THURSDAY TRAILBLAZER: Bernice Rubens

BernicerBernice Rubens was a class act, even if the same couldn't always be said for her characters! (See the suicidal woman whose life is turned around by her diary in A Five Year Sentence for an example).

Rubens died in 2004, aged 76, having just completed her autobiography (great timing! - see, classy). Like Marian Keyes, she began writing at the age of 30 (having worked as a teacher and then a film-maker first) but then threw herself into it, writing twenty four novels plus her memoir, When I Grow Up. She won the Booker Prize in 1970 for her book The Elected Member, which established her as one of the best writers of her generation.

She was simply a great writer, with the capacity to create memorable if often odd characters and fascinating scenarios. She was also rather opinionated, laying into Martin Amis for writing a novel about the Holocaust that she found inappropriate. She described her writing as "Better than most, not as good as some." And she was probably right.

Read this: Madame Sousatzka (which appears to be shamefully out of print).

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THURSDAY TRAILBLAZER: Bernice Rubens - Comments

  • A Five Year Sentence has my favourite opening line ever (although it&#39s rather a dark and odd read). She&#39s *definitely* worth reading, though.

  • People have been recommending Bernice Rubens to me for years. So much so that I&#39m now frightened to read one in case I&#39m disappointed!

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