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Claire TomalinClaire Tomalin
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BiographyBiographer Claire Tomalin was born in London in 1933. After graduating from Newnham College, Cambridge, she worked in publishing for Heinemann, Hutchinson and Cape before switching to journalism, becoming literary editor of both the New Statesman magazine and the Sunday Times newspaper. She is a trustee of the National Portrait Gallery, London and the Wordsworth Trust, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and a Vice-President of English PEN.    
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Biography, Drama, Non-fiction     BibliographyThe Life and Death of Mary Wollstonecraft Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1974 Shelley and His World Thames & Hudson, 1980 Parents and Children (editor) Oxford University Press, 1981 Katherine Mansfield: A Secret Life Viking, 1987 The Invisible Woman: The Story of Nelly Ternan and Charles Dickens Viking, 1990 The Winter Wife (play) Nick Hern Books, 1991 Mrs Jordan's Profession Viking, 1994 Jane Austen: A Life Viking, 1997 Maurice, or the Fisher's Cot by Mary Shelley (editor) Viking, 1998 Several Strangers: Writing from Three Decades Viking, 1999 Samuel Pepys: The Unequalled Self Viking, 2002 Thomas Hardy: The Time-Torn Man Viking, 2006 The Poems of Thomas Hardy (editor) Penguin, 2007 The Poems of John Milton (editor) Penguin, 2008  
  Prizes and awards1974 Whitbread First Novel Award The Life and Death of Mary Wollstonecraft 1990 James Tait Black Memorial Prize (for biography) The Invisible Woman: The Story of Nelly Ternan and Charles Dickens 1991 Hawthornden Prize The Invisible Woman: The Story of Nelly Ternan and Charles Dickens 1991 NCR Book Award for Non-Fiction The Invisible Woman: The Story of Nelly Ternan and Charles Dickens 2002 Los Angeles Times Book Prize (Biography) (shortlist) Samuel Pepys: The Unequalled Self 2002 Whitbread Biography Award Samuel Pepys: The Unequalled Self 2002 Whitbread Book of the Year Samuel Pepys: The Unequalled Self 2003 British Book Awards Biography of the Year (shortlist) Samuel Pepys: The Unequalled Self 2003 Samuel Pepys Award Samuel Pepys: The Unequalled Self 2007 British Book Awards Biography of the Year (shortlist) Thomas Hardy: The Time-Torn Man    
  Critical PerspectiveIn the acknowledgments section of her latest biography, Thomas Hardy: The Time-Torn Man (2006), Claire Tomalin recalls the ‘unforgettable experience’, as a Cambridge student in the early 1950s, of hearing George ‘Dadie’ Rylands recite Hardy’s ‘Poems of 1912-13’. She describes these as ‘one of the finest and strangest celebrations of the dead in English poetry’. Rylands, a long-serving Cambridge don and friend of the Bloomsbury writers, was of a generation who would have known Hardy as a living presence in English literature. And in Katherine Mansfield: A Secret Life (1987), a marginal note records another kind of personal link with her subject, mentioning Mansfield’s occupation of a flat in the Gray’s Inn Road during 1913: ‘For some years – until 1986 – the next door building housed the Sunday Times newspaper … [and] for six years the author shared K.M.’s view’. This reminds us that, before becoming a full-time writer, Tomalin was an influential Literary Editor of the Sunday Times. And that, as a biographer she often manages to, in a larger sense, ‘share the view’ of her subjects, explaining the reasons and pressures lying behind what might otherwise be thought of as irrational life decisions by women trying to balance family life and the demands of their art.
Thus she has at times drawn upon the collective memory of her female relatives as well as her own experiences of marriage and mothering. She brings impeccable research to her biographies but also a wealth of knowledge about the lives she writes about, especially the realities of women’s lives in the past. For her, ‘biography is a branch of history’, perhaps more precisely social history. In her first book, The Life and Death of Mary Wollstonecraft (1974), she fully explains the sources of feminist ideas in the epoch-making ‘Vindication of the Rights of Women’. We are also informed about medical procedures in the eighteenth century (all-purpose cupping and purging), and about birth control (practised mainly by prostitutes, the ‘repositories of female knowledge’). In Mrs Jordan’s Profession (1994), discussing the choices made by the famous comic actress and royal mistress Dora Jordan, Tomalin remarks that they were ‘always mysterious, powered by forces that defy logic and prediction. The one bit of basic training all girls received in the eighteenth century, along with their needlework, was that they must be strict sexual bargainers. Any other woman could have told Dora not to trust her admirer’. Dora became the devoted mother of ten ‘natural’ children with the future King William IV but alas – a victim of the legal system as well as of subsequent Victorian biographers – ended her life in exile, penniless and separated from her family.
Nevertheless, as Tomalin points out, both the intellectual Wollstonecraft and the performer Jordan had important things in common: ‘personal experience of poverty that made them concerned to help their fellow women, and strength of character that allowed them to flout convention’. When dealing with the far more restricted life experiences of a socially conservative novelist of manners, in Jane Austen: A Life (1997), Tomalin notes the limitations placed upon unmarried women within households, pointing out that Austen seldom enjoyed a room of her own, and was largely an observer of the world she fictionalized. Under such circumstances, balls and dances were for women not only a marriage market but also ‘a liberating pleasure, a permitted high in women’s lives’, adding that it was ‘something women understood among themselves’. Yet Austen also enjoyed the hedonistic pleasures of the theatre, as on 7 March 1814 when she saw a farce, ‘The Devil to Pay’, starring – Dora Jordan.
Having made her reputation with books about these pioneering women, Tomalin has more recently enhanced it with biographies of men, namely Pepys and Hardy. In Samuel Pepys: The Unequalled Self (2002), she makes full use of the intimately revealing life details contained in the famous diary, declaring Pepys to be ‘both the most ordinary and the most extraordinary writer you will ever meet’. (In a radio discussion of the book, Tomalin disclosed that she first read Pepys’ diary, a present from her husband, when as a young mother she was recovering from illness). Thus the most vivid detailing occurs during the years of the diary, from the Restoration of the monarchy in 1660 to about 1669. We follow both his career as a naval administrator and – more fascinatingly for most readers – his love life: with his wife, his mistress, and several other women along the way. Tomalin as always fills in the historical context thoroughly, again using the diary descriptions to make vivid events such as the Great Fire of London (‘a shower of firedrops’ and ‘the cracking of houses’) as well as the gruesome mortality witnessed during the Great Plague. Almost equally memorable, however, are the all too human aspects of Pepys’ remarkable life, whether suffering the agonies of kidney stones or, rather more agreeably, dreaming about being in bed with the King’s mistress.
Tomalin’s biography of Thomas Hardy identifies the death of his wife Emma – specifically memorialized in the ‘Poems of 1912-13’ - as the time when Hardy at last became a great poet. The book is also about the rather longer process by which he also became a great novelist. As she later remarks, his ‘capacity to store up particular experiences and draw on them imaginatively in his writing years later was as strong in Hardy as in Wordsworth’. His relationship with Emma, both in their marriage of 38 years and after her death, was of great significance to his development as a writer, as was his loss of faith in Christianity (‘like shedding a protective skin’). Particularly interesting is Tomalin’s account of Hardy’s dealings with influential London literati such as Leslie Stephen and Edmund Gosse, and that the controversial subject matter of his novels meant that he ‘suffered from bowdlerizing editors throughout his writing career’. Tess of the D’Urbevilles, for instance, was expurgated for its serialization in magazine format. Nevertheless, ‘dinner parties had to be rearranged to take account of the warring opinions [it provoked]. And it sold and sold’. In an epilogue, Tomalin tells the curious tale of what happened to Hardy’s heart (when it was removed from his body in death) – or rather, the several possible endings to the tale. She concludes, however, with a magisterial summary of his life and art: ‘He knew the past like a man who has lived more than one span of life, and he understood how difficult it is to cast aside the beliefs of your forebears’. Tomalin’s biographical skills bring us close to her subjects, the details of their lives, in ways that are always sympathetic and uncommonly revealing.
Dr Jules Smith, 2008  
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