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Hill expressed her fury at this fabrication and, like many victims of the press before and after, argued that those who didn’t know her tended to believe all they read. As a result of these lies she had been 'cut dead in the street'. Hill also complained that the popular press is very willing to build a young author up on no critical grounds whatsoever
. 'It very easy to forget,' she observed,'that the people who write all these things have never read one word of the book'. Indeed, The Enclosure, wasn’t to appear until the following year. All this press flattery, Hill felt, tended to make the job of writing her second novel more fraught with problems.
Hill did, however, admit that on balance, the publicity surrounding her novel would help to sell it. Despite this, she was not willing to excuse the practices of gutter journalism, which sought to exaggerate and even lie in order to cater to the public taste for ‘sex and sensationalism’
“It is worrying and frustrating after trying very hard to avoid this, to find that the press has created the idea in the public mind, quite without foundation, that mine is ‘another obscene book by a teenager’. And people will simply not believe me when I deny it “
What you might not know about Susan Hill
* A question asking for the name of her University once appeared on one of those pub quiz machines.
* Her former husband of thirty eight years, Stanley Wells, rarely smiled while a lecturer at Birmingham University and was know affectionately by his students as Volpone.
*Her book, The Magic Apple Tree, was set in a village called Barley, which is the name of a real village in Hertfordshire, best known for producing the first Mayor of New York City and two Archbishops of Canterbury. Unfortunately, Hill seemed unaware that such a village existed.
*While serving as the president of the famous Alliance of Literary Societies, Hill did not show her face at a single AGM. Luckily, she was replaced by the much more diligent Aeronwy Thomas, late tousled-haired daughter of poet Dylan. [RH]
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