Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Sutcliff, Rosemary - Marcus Crouch
Sutcliff, Rosemary - Marcus Crouch
MARCUS CROUCH
Rosemary Sutcliff is an intuitive historian. This is not to say that she is not most careful and exact in research, but that her ability to think herself back into the past transcends scholarship. Her acknowledged master is Kipling who had the same gift for feeling history through his nerves and seeking it through the soil. Rosemary Sutcliff began her career with The Queen Elizabeth Story [1950], a gentle, charmingly written story with an element of fantasy and a pervading sweetness which bordered on sentimentality. This was the vein of several succeeding stories until suddenly, in Simon [1953] the author found her strength in a brilliant realistic picture of life in the civil wars. In later books she developed her gift for strong vigorous narrative and replaced the sentimentality with an increasing harshness. The Eagle of the Ninth [1954], a story of Roman rule in Britain, and The Shield Ring [1956], which described the...
[The entire page is 384 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Louise S. Bechtel
- Naomi Lewis
- Lavinia R. Davis
- Louise S. Bechtel
- Elizabeth Hodges
- Margaret Sherwood Libby
- J. O. Prestwich
- Lavinia R. Davis
- Eric Hood
- The Times Literary Supplement
- Margaret Sherwood Libby
- C. S. Bennett
- The Times Literary Supplement
- Carolyn Horovitz
- Margaret Meek
- Marcus Crouch
- Robert Payne
- Padraic Colum
- SHEILA EGOFF, G. T. STUBBS, and L. F. ASHLEY
- Joan V Marder
- Eleanor Cameron
- The Times Literary Supplement
- John Rowe Townsend
- MAY HILL ARBUTHNOT and ZENA SUTHERLAND
- Feenie Ziner
- Jill Paton Walsh
- Margery Fisher
- Sarah Hayes
- Pauline Clarke
- Elaine Moss
- Ann Evans
- Marcus Crouch
- Hilary Wright
- Neil Philip
- Marcus Crouch
- Sheila A. Egoff
- Neil Philip
- Margery Fisher
- Anne Duchene
- Copyright
