


konallis Roasemary Sutcliff’s #ShiftingSands was published in 1977.ġ2 yr old Blue Feather is promised to Chief of her People, Long Axe … | 3 days ago.twitter guardianstyle Can you help? Can twitter help?Ĭc IMcMillan MichaelRosenYes | OED Why / How has ‘unicorn’ (mythical beast) become a term for tech startup company that reaches a $1 billion dollar market value? | 2 days ago.Walter Hodges Carnegie Medal Charles Keeping children’s books children’s literature Dark & Middle Ages diary disability dogs education Fantasy film garden hawthorn health historical fiction History inspiration interviews journal King Arthur lego models music nature Newbery Medal politics questions & answers quotes reading reviews Romans translation Vikings writers writing young adult fiction Source: The Economist, December 4, 1993Īncient Greece Archaeology Arthurian authors awards books Brexit C.At their best, they have the confident sweep and pomp of Victorian narrative painting. The illustrations by Alan Lee do the book a great service. This helps children to see the characters of the great protagonists all the more clearly. Like all her books, it is an intellectually-taxing read - but it also manages to sort out some of the complicated strands of Homer’s often digressive narrative. The first of these, Black Ships Before Troy, her version of the Iliad, is now out. The last two books that she completed were children’s versions of Homer. Yet Rosemary Sutcliff produced many outstanding works of fiction over a 40-year-period - most notably her cycle of novels which dealt with the Roman occupation of Britain. (Blog editor’s note: actually, she did not die from Still’s disease!). One of the 20th century’s great writers of historical fiction for children died in 1992 from a disabling disease that had confined her to a wheelchair for much of her working life.
