“Every reader re-creates a novel -
in their own imagination, anyway. It's only entirely the writer's when nobody
else has read it.”
– Susan Hill
Hill, born on this date in
1942, is an English author of “mostly ghost stories written in gothic style to create maximum suspense and the right atmosphere." Among her works are The
Woman in Black, The Mist in the Mirror, and I'm the King of the
Castle, for which she received the Somerset Maugham Award – named for British writer W.
Somerset Maugham and a really cool
award that can only be used for foreign travel to do more research for your
writing.
An only child she said she was born
to be a writer. “I was never really good
at anything else,” she explained. “I had
no other option. I could write; I wanted
to write; I wrote. Otherwise, I was
unemployable.”
In addition to the "Maugham" award, Hill was named by Queen Elizabeth as a Commander of
the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 2012 and a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in 2020 for her lifetime achievement and services to literature.
“Don’t overwrite," Hill says about the writing process that has led to her own success. "Once
you finish a book, just let it go out into the world to seek its fortune.”
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