
Die Mannequin Obituary, Die Mannequin Has Passed Away – Death Cause
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Die Mannequin Obituary, Death – She was the first female author to win the Booker prize twice, which she did for the first two volumes in her epic trilogy about the life of Thomas Cromwell, Wolf Hall (2010) and Bring Up the Bodies. Dame Hilary Mantel, who passed away at the age of 70 after suffering a stroke, was the first female author to win the Booker prize twice (2012). The novels, which weigh a combined approximately 2,000 pages, have collectively sold 5 million copies around the world.
They have also been adapted into an acclaimed BBC series (2015) starring Mark Rylance, and Mantel herself adapted them for the RSC stage version (2014), which was a process that she loved. The conclusion of the trilogy took place in 2020 with the publication of The Mirror and the Light, which also happened to be Cromwell’s last book before her passing. These novels, which are all told in the present tense, constitute a remarkable achievement in narrative immersion and a significant milestone in the history of contemporary literature.
A Place of Better Safety (1992), which is about the French Revolution; Beyond Black (2005), which is a typically dark and eccentric account of a medium in Aldershot; a memoir titled Giving up the Ghost (2003); and three collections of short stories were published by Mantel before she wrote Cromwell. In spite of the positive reviews she earned, her book sales were not particularly impressive, and none of her books had even been considered for the Booker longlist. She stated this sentiment in an interview with the Guardian in the year 2020.
“I felt very much like a niche product, very much a minority interest,” she explained. But it wasn’t until she wrote about Cromwell and made the decision, as she put it, “to march on to the middle ground of English history and plant a flag” that she attracted a large number of readers. It was the novel that she had been longing to write for the entirety of her career.