The Field of the Cloth of Gold (novel)

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LanguageEnglish
PublisherBloomsbury
Publication date
23 April 2015
The Field of the Cloth of Gold
First edition
AuthorMagnus Mills
LanguageEnglish
PublisherBloomsbury
Publication date
23 April 2015
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media typePrint
Pages224
ISBN1-4088-6002-3

The Field of the Cloth of Gold is a novel by English author Magnus Mills, published in 2015 by Bloomsbury it was shortlisted for the Goldsmiths Prize that year.[1]

The Great Field lies on a bend in the river, bounded on three sides by water and to the north by wilderness. It is populated by a growing number of tents, and its story is told by the unnamed narrator – one of the first to pitch camp. As the year advances from Spring to Summer each new arrival adds complexity to the fledgling society, its unwritten rules and petty jealousies. A large regimented group sets up a tent village in the south of the field and digs a drainage ditch which divides both the field and opinion and the narrator is forced to take sides. Further groups arrive and threaten the delicate balance of power, then Hippo – clad in just a coarse blanket brings a message that he proclaims all must hear...

The title of the novel is taken from the site of a 1520 meeting between Henry VIII and Francis I of France, and the plot echoes a number of episodes from British history including the coming of the Romans (Julius Caesar's 55BC invasion, Claudius's 43AD takeover, the building of Hadrian's Wall and finally the collapse of the Roman Empire) and also the Viking incursions.[2][3][4]

Inspiration

In an interview with BOMB magazine Mills explains "It started when I began considering the actual Field of the Cloth of Gold in France, which is where Henry VIII met Francis I. They both had a large pavilion of tents set up. If you go there now, not knowing its historical context, it just looks like a big field. So I wondered what would happen if someone happened upon history occurring in an inconspicuous place and not knowing what was going on."[5]

Reception

References

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