Anna Abney
Anna Abney is among the last descendants of the Abney family, former residents of Measham Hall, a lost house of Derbyshire. The Measham Hall series is a fictionalised account of her ancestors’ lives.
An academic in the English and Creative Writing department at the Open University, she wrote her PhD on the seventeenth century writer, Margaret Cavendish, the first English woman to be published in her own name, under the supervision of Lisa Jardine at Queen Mary, University of London. Her writing also includes fiction, journalism and drama.
Anna was born and raised in London and lived in Ireland, North and South, for thirteen years before returning to the Big Smoke. She now lives in rural Kent with her husband, a playwright and screenwriter, and their border-collie.
Character versus Content
The characters in The Measham Hall novels are affected by many of the major incidents of the Seventeenth century - plague, civil war and revolution, but their lives are also shaped by the social and religious attitudes of the time. Though often overlooked, it is a century that was fundamental in shaping modern Britain.
In her talk, Anna Abney explains her approach to writing historical fiction, how she researches the background to her novels and how the characters and plots grow out of that research. By the end of her talk, she hopes the audience will be as fascinated and inspired by the dramatic world of Seventeenth Century England as she is.