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Interview: Samantha Ellis

January 20, 2014 11:27
Samantha Ellis: lists her girls of wisdom

BySimon Round, Simon Round

2 min read

Samantha Ellis can pinpoint the exact moment when the idea for her literary memoir How To Be a Heroine came into her head.

She was on a visit to Brontë country with her friend, Emma. Ellis's favourite Brontë character had always been Cathy Earnshaw in Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights: "I was genuinely surprised and shocked that Emma was championing [Charlotte Brontë's] Jane Eyre. She said Cathy was 'silly'. That started me off re-reading Wuthering Heights, Jane Eyre and lots of other books, too."

The journey that started on a hill in Yorkshire eventually led to How To Be a Heroine, a re-evaluation of Ellis's fictional female role models, from The Little Mermaid through Anne of Green Gables to Elizabeth Bennett "and, of course, Jane Eyre." Each chapter deals with a different character and tells how she has influenced Ellis's life.

Cambridge-educated journalist and playwright Ellis is the daughter of Iraqi Jews who fled to Britain in the early 1970s. Her childhood search for heroines was partly a quest for her own identity. Hans Christian Anderson's Little Mermaid, she suggests, is a homesick refugee in the human world and, as such, very appealing to the child of homesick refugees. Ellis also strongly sympathises with Esther Greenwood, the troubled protagonist of Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar. Lucy Maud Montgomery's Anne of Green Gables influenced the young Ellis to go out and buy a notebook to try, like Anne, to become a writer.