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David Sweetman (1) (1943–2002)

Author of Mary Renault: A Biography

For other authors named David Sweetman, see the disambiguation page.

13+ Works 526 Members 4 Reviews 1 Favorited

Works by David Sweetman

Associated Works

British Poetry Since 1945 (1970) — Contributor, some editions — 192 copies, 2 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1943-03-16
Date of death
2002-04-07
Gender
male
Education
Durham University
Cause of death
multiple system atrophy
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
Northumberland, England, UK
Place of death
London, England, UK
Map Location
UK

Members

Reviews

6 reviews
A brief collection of the histories of a dozen female rulers in Africa, ranging from 15th century BC to 19th century AD. I wish I could assign this book to history classes, because I found it really helpful to beating back the pernicious trope of the African continent as just a bunch of roving tribes with little in the way of courts or dynasties. Intellectually I knew there was more to African history than mud huts and disease, but now that I've read this book, I believe it too.

My favorite show more of the rulers contained herein is Queen Nzinga of Angola. Nzinga was the kind of ruler who, when the Portuguese did not give her a chair during negotiations, sat on one of her subjects so as not to appear at a disadvantage. She led a fierce guerrilla resistance against the Portuguese for decades. She kept a harem of young men dressed as women who were referred to as her 'wives.' When she finally died, she demanded that her successor be a woman. Badass! show less
a very detailed biography of an complex man and artist. perhaps the most interesting thing I learned was about gauguin's grandmother, an radical feminist. none of that rubbed off on paul! all in all an enjoyable and educational read
I've been meaning to get this biography for ages but didn't get round to it until recently. Sweetman had an opportunity to interview Mary Renault in the early 1980s for BBC's Omnibus and when he started on the biography, Julie Mullard helped him as much as she could. The biography is rather good, although it initially irritated me that he Sweetman didn't give references. Obviously there is a list of sources but not in the text or footnotes, it just felt sloppy. Of course, this biography, show more unlike Zilboorg's literary biography, is presumably intended for general readers. But this was a good biography and I really enjoyed reading it. show less
½

Awards

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Associated Authors

Jean Autret Translator

Statistics

Works
13
Also by
1
Members
526
Popularity
#47,289
Rating
3.8
Reviews
4
ISBNs
42
Languages
7
Favorited
1

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