Sunday, January 10, 2010

Late notice: Alison McLeay, 1949-1998

Back in 2006, as part of a meme that was going through the HF blogosphere, I posted short reviews of five of my favorite historical novels. Only I cheated and listed six just so I could include two novels by Alison McLeay: Passage Home (UK title The Wayward Tide) and Sea Change (Sweet Exile). She wrote five historical novels in all; the last one, The Summer House, was published in 1997. I always wondered why she hadn't written any others. Every so often I'd check WorldCat and search through Amazon and Google, but I never found anything more about her or her books.

Then this weekend I was going through my blog statistics and saw that someone had come across my blog while searching for McLeay's obituary. Not a good sign. After doing some investigating via Google and then in my library's LexisNexis database, I was able to confirm that she had, in fact, died... back in March 1998, the same month that the paperback of her final novel was scheduled to be published. Per her obituary in The Scotsman, she was only 48 and left behind her husband and a 12-year-old son.

To quote a brief excerpt:
It was not until the publication of her first novel, The Wayward Tide, in 1990, that McLeay became a formidable player in the literary market for historical romance ... The book became an instant best-seller, and was labelled "the most stunning fiction debut in years" by Publishers Weekly in America, where the first print run reached an astonishing 100,000 copies. The Wayward Tide was published in ten different languages. The sea, travel and the lure of distant lands played a central role in her tales of love and life.
Despite the journalist's words, her novels aren't romances by the usual definition, so if you expect a standard romance plotline -- like one PaperbackSwap reviewer did -- you may be quite surprised by all of the twists and turns it takes.

It's sad that her life was cut so tragically short. By the time I first discovered and devoured all five of her novels, she had already passed away. Has anyone else read her work? If not, and if you enjoy reading detailed romantic epics that sweep you away to another place and time, consider giving them a try. All are out of print but available used on Amazon and PaperbackSwap.

7 comments:

  1. Sad to hear about her death. =/ Her books sound really wonderful though. I'll have to seek them out.

    ReplyDelete
  2. My library has all five books! *adds books to TBR list*

    ReplyDelete
  3. I read Passage Home a few years ago but no others of hers. I had that book up until two years ago when I had to down-size my library.

    ReplyDelete
  4. If any of you decide to read her books, Passage Home is the one to start with - it's excellent. Sweet Exile/Sea Change and After Shanghai are the two sequels. The other two (Dream Maker and Summer House) both stand alone.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I read it when I was 13 or 14 (I'm now 20) and it has been one of my favorite books ever since. I think Passage Home is one of the most amazing books you can expect to find and would almost say it should be studied in a university course on gender history.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Four years after this blog, I've just discovered her book Passage HOme, bought at t second hand store-(uncorrected proof!!) she transports one to the past (as good as being in the Taris!) sad to hear she died so young!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Thanks for visiting and commenting. I still recommend Passage Home to other readers every chance I get!

    ReplyDelete