of the most eagerly anticipate­d literary releases in recent years following the runaway success of the two previous novels in the series.

Wolf Hall, published in 2009, and its sequel Bring Up The Bodies, which came out in 2012, together sold more than 5 million copies worldwide and both won the Booker Prize, an unpreceden­ted win for two books in the same trilogy.

Mantel, 67, is the only woman and the only Briton to have won the prestigiou­s award twice.

The final instalment picks up where the previous one left off, just after the beheading of Henry’s second wife, Anne Boleyn, a drama in which Cromwell played a central part.

The Mirror & The Light charts Cromwell’s further consolidat­ion of power following Anne’s death, his religious reforms that cause turmoil across the land, and his eventual downfall. At the end of the book, his own head is on the executione­r’s block.

The book is officially published on Thursday, but Mantel was signing copies at a special event at a central London bookstore on Wednesday evening.

While the first eager fans to get their hands on the 900-page tome waited in line to have it signed by Mantel, historical musicians played traditiona­l tunes on 16th-century instrument­s including the recorder and lute.

The launch event also featured an embroidery workshop where guests made flowers in the style of Tudor roses and a dramatic performanc­e of readings from the first two books.

Mantel’s editor, Nicholas Pearson, described the publicatio­n as an emotional moment.

“I do think this book is the crowning achievemen­t of her career so far and that is saying something when you’ve got Wolf Hall and Bring Up The Bodies behind you,” he said. “It’s a book about the re-jigging of this country 500 years ago which has connotatio­ns with what’s going now,” he added.

The turbulent and bloody politics of the Tudor era, which lasted from 1485 to 1603, is a well-trodden path for writers of historical fiction, but Mantel is widely credited with elevating the genre to new heights.

“With this trilogy, Mantel has redefined what the historical novel is capable of,” wrote The Guardian’s Stephanie Merritt in her review of the latest book, which she said was also worthy of the Booker.

“She has given it muscle and sinew, enlarged its scope, and created a prose style that is lyrical and colloquial, at once faithful to its time and entirely recognisab­le to us.”

The New York Times also ran a highly flattering review of the work, calling it a “triumphant capstone” to the Cromwell trilogy.

“The world is blotted out as you are enveloped in the sweep of a story rich with conquest, conspiracy and mazy human psychology,” wrote the paper’s reviewer Parul Sehgal.

The London Times struck a dissonant note, saying in its own review that the third instalment was “clogged with researched data” and painfully slow in parts.

“Her trilogy is a phenomenal achievemen­t, but in The Mirror & The Light it’s more a phenomenon of amassed informatio­n and tireless enthusiasm than triumphant creativity,” wrote Peter Kemp.

Asked if Mantel would write a sequel, Pearson shook his head.

“We’re done,” he said, “we’re done.”

 ??  ?? Author Hilary Mantel.
Author Hilary Mantel.

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