
My interview with Brenda Rickman Vantrease is just the second author interview I had ever done. I clearly remember going to my book shelves one night to pull down all of the books I had recently read, emailing all of the authors whose contact information I could find. I was extatic the following day when several had replied, in fact 95% of all of the authors I have ever contacted have happily agreed to participate - there are a few who have been busy and some who have not been so gracious. Some day I fancy writing a tell all in which I unmask the friendly. Some day.
Brenda's book The Illuminator is historical fiction that deals with the process of book illuminating, some very engaging characters and that state of religious change and reformation spurred on by the English translation of Bible scriptures which was at the time very much against the teachings of the church. At a time in my college education when I was pooring over medieval church history as part of my major in English history The Illuminator provided me with interesting characters (Julian of Norwich, for example, a real life and prolific religious mystic who claimed a connection with God) who were not only living in the time period but followed the beliefs of men like John Wycliffe and his Lollards - beliefs and ideas and individuals that I was working to memorize for upcoming exams.

Kelly Hewitt: You taught in the Metro Nashville School System for 25 years before retiring in 1991 to write full-time. What was that first month like? Had you already been working on "The Illuminator" or did you start after you were done teaching?

KH: I read in an article that you joined a writer's group in order to gain support and have said, "I could never have done it without them." Are you still a member of a group? What would you suggest aspiring writer's look for when joining a writer's group?
BRV: From within that first large group I was able to find a few like-minded souls, all committed, all at about the same stage and level of understanding of the craft. We all wanted to write novels and decided to meet once a week and critique each other's work in a very honest, take-no-prisoners kind of way. The critiques were helpful, but the best thing about that group was the discipline. We felt pressure to produce--much like homework--every week, until it developed into a good work habit. Much of what we produced was throwaway quality, but we were putting words on paper and learning how to write for readers.
Unfortunately, my group broke up when two of the members moved a continent away. We still keep in touch, still exchange manuscripts, but it's not the same. So I'd say proximity is one of the things to look for in a writer's group. Look for people who share your level of commitment and people whose work you don't mind reading, because you'll read a lot of it.

BRV: Actually, it was reading Julian that led me into the story. I wanted to write about her, but found it daunting to base a whole novel around what is recorded of her limited life experience. I couldn't really get inside her head. I guess I'm not that holy. So she became a minor character whos philosophy I used as a theme, a sort of touchstone for all the othe characters. Margery Kempe and Hildegard of Bingen also fascinate me.
KH: One review, and I note for the record that it was indeed just *one* review, noted the similarities between The Illuminator and Anya Seton's Katherine. Both novels have Julian of Norwich and John of Gaunt as characters. Is this something that others have brought to your attention? If so, how do you respond to that?

KH: Your second novel The Mercy Seller is due out in February (of 2007). Can you give us a bit of information about new book?
BRV: I guess I could not bear to part with Finn and Kathryn. They stayed with me and are characters in THE MERCY SELLER, although it is basically the story of Finn's young granddaughter, the child at the end of the story.

The conflict in this story also arises from the historical persecutions of the Lollards and the early English Bible translators. The setting is 1412 and the story begins in Prague when three young men, converts of the reformer Jan Hus, are executed for burning papal indulgences. The setting later shifts to England where Henry V and Archbishop Thomas Arundel are set on burning out the 'heretics." Like THE ILLUMINATOR, THE MERCY SELLER, is a story of romance and intrigue.
KH: I am one of those who can't help but fill their shelves with books, CD, and movies. What is the one thing that loads down the shelf of Brenda Rickman Vantrease?
BRV: Books on the cultural, political, and religious history of England. I'm an addict of English history. And now my shelves are loaded with foreign translations of THE ILLUMINATOR. What a hoot! I can't read anything in them but my name.
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