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Michèle RobertsMichèle Roberts
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BiographyNovelist and poet Michèle Roberts was born in Hertfordshire, England, on 20 May 1949 to a French Catholic mother and an English Protestant father. She was educated at a convent school before studying at Somerville College, Oxford, and University College, London.
Michèle Roberts was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1999. She lives in London and in Mayenne, France and was awarded the Chevalier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres (France) in 2000. A memoir, Paper Houses, was published in 2007.    
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Drama, Essays, Fiction, Non-fiction, Poetry, Short stories     BibliographyCutlasses and Earrings (editor with Michelene Wandor) Playbooks, 1977 A Piece of the Night Women's Press, 1978 Tales I Tell My Mother: A Collection of Feminist Short Stories (contributor) Journeyman Press, 1978 Touch Papers (with Judith Kazantzis and Michelene Wandor) Allison & Busby, 1982 The Visitation Women's Press, 1983 The Wild Girl Methuen, 1984 The Mirror of the Mother: Selected Poems 1975-1985 Methuen, 1986 More Tales I Tell My Mother: Feminist Short Stories (contributor) Journeyman, 1987 The Book of Mrs Noah Methuen, 1987 The Seven Deadly Sins (contributor) Serpent's Tail, 1987 In the Red Kitchen Methuen, 1990 The Seven Cardinal Virtues (contributor) Serpent's Tail, 1990 Psyche and the Hurricane Methuen, 1991 Daughters of the House Virago, 1992 During Mother's Absence Virago, 1993 Flesh & Blood Virago, 1994 All the Selves I Was: New and Selected Poems Virago, 1995 Mind Readings: Writer's Journeys Through Mental States (editor with Blake Morrison and Sara Dunn) Minerva, 1996 Impossible Saints Little, Brown, 1997 Food, Sex and God: On Inspiration and Writing Virago, 1998 Fair Exchange Little, Brown, 1999 The Looking Glass Little, Brown, 2000 Playing Sardines Virago, 2001 The Mistressclass Little, Brown, 2003 Reader, I Married Him Little, Brown, 2005 Paper Houses Virago, 2007 The Secret Gospel of Mary Magdalene Pegasus Books, 2007 Delusion Pegasus Books, 2008  
  Prizes and awards1992 Booker Prize for Fiction (shortlist) Daughters of the House 1993 WH Smith Literary Award Daughters of the House 2000 Chevalier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres (France)    
  Critical PerspectiveMichèle Roberts’ recent memoir, Paper Houses (2007), is not only an entertainingly frank account of her bohemian life in London during the 1970s and beyond but also gives us a good deal of insight into her writing. Drawing on her diaries of the period, she brings back a more political, though also hedonistic era of radical feminism, communes and demonstrations. And the friendships she made and has kept ever since, notably with fellow feminist writers such as Sara Maitland, Micheline Wandor and Alison Fell. Roberts also self-analyzes the effects of her Anglo-French family’s Catholicism (‘the nun in my head, that monstrous Mother Superior’), which have remained a fertile source, even as she reacted against its overt doctrines. Her exploration of London, the various areas and houses that she lived in, went alongside her development as a writer. For her, writing ‘meant voyaging into the unknown and having adventures’ though also ‘bearing witness to other people’s stories as well as my own’.
As she describes, Roberts’ early writing was encouraged by her participation in feminist theatre and writing groups. Her journalism started to appear in associated magazines of the early-mid 1970s, notably Spare Rib (of which she became poetry editor), Red Rag and later on, City Limits; her stories were included in the collective publication Tales I Tell My Mother: A Collection of Feminist Stories (1978). That same year she published her first novel, A Piece of the Night, which – as most of her subsequent books do – moves between France and England, between the past and present. Its heroine Julie looks back to her convent schooling by nuns, and at her current life in a London commune with her lesbian lover. In depression she thinks of herself as ‘a fragment of dark’ but finds the strength to leave the commune, ‘no longer corpses in the church and mouths of men’. The ‘secret gospel’ story of another errant woman in the eyes of the church, Mary Magdalene, is the basis of The Wild Girl (1984), which puts together religious feeling, women’s lives and sensuality in a more sophisticated fictional form. Spiritual and bodily concerns of a differing sort inform the playful narrative of In the Red Kitchen (1990), based on a celebrated charlatan 19th-century medium, using multiple female voices to tell the tale. Interspersed with Flora Milk’s travails is the narrative of a modern woman decorating a Victorian era house – and seeing a vision of Flora’s ghost in the basement.
Roberts’ best-known novel is Daughters of the House (1992), which was short-listed for the Booker Prize for Fiction and won the W.H. Smith Literary Award (the money, as her memoir explains, ‘changed my life’, enabling her long-desired purchase of a house in France). The return of nun Therese to the family home in France after 20 years, a house now occupied by her English cousin Leonie, provokes a shift back in time to their childhood intimacy, when being ‘proper jeune filles’ meant ‘having secrets’. Alongside their emerging sexuality, the girls’ religious visions attract the attentions of the church hierarchy. The village’s grim wartime secrets start to be uncovered, and Leonie finds that the house itself contains disturbing ghosts. Roberts’ conjuring up of the sensuality of religious feeling, and her trademark exploration of women’s desires, is perhaps at its peak in this book.
Alongside her novels, Roberts has consistently written poetry, much of it exploring similar themes of sex, food, God and women’s lives. The best of a number of volumes is selected in All the Selves I Was (1995), with a characteristic tribute to the ‘women who cradled me, and made me rise, / I am bread, you were yeast and salt in me’ (‘Lament for my grandmother’). The subject of mothers and daughters is given a classical form in a series about Persephone’s departure from Demeter to enter the underworld: ‘I shall be crying loudly / for the mother and women lovers I leave behind’. Family relations are also reflected in poems about her dying father (‘Lacrimae rerum’), and repairing relations with a sister: ‘what has divided us/ comes down …. / and we chew over / the babies you’ve got / the baby I dreamed I’d steal’ (‘The day the wall came down’).
Roberts’ recent novels have been written alongside her commitment to teaching Creative Writing (most recently at the University of East Anglia). She has always been interested in the forms that fiction can take. As she explains in her memoir, ‘all my novels enact problem-solving, pose questions of content and form then try to answer them’. While she still deals with women’s explorations - of houses, religion, and desire - Roberts’ fictional manner has become ever more assured. In The Looking Glass (2000), she speculates that ‘Perhaps Eve’s punishment, thrust forth from paradise, was to become a storyteller’. Again set in France, through its multiple voices we observe Genevieve, a young girl taken from an orphanage run by nuns. She works for bar owner Madame Patin, whose meanings she perceives ‘were sealed under a skin of silence, as you seal pate under fat’ (one of Roberts’ typical culinary metaphors). The girl’s domestic life of cooking and cleaning is disturbed by the growing interest in her by the men she encounters through the bar. But her loyalty remains to the past, ‘my country and my prison and my home’.
By contrast, Reader, I Married Him (2005) is a delightful comic novel, something of an exercise in storytelling arts, and a playful dance through her favourite subjects – food, religion and sex. It remains light-hearted even as its narrator Aurora tells us about the tragic deaths of her three husbands, and awkward relations with her blunt-speaking stepmother Maude, who tells her: ‘Every woman owes it to herself to get married once … but you don’t have to make a habit of it’. To get away from it all, Aurora flies to Italy to visit her old friend Leonora, now a nun at a somewhat eccentric convent. In Italy, Aurora re-discovers her appetite for delicious food, and delicious sexual encounters – even fantasizing about handsome priest Michael, who is, however, not what he appears to be. The action is full of witty dialogue and observations, comical reversals of fortune. A central scene is set in a restaurant full of pompous male Catholic priests and alluring ‘postulant waitresses flying to and fro with charged trays’, done with a nice sense of farce. Pistol-wielding nun Leonora is arrested: ‘I haven’t spent a night in jail since the seventies, she remarked’. Aurora’s past deeds threaten to catch up with her, but she remains jaunty up to the final revealing sentence. With this book, and in her entertaining memoir, Michele Roberts shows that she remains a libertarian feminist – and a subversively witty one.
Dr Jules Smith, 2008    
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