• About Kathy
    • Portoflio of Essays
    • Fiction
    • Plays
    • Diving for Pearls: A Thinking Journey with Hannah Arendt
    • Living Between Danger and Love
    • Compassionate Authority
    • The Political Interests of Gender
    • Women Transforming Politics
    • Sexuality, Gender, and Power
  • Workshops & Events
  • Blog
  • Invite Kathy
  • Contact
Menu

Kathleen B. Jones

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number
author, editor, publisher

Writer, Editor, Publisher

Kathleen B. Jones

  • About Kathy
  • Essays, Books & Plays
    • Portoflio of Essays
    • Fiction
    • Plays
    • Diving for Pearls: A Thinking Journey with Hannah Arendt
    • Living Between Danger and Love
    • Compassionate Authority
    • The Political Interests of Gender
    • Women Transforming Politics
    • Sexuality, Gender, and Power
  • Workshops & Events
  • Blog
  • Invite Kathy
  • Contact

Cities of Women, a novel

August 4, 2018 Kathleen B. Jones
Enders Island, Mystic, CT

Enders Island, Mystic, CT

I may have been silent about my writing for some time, but I have not been inactive. Just returned from an eight-day writing residency on Enders Island, Connecticut, a program sponsored by Fairfield University as part of the M.F.A. in creative writing, which I began this summer. (Yes, you read that correctly. I have begun graduate studies in creative writing on the cusp of my 70th birthday. Why not?)

I've had a novel in mind for more than a decade and I am finally getting it into shape, with the help of excellent faculty guidance and collegial support.

Here's the concept:

While researching Christine de Pizan’s manuscripts, Prof. Verity Frazier stumbles upon evidence indicating some of the most beautiful designs in the collection have been the handiwork of a woman. The novel flashes back to the fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries to recreate an imagined relationship between Christine de Pizan and Héloise Tapis, a remarkable woman employed by de Pizan to illuminate her manuscripts.

The obstacles facing these women in the past reverberate into the present as the novel returns to the 21st century when Prof. Frazier confronts resistance to her efforts to document Tapis’s significance in Pizan studies.

Exploring themes of religious scandal, political corruption, catastrophic disease, and gender and class conflict through the lens of an era the historian Barbara Tuchman called “a distraught age whose rules were breaking down under the pressure of adverse and violent events,” the story tracks a time remarkably similar to our present.

Parchment, Morgan Library

Parchment, Morgan Library

The research has been an extraordinary experience for me, taking me to the Morgan Library, where I learned about parchment production, and the British library in London, whose collections of Christine's works provide the setting for some of the novel's contemporary scenes.

Christine de Pizan manuscript, British Library.

Christine de Pizan manuscript, British Library.

But it's the imaginative process of writing that will engage me fully in the coming months, as I develop further the voice, character, and structure with which to tell this story. I have had the expert guidance of Eugenia Kim, whose novel writing workshop at Enders spurred me further into the development of my craft. And I will be working with Karen Osborn this fall on structure and voice in the novel.

Stay tuned for further updates.

In 15th century, Bay Area Writing, Christine de Pizan, creative writing, feminism, historical novel, novel, research, workshops, writing Tags 15th century, 15th century women, Christine de Pizan, creative writing, France, historical novel, MFA, novel writing, women in history, writing, writing workshops
1 Comment

© Copyright Kathleen B. Jones