Sunday, 7 August 2011
Heyer claims Cartland was a plagiarist
Decades-old allegations of plagiarism from historical novelist Georgette Heyer have only just emerged...and they are directed at Barbara Cartland.
Heyer, who wrote over 50 successful historical novels, prided herself on the strength of her research. Barbara Cartland however was rather less fastidious but much more prolific, famously producing over 700 novels before her death in 2000. But within those 700 novels are some similarities to Heyer's work, according to letters from 1950, due to be published in October in Georgette Heyer: Biography of a Bestseller by Jennifer Kloester.
'Fair enough', states writers-online.co.uk, 'you write 700 books, there are bound to be some similarities to existing ones, one might reason... and then you learn that Cartland wrote of Sir Montagu Reversby in her 1949 novel Hazard of Hearts, five years after the character Sir Montagu Revesby appeared in Heyer's Friday's Child.'
Learning from a fan that similarities between her novel These Old Shades (1926) and Cartland's novel Knave of Hearts (1950), Heyer wrote to her agent: 'I think I could have borne it better had Miss Cartland not been so common-minded, so salacious and so illiterate.
'I think ill enough of the Shades, but, good God! That 19-year-old work has more style, more of what it takes, than this offal which she has written at the age of 46!'
Heyer went on to suggest that rather than accurately research for herself, Cartland simply appropriated historical detail from her books. 'She displays an abysmal ignorance of her period. Cheek by jowl with some piece of what I should call special knowledge (all of which I can point out in my books), one finds an anachronism so blatant as to show clearly that Miss Cartland knows rather less about the period than the average schoolgirl.'
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