logo
#

Latest news with #Cathars

Kate Mosse: I wrote a global smash hit but male authors are taken more seriously
Kate Mosse: I wrote a global smash hit but male authors are taken more seriously

Telegraph

time16-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Telegraph

Kate Mosse: I wrote a global smash hit but male authors are taken more seriously

Almost the first thing I see when I step inside Kate Mosse's Chichester house is her 94-year-old mother-in-law, known as Granny Rosie, sipping her lunchtime gin and tonic and hunched over a codeword puzzle in the kitchen. A couple of uneaten sandwiches lie on a plate in front of her, which Mosse urges her to eat. But Granny Rosie is more interested in trying to place the letter X and, as I try uselessly to help, she seizes on her error. 'Done it!' she says triumphantly. 'She sometimes manages it in 10 minutes,' says Mosse. Granny Rosie, who has lived with Mosse, 63, and her writer husband Greg for nearly 30 years, is one reason why Mosse is less able these days to visit her beloved Carcassonne, the medieval walled citadel in France, where the best-selling author has had a house since 1989, and whose blood-soaked history inspired her 2005 global smash hit Labyrinth. Rosie is now in a wheelchair and although in spirit is as independent as ever, she needs more help from Mosse, who is her full-time carer (the house is proudly, if intimidatingly, intergenerational, with Mosse's daughter Martha, director of the Paul Smith Foundation, and her two-year-old grandson Finn also currently in residence, along with Greg's brother-in-law, a photographer. Mosse also has a son, Felix, a writer and script editor). So if Mosse can't go to Carcassonne, Carcassonne must come to her. This month she embarks on a 34-date tour in honour of the book's 20th anniversary, in which she will immerse her novel's many devoted fans in the region's brutal warmongering and esoteric mythology through a mix of storytelling and personal anecdotes. 'I did a similar tour last year to launch my book Warrior Queens and Quiet Revolutionaries [an alternative feminist history], and when the publishers suggested that, I was terrified,' she says, a small, neat, dynamic figure dressed down in jeans and sweater. 'But my parents always brought me up to give things a go.' Few novels celebrate their 20th birthday with such fanfare but then few novels have had such seismic popular impact. Mosse had previously written four books, having left her publishing job as an editorial director at Hodder in 1992 in order to write, but she was also struggling to make ends meet when Labyrinth was published. A furiously paced female-fronted time-slip adventure that splices the persecution of the 12th-century Cathars by the Catholic North with the legends of the Holy Grail, it has now sold more than 10 million copies in 41 countries. 'Its success meant I no longer had to take every journalism job I was offered for a couple of hundred quid,' she says. 'It was great after some very lean years to not have to think about the pounds, shilling and pence. But most of all it meant that when my father, who had Parkinson's, started to deteriorate, and the time came for us to throw in our lot together to support my mother, we could find a house that could accommodate everyone and we could afford to access the expert carers he needed. That is what I am most grateful for.' That house is the one she still lives in, a spacious double-fronted Edwardian on the outskirts of Chichester. It had previously been an old people's home and, when Mosse and Greg bought it, required a huge amount of renovation. 'There were all these hideous thick brown doors everywhere, while the garden was littered with awful green and pink baths used as planters.' She and Greg had an annexe built for her parents to live in and for years she helped her mother, a former teacher of economics, to look after her father, who had been a solicitor, an experience she writes about in her 2021 memoir An Extra Pair of Hands. Mosse still wells up when talking about her parents. Both had been well known and loved in the town in which they had lived for many years, although they had brought up Mosse and her sister in nearby Fishbourne, and had devoted much of their lives to voluntary work. 'They were good people, real pillars of the community. When they died [her mother passed away in 2014] there were not enough orders of service for their funerals.' She had imagined her father dying long before he did: Labyrinth contains a deeply touching scene between the 17-year-old Alais and her dying father, a local nobleman. 'I'd obviously not had that experience at that point, but I put everything that I feared it would be like into writing that scene. I realised I got it exactly right, except my dad, unlike Alais's father, had a very good death. I was with him, the windows were open, the birds were singing and it was a lovely May morning.' Mosse, who studied English at Oxford University, has written many novels since Labyrinth, including its two sequels Citadel and Sepulchre and The Burning Chambers quartet, inspired by the French Wars of Religion. All are imbued with an almost mystical feel for history and a romantic sense of place. Yet conversation with Mosse naturally keeps veering back to that book: even the room we are sitting in, a light-filled study painted racing green, contains an entire wall devoted to its many editions. It stood out when it was published for feminising the quest-propelled adventure genre traditionally perceived, thanks in no small part to Dan Brown, as the exclusive preserve of men. Yet some reviewers insisted on labelling it as 'women's fiction', perhaps unable to accept that Mosse had strayed out of her lane by not writing 'a domestic story', as she puts it. One broadsheet called it 'the thinking girl's summer reading'. Mosse had to fight hard to persuade the publishers to 'not put a picture of flowers on the front cover' and for years resisted calls from film producers who were keen to adapt it but who insisted on including a male lead. 'It's a story about two girls. Who did they think the male lead was going to be? So there was always that underlying thing.' The irony is that few novelists had devoted more energy to battling 'that underlying thing', whereby fiction written by and about women is seen as less worthy than that written by men, than Mosse. A decade previously she had founded The Women's Prize to celebrate female fiction precisely because the year before the 1991 Booker shortlist had featured only male authors. Mosse's point wasn't that the judges should have picked a couple of women; it was that no one noticed, or cared, that they hadn't. She expected the Women's Prize launch at the ICA to resemble 'a Breughel painting, full of people waving their hats in excitement'. Instead 'one journalist asked me if I was a lesbian. Another man rang my husband and told him he should be ashamed of letting his wife behave like that.' Evidently the idea of a literary prize celebrating women was too much for some men to take. 'There were a lot of unpleasant emails. Some people find the idea of women standing shoulder to shoulder very challenging.' To some extent she thinks she got off lightly. 'I'd like to think I'd have the courage to launch something like The Women's Prize today but I know [the abuse on social media] would be awful. I'd need to have a much thicker skin than I do. I have female friends who are MPs and the abuse they get is sickening.' Many of the Women's Prize's detractors, though, have been women. Germaine Greer and the late AS Byatt were among those who argued when the prize was established that giving women special treatment in this way was condescending, and ran counter to the aim of not pigeon-holing women's literature. Today with female novelists on average dominating around 75 per cent of the contemporary fiction market, and with five women on the Booker shortlist in 2024, what, one might ask, is the point of the prize? Mosse has heard this argument many times. 'It's not about quotas,' she says. 'There have always been more women published than men. The Women's Prize was never about access to market, it was about celebrating and honouring women's fiction as being equal to men's. 'There is still the misconception that 'literature' is what we all studied at school and university – which is mostly works by men with a male protagonist and universal; whereas fiction written by women, particularly with a female protagonist, is still seen as 'for women' and not for all readers. And although the Women's Prize has turned the dial, there is still a job to be done. It's great that five women were on the Booker shortlist but the fact it was commented on is down to the Women's Prize.' The next frontier, she says, is non-fiction. Last year she launched a sister prize, The Women's Prize for Non-Fiction, with the inaugural winner Naomi Klein for Doppelganger, a memoir about shifting political allegiances in the age of big tech. 'Women are likely to receive lower advances for their books in this area, and the 'smart thinking' shelves in bookshops are often a female-free zone. Women are still not perceived as being 'expert' on the same terms as their male colleagues, even when their experience and their achievements are comparable. I get that as an artist no one wants to be defined by their gender, but we know that in real life that's not how it works.' Shifting the dial is becoming Mosse's life work. Her next project is a YA work of non-fiction, Feminist History For Every Day of the Year, containing 366 stories of influential women throughout history, from Mary Wollstonecraft to Billie Eilish, which will be published in September. When she wrote it, she was warned by her editors not to assume knowledge on behalf of her readers. 'They told me [most young girls], for instance, won't have heard of Greenham Common, which was so big for my generation and such a crucial part of the women's movement.' To some extent it didn't surprise her. 'From what I hear from teachers, there is very little about women's achievements taught in schools.' She hopes as many boys will read it as girls. 'There are so many pressures on young boys. Many of them feel quite threatened by feminism. You can see this [playing out] in the Andrew Tate phenomenon. But for me this is what feminism is about. Rigid patriarchal structures benefit no one but a tiny few. I've always written about strong women and gentle men in my fiction because what about all those boys who don't want to be that boy? They are under as much pressure [as girls] to behave in ways that don't feel normal to them. And when they come through it, when they are a bit older, those men who were a bit laddish in their youth are often a bit horrified by their behaviour.' Does she think these gender pressures are partly responsible for the mental health crisis in young people? 'Oh yes, quite possibly. Boys and girls are under such peer pressure. And then there's the social media echo chamber. There is no shared story in the way there used to be. Instead we have a sense of disconnect [brought about by technology]. Everyone has ear buds plugged in and that normal engagement you used to have with strangers on the street, the simple courtesy of hearing or saying 'after you' etc is gone.' Mosse is an indefatigable natural campaigner, blessed with a natural clipboard efficiency. Thanks to An Extra Pair of Hands she has recently found herself becoming a spokesperson for Britain's growing number of largely invisible care workers. 'I can't speak for every carer, not least since my situation is particularly privileged,' she says. 'We have the room, plus Greg and I are both writers who work from home. But the stats are terrifying. There is a huge number of child carers for instance [the exact figure is estimated to be around 120,000]. By the age of 59, 50 per cent of women will become an unpaid carer [although this might only amount to a few hours a week]. If we all downed tools the NHS would collapse in an instance. Successive governments have for years failed to implement meaningful reforms in this area but it's partly out of fear. The issue is not a vote winner. And so the situation goes on.' Where does she stand on assisted dying? 'I believe everyone should have agency over their own body. So it needs to start from that. That doesn't mean I don't have big concerns over coercion. Of course it needs to be fully regulated.' Her love for Granny Rose feels sewn into the very fabric of the house, although caring for a nonagenarian is not without its comedy moments. 'She once pressed her panic button by mistake and the police rushed round to find her sunbathing in the garden in her underwear. So we don't leave her by herself anymore.' Her most recent stance has been against Labour's recent consultation on copyright and AI data mining, which came under fierce criticism from the creative industries when it was launched in December for allowing companies to train AI using published material without permission unless individual artists opted out. 'It comes down to money,' says Mosse, who has had five of her novels licensed without permission in this way. '[Labour] have their heads turned by Silicon Valley and automatic growth. AI companies are saying that artists have to opt out. What they mean is they don't want to pay. They say if they do have to pay they won't invest. But most of these tech companies are off shore. But it's also ludicrous. It means I have to go round every AI company to say 'don't steal my work'. It's like owning a corner shop and a succession of thieves steal all your Mars bars because you didn't ask each thief not to do so. 'The UK has one of the oldest and most robust copyright laws in the world, it dates from 1710 and it's very simple. You own your work.' She gives a wry smile. 'When Silicon Valley accused the Chinese chatbox DeepSeek of theft by saying it may have been trained on American AI models, you couldn't help but laugh, because that's what American AI has done to writers.' She's not remotely anti tech, although she is not a fan of some of the bros who dominate it: she came off X when Musk took over. 'Partly because it was suddenly full of adverts for bitcoin. It was like an arcade. But also, I didn't want to be part of something run by someone who has such contempt for democracy.' Would she allow AI to license her work if they paid? 'Yes, absolutely. AI needs all that female history. AI generally is here to stay, it's the future, that's it. There are so many amazing things that will happen through AI. But a dazzling thing has gone on whereby we have become blind to the significant issues that AI will bring.' Such as the existential challenge it presents to writing itself. 'AI relies on recycling; it's hard not to worry that whatever literature it produces will be very thin indeed. I'm not worried for me but for the writers yet to come. That's why I'm happy to use my platform.' She uses that platform wherever she can. Her current passion project is the plight of Afghan women under the Taliban, and along with the organisation Untold Narratives she is working with an Afghan Women's Writers Group. 'Where we are in the world right now is a place that as a feminist I never thought I'd see. In Afghanistan women are being erased.' She agrees that by and large there has been a startling absence of protest against this in the West, particularly among feminists. 'What's happening in Afghanistan is at the top of my agenda. It's not at the top of others. Instead different things are..' Yet she's not about to bash the younger generation. She bats away, for example, the suggestion that publishing has become dominated by younger editors intent on pursuing 'woke'' agendas. 'When I worked in publishing [in the 1980s] it was definitely a bit of a gentleman's club. But it's also always been full of people who feel passionately about things. In the 1980s the cause was apartheid and South Africa and there were lots of fights between editors on how publishing should be responding to that. Publishing has always had those spats.' Mosse, ever the doer, prefers deeds to virtue signalling. 'The job is not to persuade everyone in the world that you are right, but rather, if you believe you are right, then to do the right thing,' she says. 'I've never found moaning about things very helpful. You have to get things done.' Labyrinth: 20th Anniversary Edition by Kate Mosse with a specially commissioned introduction by Sir Ian Rankin and a new afterword by Kate Mosse is published by Phoenix on February 20 2025, Hardback, £30.

8 lesser-known castles to visit in south-west France
8 lesser-known castles to visit in south-west France

Local France

time11-02-2025

  • Local France

8 lesser-known castles to visit in south-west France

France's ministry of culture has announced the country's candidates for the UNESCO World Heritage List in 2026. They will be the D-Day landing beaches in Normandy as well as the eight 'Cathar castles' of south-west France. While you may have already heard of the medieval Cité de Carcassonne, which became a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1997, the eight surrounding castles in the Aude and Ariège départements are worth a visit too, and are considerably less crowded than Carcassonne. The French ministry of culture noted in its press release on Monday that the eight castles were "built on rocky peaks in grandiose landscapes" and they "illustrate a pivotal period in history and offer a unique example of military architecture, conferring on them an exceptional universal value". Often called the 'Cathar castles', these structures are commonly associated with the persecuted religious group which lived in the Languedoc region (near modern day Toulouse and Carcassonne) between the 12th and 14th centuries. During an exceptionally brutal period of history, the Cathar religious group - deemed heretics by the Catholic Church - were persecuted and largely exterminated, and the region eventually became part of the kingdom of France. Over the years, the castles have become the centre of many legends surrounding the Cathars (also known as the Albigensians) and have featured in numerous books and films, including The Da Vinci Code. Many of the castles are perched on hilltops or clifftops (a sensible defensive precaution), so they may require a short hike or walk to get there. People with reduced mobility should check in advance with the site, as not all are fully accessible. Some are only open during the summer months. Lastours castles Located about 15km from Carcassonne and 300m above the valleys of the Orbeil and Grésilhou rivers, the Lastours Châteaux now consists of four remaining castles which were originally built in the 11th century as the property of the lords of Cabaret. They were significant locations for Cathar religious activity in the 13th century, hosting important members of the faith. Ultimately, the Lastours Châteaux were destroyed in the 13th century to eliminate a refuge for the Cathars, but they were rebuilt as royal fortresses afterwards. The four remaining castles have been listed as French historic monuments since the 1905. More information about history and visiting on the Pays Cathare tourism site. Tickets cost €9, more info here. Opening hours depend on the time of year. Termes castle Famous for the long siege of 1210 during the Albigensian Crusade, the Termes castle overlooks the Termenet gorges, which you can visit too. The castle is generally closed during the winter months. More information on visits here. Aguilar castle Once the seat of a powerful Occitan knight, the castle was an important fortress in the French crown's line of defence against the kingdom of Aragon. Later, in the 16th century, the castle was taken by the Spanish army. Over time, it lost its strategic importance and fell to disrepair. It became a French historical site in 1949. There is a carpark at the foot of the castle. Bus parking is about 1km from the ticket office. More info on the local tourism site. Peyrepertuse castle Perched on a limestone cliff in the Corbières mountains, the Peyrepertuse castle offers a stunning view across the valley. Though beware - it is also known as the citadelle du vertige (citadel of vertigo). On a good day, you may even be able to see the Mediterranean. The nearby village of Duilhac has an equally fascinating history, having been passed between different feudal Lords until it became part of the Kingdom of France. The agrarian commune traditionally cultivated wine and olives. Info for visiting on the castle's website. Quéribus castle At an altitude of 728m, sitting above the village of Cucugnan, the land that the Quéribus castle now stands on was once a fortified site owned by Chabert de Barbaira, a partisan of the King of Aragon who welcomed the Cathars. Eventually, he surrendered Quéribus to the King of France. Recent archeological excavations in the area have found ceramics that date back to the Iron Age. Visit information on the Aude tourism website. Puilaurens castle The Puilaurens castle is one of the best preserved royal fortresses, at 697m in altitude. There are also several nearby activities, including a visit to the Galamus Gorges for rafting, canoeing or relaxing. The nearby village of Lapradelle-Puilaurens is also along the scenic 'red' train, or the Train du Pays Cathare et du Fenouillèdes, which runs from Rivesaltes to Axat in the summer months. More info here. Montségur castle Perhaps the most famous of the 'Cathar castles', Montségur (at 1,200m in elevation) was one of the last of the Cathar strongholds to be seized and razed by French Royal forces. All sorts of legends and rumours swirl around this site, notably related to the Holy Grail and buried treasure, which Nazi leader Heinrich Himmler apparently took time out of World War II to investigate. Tickets cost €5.50 - more information on visiting on the Occitanie tourism site.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store