In praise of Anya Seton and Katherine

By Sophie Masson  |  May 18, 2011  | 

Therese butting in for a sec with a big w00t for WU contributor Sophie Masson before her regularly scheduled post. Sophie has just won the Patricia Wrightson Prize for Children’s Literature for her book My Australian Story: The Hunt for Ned Kelly. I absolutely loved Sophie’s interview with ABC Sydney after winning this book. Have a listen HERE. Our warmest congrats, Sophie, for taking home this most prestigious award! And now, to Sophie…

I was so delighted by the wonderful response to my post on Mary Stewart that I thought I’d write this month about another great lifelong reading love of mine—Anya Seton and her gorgeous historical novels, especially Katherine.

I was sixteen, about the same age as Anya Seton’s famous heroine, Katherine, when I first encountered her as she set out in that ‘tender green time of April’, on a journey that was to take her from sheltered convent girl to controversial great lady. Though Katherine de Roet, later Swynford, was, I was sure, infinitely more beautiful and gifted than me, though she lived in such a different time and place, I clicked instantly with her, and with the gorgeous book in which she lived and breathed with such intensity.

Like her, I too had spent years in a convent—a rather kind and liberal convent school, in my case!–and like her I was itching to go out into the world, and especially, fall in love. The separation between us—a gap of some six hundred years—seemed meaningless. I was with Katherine every step of the way, from her first introduction to the royal court, where she meets the man who will forever change her life, though she does not know it yet—John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, the King’s dazzling third son. It is not love at first sight. But love is kindled between them, and when it erupts, it is a passion as unstoppable as it is overwhelming, one that will bring not just delight, but tragedy, murder, madness, and exile. And the evocation of that grand passion by Anya Seton—particularly in the early stages of the affair, when Katherine and John spend several enchanted days in the remote castle of La Teste, in Les Landes, in Gascony (a region of France I knew well, as part of my family comes from there) was so thrilling to my adolescent self that I must have worn out those pages re-reading them, savouring each time that intoxicating mixture of languor and excitement, of sex and romance, of poetry and passion. This is not an uncommon reaction; lots of readers, and not only female readers, have felt this way—my husband tells me that as a teenager in England, where he grew up, he read Katherine on the recommendation of his sister—and loved it, reading it twice, especially lingering on those passages!

But though passionate love forms its incandescent centre, Katherine isn’t just about love. It is also an exceptionally rich, detailed, and utterly believable evocation of a turbulent time—the mid to late 14th century, dominated by war, the Black Death, and religious and political rebellions. In its pages we meet not only Katherine and her royal lover, who are masterfully brought to life in all their complexity, but also a whole host of exquisitely-drawn characters: Katherine’s swinish, tormented husband, Sir Hugh Swynford; their  daughter Blanchette, who will grow up to condemn her mother; John of Gaunt’s strange little Gascon squire Nirac, who takes it upon himself to perform a terrible service for his beloved master;  Katherine’s brother in law, that brilliant observer of his time, Geoffrey Chaucer; John’s lovely, serene first wife Lady Blanche and his odd, spiky second wife, the Castilian princess Costanza; the English mystic Lady Julian of Norwich, who comforts Katherine in a period of extreme suffering—and many, many more. It’s not only characterisation at which the author excels, however; the historical setting, the background of major events, such as plague, war, and rebellion, as well as the innumerable details of ordinary life, are flawlessly recreated.

Katherine not only enthralled me: it totally changed my idea of Chaucer. We had to study ‘The Knight’s Tale’ at school, the year after I read the book, and it made the whole thing much easier, because rightly or wrongly I could visualise Geoffrey as a person. As well, it made the experience of Katherine even more real—reading the work of a man who had actually known her in life was exciting, a kind of reflected glory that quite reconciled me to the funny Chaucerian spellings!

Reading Katherine again now, not only as an adult, but as a writer myself, I am struck by how very good, even brilliant, it still is. There is nothing dated about it, either in style or in character or in essence, and to my mind it is one of the greatest of English-language historical novels.

Back in my teens, after reading Katherine several times, I rushed off to look for other Anya Seton titles. Though none quite had the stunning impact of Katherine, I enjoyed them all. Two especially I still remember with great fondness, and have had much pleasure in re-reading: Green Darkness, a part-historical, part-fantasy novel, shuttling between the 20th and 16th centuries; and Dragonwyck, a rather Rebecca-like novel set in 1840’s upstate New York, centred around the haunted New York Dutch family, the Van Ryns, and their mansion, Dragonwyck.

But it is only recently that I have realised that Anya Seton’s life was as extraordinary as her fiction. Born in New York in 1906, she was christened Ann, the only child of two wealthy, prominent writers: Ernest Thompson Seton, and Grace Gallatin Thompson Seton. Ernest, who was born in Northumberland but migrated with his family to Canada as a child, was a world-famous naturalist and anthropologist, as well as an adventurer, an artist and writer. From an early age, he was fascinated by both the natural world and the world of the Native Americans, and as an adult, he spent a long time travelling, living in the wilderness of Manitoba, tracking animals and learning skills from the Cree Indians. A gifted artist who had exhibited in Europe and America, he had written and illustrated several natural history books before publishing the book that made both his fame and fortune: Wild Animals I have Known, published in 1898, and never out of print since. As well as publishing several books, he was a famous lecturer, co-founder of the Boy Scouts of America, and founder of the Woodcraft League.

His wife Grace, daughter of a beautiful Californian socialite who, after her divorce, had come to live in New York, was no slouch either. She wrote several very popular and highly-regarded ‘personal travel’ books. She was also president of the Connecticut Women’s Suffrage League, served two terms as president of the National League of American Pen Women, and organised, and later, commanded, a women’s mobile relief unit in France in World War I! Young Ann was brought up in the family mansion, under the care of a nanny, and later went to boarding school, but she also travelled a great deal with her parents. She was apparently a hauntingly beautiful and very intelligent child, but though she did well at school, did not go to college. Instead she got married at nineteen and ran away to Oxford with her new husband. Perhaps the artistic hothouse that was home was just a little too much for her! (As was perhaps not surprising given the strong wills and personalities of Ernest and Grace, they divorced in 1934).

It was not until Ann was in her early thirties, and herself already divorced, remarried, and with three children from those two marriages, that she fulfilled a long-held dream of becoming a writer. As Anya Seton, she published her first novel, My Theodosia, in 1941. She obviously had her father’s golden touch: the novel was an immediate bestseller. More successful novels followed, some of which, like Dragonwyck, were made into  Hollywood films in the 40’s and 50’s. Over a 34-year career, which included many long periods travelling and researching, she wrote twelve novels, some of them ‘straight’ historical novels, like Katherine, others mixtures of fantasy, the supernatural, and history, like Green Darkness. Her last novel, Smouldering Fires, was published in 1975; the author herself lived for another fifteen years after that. Though all her novels were popular worldwide, it is definitely Katherine which to both critics and readers alike represents the high point of her considerable gifts, and which will live forever in the minds and hearts of thousands of once-were-teenagers, now grown men and women.

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14 Comments

  1. Juliet on May 18, 2011 at 8:08 am

    Fascinating post! I remember loving Anya Seton’s books when I was younger – must read some again and see if they’ve retained their magic for me. And congratulations (again) on your award, Sophie, so well deserved!



  2. Kathleen Bolton on May 18, 2011 at 8:17 am

    HUGE CONGRATS, Sophie!!!

    I love Anya Seton. She’s the queen of the historical. I haven’t read her in years, but I will rectify the oversight this summer for sure!



  3. Kristan Hoffman on May 18, 2011 at 8:36 am

    Congratulations on the award!! And thanks for the introduction to a book and an author who have inspired you so.

    Not gonna lie, every time you mention “green,” I was like, “Good girl, she didn’t use ‘verdant’!” I guess yesterday’s post really sunk in. :P



  4. liz michalski on May 18, 2011 at 8:38 am

    Congrats on the award! I’ve never heard of Anya Seton, but shall go and read her posthaste!



  5. Kim Kircher on May 18, 2011 at 10:26 am

    Nice work. Looks like I have a new book to add to my must-read list.



  6. Caroline Starr Rose on May 18, 2011 at 11:11 am

    I’m a huge Katherine fan, too. When I read a bit of Thomas Costain’s NF about the Plantagenets, I was a bit saddened by the real picture the commoners had of John of Gaunt. You know, burning his home, and all.

    Just this year I picked up MISTRESS OF THE MONARCHY, a NF about K. by Alison Weir. Parts are slow, but if you love Katherine, I recommend it!



  7. Elizabeth Kerri Mahon on May 18, 2011 at 11:44 am

    I’ve been a huge fan of Anya Seton since the age of 11. Katherine is one of my favorite books along with That Winthrop Woman. I remember being amazed that the novel was based on a true story.



  8. Erika Robuck on May 18, 2011 at 2:21 pm

    I don’t know how (as an historical fiction author) I’ve never heard of her, but I can’t wait to read KATHERINE!

    Thanks for this post, and congratulations on your news!



  9. Jennifer Karin on May 18, 2011 at 3:17 pm

    Katherine is one of my all time favorites. It was so nice to visit with her again. Thank you!



  10. Anne Greenwood Brown on May 18, 2011 at 4:07 pm

    Congratulations, Sophie!

    Being a medieval studies major (what was I thinking?), I am embarrassed to say I don’t know this book. I’m going to pick it up tonight. It has to be infinitely better than the drudgery that is Wuthering Heights, and I desperately need an excuse to put that one aside.



  11. Keziah Hill on May 18, 2011 at 4:35 pm

    Katherine was the first romance I ever read when I was about 13 and set me on a life long interest in the Plantagenets and the Wars of the Roses. I have Alison Weir’s book about her on my TBR pile.



  12. Sophie Masson on May 18, 2011 at 5:22 pm

    Thank you all very much for your congrats, it was such a big thrill, winning this award!
    To all of you who haven’t read Katherine yet, you’re in for a real treat! Almost envy you, reading that beautiful book for the first time!



  13. Autumn St John on May 19, 2011 at 11:44 am

    Congratulations on your award, Sophie.

    Even though I studied the black death and that whole period of medieval history in my first year at uni, I’ll have to add my name to the list of people who’ve never heard of this novel before. But I do know what it’s like to read an absolutely game-changing book for the first time, so I look forward to getting my hands on this!



  14. Jennifer Jensen on May 19, 2011 at 7:39 pm

    I loved Anya Seton as a teen – Green Darkness, That Winthrop Woman, and Dragonwyck – but somehow I never came across Katherine. And I definitely have an interest besides the author and a favorite time period/place – Katherine is one of my ancestors! Adding it to my next bookstore order.