regshoe: The Uffington White Horse: a chalk figure of a horse made on a hillside (White horse)
[personal profile] regshoe
It was time for another Sutcliff, and I thought the history in this one looked especially interesting. I was right!

The Rider of the White Horse (1959) is, like Bonnie Dundee, much more closely based on real history than Sutcliff's Roman novels. It centres on Anne and Thomas Fairfax, Thomas being the real rather important Parliamentarian commander in the Civil War and Anne his real wife; the book opens with the events leading ominously up to the outbreak of war and has its dramatic climax at the battle of Marston Moor in 1644. And most of its plot consists simply of how the main characters experience their historical lives during the war—I wouldn't call it meandering, but it felt much more like a continuous experience of history than a neatly-plotted novel, something which I think it has in common with Sword at Sunset (although that one is less historically specific, of course).

Something else which increasingly seems typical of Sutcliff the more I read of her books is the complicated and difficult relationship in an arranged marriage. In this case, Thomas is perfectly content to be married to Anne and treats her kindly, but Anne loves Thomas passionately and wishes in vain that he could return her love, leading to much difficulty and heartbreak. I don't usually like these dynamics very much; this one wasn't hugely my thing either, but I liked it better than some of Sutcliff's other similar relationships—possibly because it's not actually antagonistic, possibly because most of the focus and POV is with the woman, and Anne—loyal, brave, rather harsh, fiercely loving—is a very compelling character whose POV I really enjoyed spending time in, with all the emotional complexities involving Thomas and otherwise.

Also, while their relationship is in some ways the centre of the book, it's not really the focus for most of it. Instead what the book is mostly about is Anne's experience of being a soldier's wife and following him on campaign, which she does (historically did!) throughout the early stages of the war in the north. I loved this aspect of the book! Anne deals with the minor mundane hardships of life on campaign, having to give up progressively more luxuries, having to pack her things ready to leave for the next movement first thing in the morning on half an hour's notice; she experiences war up close from a woman's perspective, seeing the fighting and being in some danger from it but not able to take part, waiting to learn the outcome of pivotal battles taking place within earshot; caring for the wounded and seeing some of them die. She observes the suffering that the war brings to ordinary people in the places she visits; she has her small daughter Moll with her and has to deal with taking care of a child in the middle of a war; at one point she gets taken prisoner and has some exchanges with rather ambivalently noble enemies which I think D. K. Broster would have enjoyed. It's a rather different sort of focus from some of Sutcliff's other books, but all described with her characteristic beautiful attention to historical and descriptive detail, use of memorable and significant symbols, constant awareness of the natural world, emotional insightfulness and generally beautiful writing.

I also liked the setting, portrayed as it is with all this brilliant Sutcliffian detail and colour. The action takes place across Yorkshire from the dales to the Humber, and the book brings this dramatic and important part of the region's history to such life. Tangentially, it was interesting to see the pre-Industrial Revolution West Riding, with places like Leeds and Bradford appearing as small 'clothing towns'.

Around the edges of the book, but becoming rather more ominously prominent as events progress, there's a strong sense of historical significance. Thomas's attitude to the war itself is to see it as a combination of righteous cause and bitter necessity; he believes in the importance of opposing what the King is doing but doesn't really want to go to war with him, and he reacts to his own victories with a sort of shocked depression. Oliver Cromwell appears in a few important scenes, and Sutcliff conveys a powerful sense of what such a historically important man is like, which remains very ambivalent about the extent to which he—on the same side as our main characters—is a good thing. The book's overall attitude to the war is a rather strange blend of belief in the Parliamentarian cause with clear-headedness about the costs of war, a strong sense of historical significance and perhaps inevitability, and something else of fated wrongness. I'm struggling to describe it clearly—Right but Repulsive doesn't really cover it—but it made for a terribly engaging and interesting read.

Apparently some editions of this book are abridged, although I don't know what was cut out—I got my copy from the library and can't tell whether it's abridged or not, though it is a later edition (copyright 1967), so it might be.

Date: Jan. 28th, 2022 08:19 pm (UTC)
philomytha: airplane flying over romantic castle (Default)
From: [personal profile] philomytha
Ah, I love this one! Anne following the drum is amazing, and I do love the pining-within-arranged-marriage trope a lot, so that worked for me too (Heyer's A Civil Campaign is another one like that which I adore). And Thomas is such a fantastic character. But the scene that's always stayed with me is Anne when she's a prisoner and the White Lady she conjures up to save Bradford, that's such an intensely powerful bit of writing in so many ways.

My copy is abriged, but I've never been able to track down a non-abridged version so I have no idea what's left out.

Date: Jan. 28th, 2022 09:41 pm (UTC)
osprey_archer: (Default)
From: [personal profile] osprey_archer
Yes, the scene where Anne makes up the White Lady to save Bradford from the depredations of Royalist forces is so good. She's in such a seemingly powerless position and she's exerting herself to the fullest to save the town, and it seems like it can't possibly work, and then - it works!

The scene is even more powerful because some of Sutcliff's other books are so tragic. You know she's absolutely capable of Going There, so when she doesn't and instead the town is saved (more or less), the relief is real.

Date: Jan. 28th, 2022 08:38 pm (UTC)
hedgebird: (Default)
From: [personal profile] hedgebird
If it's the 1967 Hodder & Stoughton edition, you're safe. That's actually the edition that led me to notice the 2014 e-book was abridged (and I've compared it to the first edition). The e-book seems to be based, for some reason, on a 1964 Peacock Books YA edition (which imprint also did the bowdlerized YA edition of Sword at Sunset.)

What was cut out: graphic violence, anything vaguely suggestive of sex, lengthy description or material that builds theme or character but not plot.



Date: Jan. 30th, 2022 05:36 pm (UTC)
hedgebird: (Default)
From: [personal profile] hedgebird
Just to make it perfectly clear, I have no reason to think any other print edition than the Peacock is abridged. It was only the e-book that I meant to caution people about.

Date: Jan. 30th, 2022 09:14 pm (UTC)
ethelmay: (Default)
From: [personal profile] ethelmay
It's probably just an error. Many years ago Penguin (I think it was) did a reprint of Little Women that turned out to have been based on a later edition that omitted references to dancing, of all things.

Date: Feb. 1st, 2022 06:29 am (UTC)
ethelmay: (Default)
From: [personal profile] ethelmay
It was the Puffin Classics edition, some 20 (gulp) years ago, that accidentally reprinted an odd version of Little Women. At least that was when I noticed it.

Date: Jan. 28th, 2022 09:14 pm (UTC)
friendofthejabberwock: two screencaps: Data and Spock holding cats (Default)
From: [personal profile] friendofthejabberwock
Oh neat! I've read several of her works and really enjoyed them, but I think they were all Roman or Viking-era. I'll have to put this on the to-read list, and thanks for the note about the abridged editions.

Date: Jan. 29th, 2022 04:30 pm (UTC)
friendofthejabberwock: two screencaps: Data and Spock holding cats (Default)
From: [personal profile] friendofthejabberwock
No, I haven't read Shield Ring -- I just looked it up, and it does sound intriguing! I've read Sword Song, about a Viking boy who is banished from his home. It's been long enough that I confess I don't remember very much specific about it, but I do remember liking it a lot.

Date: Jan. 29th, 2022 09:04 pm (UTC)
osprey_archer: (Default)
From: [personal profile] osprey_archer
Heads up the Sword Song was published posthumously, so it's a little bit more rough-drafty than the others. Still worth reading though - there are some bits that I loved, although I won't mention them here so as not to spoil anything.

Date: Jan. 29th, 2022 06:03 am (UTC)
hyarrowen: (Swan)
From: [personal profile] hyarrowen
I read it very-long-ago, and too young, I think, as with most of her adult novels. I found the love not reciprocated theme hard to cope with at the time but it's not the worst that can happen, after all. I remember her being captured and her efforts to save the town pretty well. It was an absolutely brutal war.

Date: Jan. 29th, 2022 09:22 pm (UTC)
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
From: [personal profile] luzula
Well, I have caved and ordered myself a non-abridged edition, because I'm sure I'll want to re-read it at some point anyway. I found one in Ireland so I don't have to pay customs on it...

And I'm glad you enjoyed it!

There's also a young adult sequel to this one, called Simon, that I haven't read. It sounds rather similar to Bonnie Dundee in theme, with a young man or boy following an older man, in this case Fairfax, in war.

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