The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Sally Magnusson

Winter Words 2018, Pitlochry Festival Theatre, February 17

- Caroline lindsay

A poignant true story set in 17th Century Iceland awaits visitors to the Winter Words Festival at Pitlochry Festival Theatre tomorrow. Broadcaste­r and author Sally Magnusson will talk about her debut novel, The Sealwoman’s Gift, a re-imagining of the plight of the women and children involved in a 1627 Icelandic pirate raid.

Barbary pirates raided the coast of Iceland and abducted some 400 of its people. Among the captives sold into slavery in Algiers were the island pastor, his wife and their three children. Although the raid itself is well documented, little is known about what happened to the women and children afterwards.

Sally, the daughter of Magnus Magnusson, is half Icelandic and wanted to acknowledg­e the trauma this event had on the country’s history. “Although I was aware of the raid, I didn’t know a lot about it until I read a memoir written by a pastor caught up in the event,” she says.

“I got a sense of the immense trauma from his account of being taken away in a big ship to Algeria and seeing his family sold as slaves.

In her novel , inspired by the sagas and folk tales of her northern homeland, Sally gives a voice to Ásta, the pastor’s wife.

“As I got older I became more drawn into the Icelandic storytelli­ng tradition – the folklore of this rugged country, the sealwomen (selkies), the trolls, the hidden people, the elves.”

But, she stresses, the story isn’t about selkies. “The old sealwoman and the elfman are symbolic characters, used to give a sense of the importance of storytelli­ng in Asta’s life and about its eternal power to help us survive.”

As a writer, Sally has been widely published, including Life Of Pee, Dreaming of Iceland and – her first foray into fiction – the Horace the Haggis series for children.

But as she soon discovered, writing a novel demanded rather different skills.

“Horace the Haggis was the first time I’d let my imaginatio­n rip but an adult novel let me rely more and more on my imaginatio­n,” she says. “As a journalist, you’re tied to factual truthfulne­ss – that’s the main lodestar.

“While the novel has a historical framework – finding out how much is known and being respectful of that – I let my imaginatio­n fly a bit to make it a novel rather than a non-fiction book. It was a process of learning a new craft.”

No stranger to the Winter Words Festival, Sally says: “The audience are always wonderfull­y engaged and warm and I hope they will be tomorrow too!”

And she’s working on a new historical novel, this time set in Scotland. “I’m just trying to structure it now so we’ll see how that develops.”

www.pitlochryf­estivalthe­atre.com

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 ??  ?? Sally Magnusson is looking forward to sharing her debut novel at the Winter Words Festival 2018.
Sally Magnusson is looking forward to sharing her debut novel at the Winter Words Festival 2018.

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