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Listen to a podcast of Margaret George, and other biographers of Henry VIII, discussing the king's enduring legacy on May 30th for Historic Royal Palaces.
click here and select the May 30th Podcast.
Listen to Margaret George being interviewed about Helen of Troy.
click here
Listen to Margaret George being interviewed about Cleopatra on NPR's Theme and Variations.
click here
Listen to Margaret George being interviewed about Mary Magdalene by Shelley Irwin at WGVU (NPR affiliate)
in Grand Rapids, MI in March 2004.
click here
Listen to Margaret George being interviewed
about her book The Autobiography of Henry VIII.
click here
Margaret George is a rolling stone who has lived in many places, beginning
her traveling at the age of four when her father joined the U.S. diplomatic
service and was posted to a consulate in Taiwan. The family traveled on
a freighter named after Ulysses' son Telemachus that took thirty days
to reach Taiwan, where they spent two years. Following that they lived
in Tel Aviv (right after the 1948 war, when it was relatively quiet),
Bonn and Berlin (during the spy-and-Cold-War days) before returning to
Washington DC at the height of Elvis-mania where Margaret went to high
school. Margaret's first piece of published writing, at the age of thirteen,
was a letter to TIME Magazine defending Elvis against his detractors.
(Margaret has since been to Graceland.)
But it was earlier in Israel that Margaret, an avid reader, began writing
novels to amuse herself when she ran out of books to read. Interestingly,
the subject of these was not what lay around her in the Middle East, but
the American west, which she had never set foot in. (Now that she lives
in the American midwest she writes about the Middle East!) Clearly writing
in her case followed Emily Dickinson's observation "There is no frigate
like a book" and she used it to go to faraway places. Now she has added
another dimension to that travel by specializing in visiting times remote
from herself.
Neither of these horse sagas got published, but the ten-year-old author
received an encouraging note from an editor at Grosset & Dunlap, telling
her she had a budding talent but should work on her spelling.
It was also in Israel that Margaret started keeping land tortoises as
pets, an interest which she still follows today. She had a great affinity
for animals and nature and that led her to a double major at Tufts University
in English literature and biology. Following that she received an MA in
ecology from Stanford University---one of the earliest departments to
offer such a concentration. Today she is active in environmental and animal
conservation groups.
Combining her interests led her to a position as a science writer at the
National Cancer Institute (National Institutes of Health) in Bethesda,
Maryland for four years.
Her marriage at the end of that time meant moving, first to St. Louis,
then to Uppsala, Sweden, and then to Madison, Wisconsin, where she and
her husband Paul have lived for more than twenty years now. They have
one grown daughter who lives in California and is in graduate school.
Through all this Margaret continued to write, albeit slowly and always
on only one project at a time. She wrote what she refers to as her 'Ayn
Rand/adventure novel' in college and her 'Sex and the City' novel in Washington
DC. It was in St. Louis that she suddenly got the idea of writing a 'psycho-biography'
of Henry VIII. She had never seen such a thing done but became convinced
the king was a victim of bad PR and she should rescue his good name. Her
background in science meant that only after thoroughly researching the
literature and scholarship on Henry VIII would she embark on the novel
itself. She sought the guidance of a Tudor historian at Washington University
for a reading list, and proceeded from there.
It was actually fourteen years between her initial idea and the publication
of The Autobiography of Henry VIII. The book made an impression
for several reasons: first, because no one had ever written a novel sympathetic
to the king before; second, because it covered his entire life from before
birth until after his death, making it almost a thousand pages long, and
third, because it was so fact-filled.
Following Henry VIII in 1986, she wrote Mary
Queen of Scotland and the Isles (1992) and The Memoirs of Cleopatra
(1997.) The Memoirs of Cleopatra was made into an ABC miniseries
in 1999, starring Timothy Dalton and Billy Zane. It has been translated
into thirteen languages, including Finnish and Korean. Mary Called
Magdalene was published in 2002, and now in 2006 she has two new
books: Helen of Troy and an illustrated children’s book
featuring her pet tortoise, Lucille Lost.
What started as an offhand idea has blossomed into a way of life---becoming
a biographer and spokesperson for those whom history has misunderstood.
She chooses people that appeal to her rather than having a specific agenda,
but because of the years of intense scholarly research required, she must
limit herself to subjects either in the ancient world or in renaissance
Britain.
Each subject leads her to explore places and meet people she would not
have access to otherwise, and that means that each book is an adventure
in itself. For example Margaret has a collection of vintage posters from
Elizabeth Taylor's "Cleopatra," including one in Czech.
Margaret is not home as much as she would like--- despite a life of travel
she really likes being at home---but when she is home she likes to pursue
her interests in tortoises (she belongs to the New York Turtle and Tortoise
Society), as well as archaeology (she is a member of the Archaeological
Institute of America), movies (the Wisconsin Screenwriters Forum), photography
and outdoor activities.
Margaret's family is of Scots/English/Irish background; one branch were
Quakers who came to America in the early 1700s. Finding no land left in
Pennsylvania they migrated south through the Cumberland Gap and settled
in Tennessee and Kentucky. Another side of the family settled in Mississippi.
The patriarch of this branch was known as "Hard Money Scott" because he
always demanded cash for purchases and paid in hard cash himself. Supposedly
Tories captured him during the Revolutionary War and held his feet over
a fire to get him to reveal where his money was hidden, but the old skinflint
refused and ended up with burnt feet but with his Scott Treasure intact.
He had buried it near Scott's Ferry in South Carolina and the family legend
is that it's still there. Today it's under a dam. If it's there at all
Margaret was born in Nashville, Tennessee. Her parents shared the love
of words, ballads, and story-telling associated with the south; her father
came from a town near Oxford, Mississippi, where Faulkner lived and wrote
"the past is never gone, it's not even past"; using language well and
fancifully was a way of life there. Margaret's father was an eloquent
speaker and writer and when she read Cicero's description of Caesar's
writing---'his vocabulary is so varied and yet so exact' she knew he could
have been describing her father as well. She dedicated Mary Queen of
Scotland and the Isles to him.
Through family lines of both birth and marriage Margaret may have inherited
the Kirkpatrick "Curse of the Black Swan." In medieval times it was said
that any Kirkpatrick sighting a black swan would instantly be stricken
and die. Since there were no black swans in Scotland at the time, was
there much danger of this? Nonetheless descendants are warned to stay
away from bird sanctuaries that might harbor a black swan. Since the black
swan is native to Perth, Australia, Margaret will not be vacationing there.
(It has been suggested that the black swan in the curse was actually a
heraldic device rather than a real one. But why take chances?)

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