Hilary Mantel (1952 – 2022)
Hilary Mantel, prolific author, has died suddenly from a stroke at the age of 70. She was a genius in her main chosen field of historical fiction, but was denied a third Booker prize for the third novel in her trilogy “The Mirror and The Light”. I am reposting parts of my 2013 blog, written before that was published:
From my blog in 2013:
“Mantel certainly has turned the Tudor tale on its axis, and turned the current literary scene too. The Guardian printed an article last week imploring that she didn’t receive the award, and to let someone else have the opportunity! She won the Man Booker prize for “Wolf Hall” in 2009. Her second book “Bring up the Bodies” won the 2012 Man Booker prize, and the Costa Book of the Year award last week.
What has interested me about Hilary Mantel since I first set eyes on her is her astrology, and her past lives! As soon as I saw her on television, I was hooked. With her round face and big blue eyes, she looked like the textbook Cancerian which she is. Moreover, she had Cancerian health issues, centring around the female reproductive system (endemetriosis).
These issues may also have stemmed from past life issues, according to an account she gave of a regression that she had, although she did feel ambivalent about it. Her friend, the novelist Adam Thorpe (author of “Ulverton”, a work of English rural history) also seems to have an interest in past lives, and may well be a member of her Soul group.
The brilliance of her intuition and spellbinding storytelling is shown in her chart by Sun exactly conjunct Uranus in Cancer (a sign associated with literature and imagination), and her success assisted by an exact sextile of Jupiter to this conjunction. Her dramatic perception and depiction of the past and historical power play is shown by Pluto on the South Node. That she can sustain her writing almost in the manner of a Russian novelist, is enabled by an exact sextile between her Mercury and Saturn.
From the beginning, I had thought her level of interest and the detail plus the imagination of her original book “Wolf Hall” must have been written with some level of past-life recall, with an interplay between her conscious and unconscious mind. She may well have observed the material she writes about at close quarters, at the time it was played out. And that is how I feel about several writers of the historical genre (fiction or non-fiction) who tend to write about and specialize in a particular era.
Hilary Mantel and Regression
Hilary wrote about her “brush” with regression in a Guardian article of January 2010. She was not comfortable with her practitioner (you do need to choose a practitioner you are comfortable with), but did experience enough to grasp the issues involved and own her feelings about it. She writes about being aware of her own current life at the same time as experiencing the past life (which is what I aim for when working).
In her own words:
‘…I was aware of everything around me…yet I was on board ship, I was in a railway car, I was in an alien land. I was still inside Sara, or she inside me, when she reached her 70s and her heart failed’. “
Note the same age in the regression as her life span in this lifetime. I think I speak for all when I say we are grateful she wrote as much as she did in the time available.
September 25th, 2022 at 4:25 pm
hI lANA
i HAVE A FAMILY
September 25th, 2022 at 4:33 pm
Hi Lana
Sorry about the above, both me and my computer to blame. I was going to say a close family member is a huge Hilary Mantel enthusiast, and upset by her untimely death. I said I wasn’t a fan of the Tudor era, possibly due to a past life, and couldn’t read her Cromwell work. I am amazed to find now that she had past life visions which makes me feel how accurate her work is.
Thanks for your insights.
Love Sarah
September 25th, 2022 at 7:54 pm
Reading that trilogy I really felt as if she had a window into a universe in which the sixteenth century was continually being played out in the Now, and that she was able to report on it as it happened. I don’t think I have had that sense with any other writer. What a genius.
September 26th, 2022 at 10:05 am
Dear Sarah
I see you got caught by Mercury Retrograde there!
I am with you on the Tudor area, though it is a favourite with many people, including my elderly mother.
Though I put the emphasis on past lives in that 2013 blog, and though she definitely had a past life regression, her detailed scholarly research and intelligence are probably the paramount features of her trilogy. Past life memory may have only been a small contribution to those works, and there is another possibility: that she consciously or unconsciously read the akashic records.
I am not sure that past lives were the focus of her thought and ideas. She was once quizzed about the afterlife, and gave quite a vague reply.
“Yes. I can’t imagine how it might work. However, the universe is not limited by what I can imagine.”
But she was very visual, and had visions as a child.
It is interesting about the life span revealed for the previous life, because often a person is presented with a crisis or choice at the age of a previous death. More usually they survive, but often they have a choice whether to continue with the dilemma.
Many thanks for your comment.
Love
Lana
September 26th, 2022 at 10:09 am
Dear Daphne
Thanks very much for your contribution. I love your description of her writing quality and achievement.
I think one of the amazing things about her work was how she totally turned round the reputation and insight into the character of Cromwell.
Hopefully, she will inspire others, though it sounds like no one else could do what she did.
Love
Lana