![]() ![]() Tremain's latest novel, The Gustav Sonata, takes us to Switzerland just before the Second World War. It shows a refugee from eastern Europe, struggling to survive on casual jobs, hungry, lost, homesick. A recent novel, The Road Home, is set in today's London. All Tremain's novels are primarily about character her empathy and imagination are stirred by people adrift or isolated by circumstance. Tremain's first big success, Restoration, revisited a much-explored costume drama site but was never weighed down by wigs and diamonds in the time of England's Charles II. That's a long way from the gritty realism of her New Zealand gold rush novel, The Colour. Ranging daringly in time and place, her novels include Music and Silence, set in Denmark at the eccentric court of Christian IV. What she writes about is quite different. Her own world is quintessentially English.Īs chancellor of the University of East Anglia, author of 15 highly praised novels, partner of the celebrated biographer Richard Holmes, Tremain knows about success and privilege at the centre of British cultural life. It sounds like dangerous advice but it has worked well for Tremain herself. ![]() "Write about what you don't know," Rose Tremain once told a group of aspiring writers. ![]()
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