Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Rumer Godden: A Storyteller's Life

Rate this book
Once upon a time by a river in India there lived a little English girl called Ma Rumer Godden. The life of Rumer Godden, one of our best-loved contemporary authors, has been as eventful and dramatic as the plot of any of her novels. Born in India to English parents at the height of British colonial power, she always knew she wanted to be a writer. Her literary career has spanned six decades. In 1939, Black Narcissus became an overnight bestseller in England and America and it has remained in print ever since. The film she scripted for Jean Renoir in 1949 from her own novel, The River, has become one of the classics of the cinema. Anne Chisholm's biography places Rumer Godden's work in the context of her remarkable life. At the heart of Godden's writing is her idyllic childhood in Bengal. In her twenties, she established her own dancing school in Calcutta and was disapproved of as a working woman and as a teacher of Eurasian girls. Although she married in 1934 and had two daughters, she was a fiercely determined writer who struggled to reconcile her need to write with the demands of her family. As her marriage failed, she retreated from the decadence of fading colonial Calcutta to the tea plantations of Assam and then the mountains of Kashmir. But Godden's relationship with India, though passionate, was ultimately ambivalent. In Kashmir a servant tried to poison her and her children (an extraordinary incident which brought this ambivalence to a head). The notoriety surrounding the case forced Godden to leave Kashmir, soon afterwards she left India for good. This mysterious episode is explored here in detail. On returning to England, she built a new life marrying again and continuing to write. Her conversion to Catholicism led her to write one of her best-known books, In This House of Brede. Several of her novels and children's books were filmed or adapted for television, including The Greengage Summer, Vie Diddakoi and The Peacock Spring Through conversations with Rumer Godden herself and from her exclusive access to private letters, Anne Chisholm has written the definitive story of an emotionally powerful writer and a woman of unusual strength of character.

352 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1998

5 people are currently reading
229 people want to read

About the author

Anne Chisholm

18 books5 followers
Anne Chisholm is a biographer and critic who has also worked in journalism and publishing. Her first biography, Nancy Cunard (1979), won the Silver PEN prize for non-fiction; in 1992 the biography of Lord Beaverbrook she wrote jointly with her husband, Michael Davie, was runner up for the Hawthornden prize.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
36 (32%)
4 stars
44 (39%)
3 stars
28 (25%)
2 stars
3 (2%)
1 star
1 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 24 of 24 reviews
Profile Image for Melody Schwarting.
2,133 reviews82 followers
March 16, 2021
Rumer Godden, a not-so-well-known name now, occupies an odd space in British literary history. Immensely popular in her own lifetime, she enjoyed fame and some fortune. Her work received mixed critical reviews, often more appreciated in America than in her native England, and quite a few of her books were adapted for the screen during her lifetime. She’s not unknown enough to be championed by recovery presses like Persephone books (plenty of her books are still in print), nor is she known enough to be remembered alongside her contemporaries like Muriel Spark. There’s also the unevenness in her work, for she published dozens of children’s books in addition to dozens of novels, and some of her books are marked by sensuality and drama, others by quietude and spirituality. Between her childhood in India and a peripatetic adulthood, the expanse of Godden’s life is difficult to grasp.

Chisholm had the advantage of writing that key biography published close to the end of the subject’s life. Godden was in her final year of life when Chisholm published A Storyteller’s Life. Most of the biography’s weaknesses can be attributed to the advantage of Chisholm’s personal relationship with Godden, the interviews she conducted, and the access to Godden’s archives. While this access gives the biography a surplus of primary sources, it’s also a hindrance, as Chisholm admits. The Goddens are fairly private people. Self-editing in interviews and recollections is inevitable. Conflicts over portrayals and how much to reveal abound. Yet, Chisholm often cuts through this, though she ends up with an uneven biography in some places, depending on what information she was given by her living, feisty subject.

Godden’s life is far too dramatic for me to summarize here, but in this biography you’ll find her stormy marriage, a murder attempt, a sojourn in Hollywood, a house fire, and a conversion. She wrote far too many books for each to be considered at length in this biography. Certain more autobiographical novels, Chisholm placed alongside the real-life events. Some resurface when Godden becomes involved in adapting a story for the screen. Others are barely mentioned. Having met Godden by reading In This House of Brede, I was pleased to find a whole chapter on this novel and Godden’s connection to Stanbrook Abbey, through which she wrote the story. Godden received special access to the cloistered order, and submitted her manuscript for review to the nuns, who enthusiastically supported her efforts. She ensured they received a good portion of the profits. (Brede was adapted into a movie starring Diana Rigg, and is available for free on YouTube. It’s but a pale sliver of the novel, but a respectable effort.)

In reading this biography, I hoped to find the “key” to why two of Godden’s later novels, In This House of Brede and Five for Sorrow, Ten for Joy, are favorites, but I found Black Narcissus, her early breakout novel, to be a mediocre reading experience. While Godden's craft as a writer is consistent, the three novels, all populated by nuns, had markedly different characters, and overall psychological aesthetics. This “key” became apparent when Chisholm quoted a 1941 letter from Godden to her sister Jon:

“I never long to be a man as much as in my writing, because I should have a man’s wholeness. To me that is what a woman can never be; I think she can never be whole, whole physically or whole hearted. If she is whole then she is useless as a woman. She must be continually impaired; by marriage, by children, by duties and ties; drained, as she is drained by her menses each month...complete wholeness is male, a woman cannot hope to achieve it and the lack of it shows in her work...Men have this robust easy power and they do not even know that they have it; it is an unconscious lordliness. It is no use resenting it. I do not resent it. I can only recognise it and do what is within my power. Anything else would be hideous.” (119)

My own disagreement with this idea notwithstanding, I find this passage enlightening regarding why Sister Clodagh in Black Narcissus was but a pale glimmer in comparison to the radiant Sister Philippa in Brede and Soeur Marie-Lise in Five for Sorrow. In between writing these novels, Godden lived 30-40 years in which she ended her marriage, wrote many other books, moved continents, endured a war, remarried and converted to Roman Catholicism. (Brede alone marks her as one of the premier Roman Catholic novelists of all time.) Godden’s “concept of woman,” to borrow the apt phrase of philosopher Sister Mary Prudence Allen, RSM, changed distinctly over these years. Chisholm doesn’t pick up this throughline in Godden’s life, but perhaps future critics and biographers will examine it.

In Black Narcissus, a nun is plagued by sexual obsession, and her sisters each experience a loss of purpose and religious vitality during their mission. At this point, Godden is not interested much in the religious life of the sisters. She refers to their Lenten fast and other observances, but the interior, spiritual life that enlivens her later convent novels is absent. The central conflicts in both Brede and Five for Sorrow involve an older woman’s ties to a younger woman. While neither tie is motherhood, each novel finds the breaking of this tie releasing the older woman to freedom. In Brede, . In Five for Sorrow, .

Godden’s “concept of woman” did not experience a complete change: she still finds this sense of un-wholeness in the human person. Upon her conversion, however, she began to find a possibility for fulfillment by giving up the conventional means of making whole (marriage and motherhood). Little wonder that the cloistered life held such appeal for Godden later in life; these conventional means had done little for her. What changed from Black Narcissus to Brede was, according to Chisholm, that Godden “believed deeply in the truth and importance both of what the nuns were doing and what she was doing in writing about them.” (269)

Black Narcissus foretells the end of the British imperialist project. At that point in her life, Godden knew little of Indian culture outside what she experienced in relationships with her servants and the mixed-race young women to whom she taught dancing. Her brief time working at an agricultural college supplied the character of the energetic young student whose perfume gives the novel its title. The nuns’ mission becomes a miniature portrait of the failure of the British Raj. Yet, to my eyes, Godden does not supply anything substantial to supplant imperialism. She treats native Indians as a collective, who will hardly remember the ephemeral touch of Britain on their lives. Later in life, she encountered India in a more holistic way, lived in Kashmir for a time during WWII, and saw much more of the world outside the limited interactions of servitude. Simply put, Black Narcissus isn’t about the religious life, which is why I still find it so disappointing as a novel. While it may stand on its own alongside other British novels like A Passage to India, in Godden’s corpus, it fades in comparison to the pure luminance of Brede and Five for Sorrow. I think I could have encountered it better had I read it with other novels about British imperialism, rather than as a book by Godden, where I can't escape comparing it to her later novels. Hopefully my re-read, perhaps accompanied by Forster, will do justice to it.

I enjoyed learning more about Godden’s life, and the extent of her writing. Someday I hope to find a copy of A Storyteller’s Life to add to my library, but like many of Godden’s books, it’s out of print. I recommend this biography to Godden fans, not just because it’s the only biography of her, but also because it gave me a good picture of Godden as a person.
Profile Image for Lewis Woolston.
Author 3 books66 followers
October 30, 2023
I love classic movies and one of my favourites is "Black Narcissus" which i have seen many times. Rumer Godden is the author who wrote the book that film is based on although as i discovered reading this book she never liked the movie that much.
This is a well written and engaging biography starting during the author's childhood in British India through various trials of life until she find her vocation and calling as a writer and begins to make a success of it.
Her later conversion to Catholicism and the various ups and downs of her career and personal life are all well covered.
A good read if you're interested in her work.
Profile Image for Alun Williams.
63 reviews4 followers
August 2, 2011
This is an informative, sympathetic, but not uncritical, biography of a prolific and long-lived author whose life was more than usually filled with incident. It was fascinating to read about the people and places that inspired Rumer Godden's wonderful novels and to learn about what she thought of the films that helped to make them famous. Rumer Godden emerges as a fascinating, determined, but often difficult woman.

Of a total of 311 pages, 233 are devoted to her life up to 1950 (when she was helping with the filming of "The River"). My only quibble with this part of the book is that we hear a good deal about (and from) a number of people whose connection with Rumer Godden seems tenuous, especially in the chapter on her life in Calcutta, presumably in the interests of atmosphere. There is a fascinating account of her time in Kashmir, from which we learn that "Kingfisher's Catch Fire" is a scarcely fictionalised account of a real incident.

The part of the book which deals with her post 1950 life is less satisfactory, though there is a good chapter on her connections with Stanbrook Abbey - the convent that inspired "In This House of Brede", and an entertaining and moving account of her final trip to India in 1994, which was filmed for, and prompted by, a BBC documentary. However, at times this part of the book reads almost like a Christmas round-robin letter in its summaries of family events and the many removals from one home to another.

Anne Chisholm seems to take little interest in most of the books Rumer Godden wrote during the second half of her life. For example, she gets the name of the main character of "An Episode of Sparrows" wrong, and is very dismissive of this book, which is a favourite of mine. As probably the first of Rumer Godden's novels to feature a Catholic church and priest strongly I think it warranted more attention since Catholicism played a big part in her later life.

Similarly, there is very little about most of her non-fiction or books for children, of the latter only "The Diddakoi" rates more than a passing mention. I should have liked to learn more about some of these books and their illustrators. For instance, although we learn that a soldier son-in-law of Rumer Godden spent time in Cyprus, Anne Chisholm seems to be unaware that "Operation Sippacik" is set there, and was no doubt partly inspired by stories he told his mother-in-law.

However, overall this is a very interesting book, and I did learn about Rumer Godden books (and films of them) that I had never even heard of and will look out for in future.
Profile Image for Melanie Williams.
385 reviews12 followers
September 23, 2024
As an introduction to the life of Rumer Godden, this book is a useful starting point. However, I now find myself wanting to read a fuller biography of her life, though I'm not aware that one exists as yet? This implies that Rumer Godden is a writer that we are not sufficiently cherishing and that her work deserves more attention than it is receiving. From the books of hers that I have read so far I have the impression that we should be cherishing her.

Alex Tickell puts it this way:
'Rumer Godden was one of the most prolific writers of late colonial India but while her fiction, particularly her writing for children, reached a mass market, she has remained marginal to canonical literary history'
Tickell, Alex (2020). Postcolonial Fiction and the Question of Influence: Arundhati Roy, The
God of Small Things and Rumer Godden. Postcolonial Text, 15(1)
https://oro.open.ac.uk/69606/
(I very much like this article and can recommend)

I am putting Godden's autobiography 'A Time To Dance, No Time To Weep' on my 'want to read' list!

Note though that if you are interested in the filming of 'The River', there is a whole chapter on this in Chisholm's biography.
Profile Image for Kathryn.
78 reviews3 followers
July 3, 2008
I have enjoyed a number of Rumer Godden's books and read the first volume of her autobiography a few years ago, so this caught my attention when I spotted a used copy. I thought Anne Chisholm did a pretty good job of telling Rumer Godden's life story and giving me a feel for her character. She had access to Rumer herself, her friends and family, and family papers, so the biography comes across as quite authoritative. Rumer's life was so bound up with India that in some ways the book is as much about the country as the person. I find the history of British India fascinating, so it is no surprise that I enjoyed the read. I was disappointed, though, in the treatment of Rumer's conversion to Catholicism. I wanted to know about her spiritual journey and the impact of faith on her character and writing, but the biography glossed over this. Her conversion was mentioned but never really explained.
Profile Image for Beth Bonini.
1,414 reviews326 followers
March 1, 2022
A happy childhood is always a paradise lost. The English children of the Indian Empire knew a special paradise, and most of them never forgot it and always missed it. Over and over again in the memories of people who grew up in India the same longings and vivid recollections recur: they remember the warmth, the sun, the colours, the light, the space, the sound; above all, perhaps, the smell of India.


Although Rumer Godden spent much of her life in England, many readers associate her with India - and the books she wrote which were inspired by her experiences there. (My own Godden bibliography has been heavily weighted towards the Indian books: The Lady and the Unicorn, Black Narcissus, The River and the memoir Two Under the Indian Sun.) I read this biography immediately after finishing Rumer and Jon Godden's memoir of their childhood in Narayanganj (then British India, now Bangladesh), and as the biographer borrowed heavily from that book, this book didn't get off to a particularly promising start for me. However, there was far more to this complicated woman's life than those childhood experiences, and soon enough I found myself in fresh and uncharted territory.

Although it's not the most exhaustive of biographies, Chisholm does a solid job of covering the complicated time-line of Godden's life, and fitting in the books as well - but without giving too much of their plots away. India provides a book-end for Godden's life, and a personal connection for the biographer, as very late in Godden's life, Anne Chisholm accompanies her and a BBC film crew to the places in India which had impacted Godden's childhood and young married years.

Godden had a terrific work ethic, and it was her habit and ritual to begin a new book every New Year's Eve. She wrote obsessively as a child, and published her first novel Chinese Puzzle when she was only 28. One of the novels she is best known for, Black Narcissus, was only her third novel, but after this first taste of writing fame - it was later adapted into both a stage play and film - she not only became a professional writer, but also the main financial support of both of her marriages. Although she had two daughters by her first husband, and took care of other family children during the years - especially during World War II, which she spent in India - she was always first and foremost a writer. Nevertheless, she didn't spend her life locked away in a study. She had a life full of a great many things and experiences.

Chisholm takes care to point out that Godden was prone to dramatising her own life - to shaping it into a story, and thus losing or blurring the factual aspects of what had happened. Throughout the book, she relies on other a variety of other testimonies - and not just Godden's point of view. I felt this book benefitted from the author's first-hand knowledge of her subject, without being slavish to it. Chisholm has fondness and respect for Godden, but she maintains distance, too.

I love the smaller or more personal details, and these are a few that I will remember from this biography. Rumer Godden loved pugs, Famous Grouse whisky, and furnishing houses. Despite the love of houses, (or perhaps because of it), she moved many times over the years. She lived in Lamb House, in Rye, a house associated with many writers - including Henry James. She converted to Catholicism later in life and wrote several books about nuns and the spiritual life. She was a hardy traveller. She wrote many children's books, and more than a dozen nonfiction books as well. She lived in Jean Renoir's house in California when they were working together on a screenplay for her novel The River.

Godden wrote three memoirs about her own life, and I intend on reading all of them. Perhaps this biography will seem more like an outline in comparison, but it's certainly a good jumping-off point for a British writer whose writing definitely deserves a revival.
Profile Image for Cate Ruane.
Author 7 books12 followers
March 21, 2021
I picked up this biography for two reasons:

1. I’ve recently begun reading Godden’s novels and love her writing.

2. I’ve lived on-and-off in India, and I’m particularly interested in the British Raj period.

This biography is well written and very readable. Godden certainly led an interesting life and I raced through the book.

My disappointment came for two reasons:

1. There is hardly anything about Godden’s method and philosophy of writing. There’s plenty about her life outside of writing, but the bio makes it seem as if the books just drop from the sky periodically. (There is more about Jean Renoir’s methods and philosophy of filmmaking than about Godden’s writing.) Chisholm goes into detail when it comes to the plots of Godden’s novels, but if you are a fan you’ve already read them (or you mean to and won’t want the spoilers).

Meanwhile, Chisholm goes into detail about EVERY SINGLE change of address over Godden’s long life. It’s interesting to a point, for example when she is moving to a new place in India, but after a while it becomes tedious.

As a writer myself, I wanted more about writing. A biography entitled A Storyteller’s Life should have more about the craft of storytelling.

2. There are subtle bits of racism throughout the biography. Yes, of course, the British Raj was heavy on the poison, but what I mean is that Chisholm suffers a bit from the same elitism.
Profile Image for Nancy Noble.
467 reviews
October 23, 2024
I read Rumer Godden's books, mostly about dolls, as a child, but wasn't familiar with her as a person or author of adult literature. A friend gave me a copy of Prayers from the Ark, and I was intrigued enough by this encounter of Rumer with Carmen Bemos de Gasztold, that I wanted to find out more. There isn't much about that encounter, but I enjoyed learning about Rumer's life, especially in India. I have always wanted to rent a houseboat in Kashmir, so that part of the book was especially enthralling. Overall, this book gave me a first look at this interesting author, and I would like to learn more about her, and maybe even read some of her adult literature. For now, I'm settling into re-reading The Doll's House...
Profile Image for Valerie.
793 reviews2 followers
February 16, 2022
3.75. I have been a long term fan of Rumer Godden and attribute her writing in part to my long held fascination with India. Although I’ve read her autobiography, it was interesting to read this author’s detailed description of her life. She knew her personally and traveled with her later in life, so the insights were compelling. What a life!
3 reviews
January 17, 2021
Wonderful insight into this wonderful author who always surprises me - I recently discovered her children's books -The Doll's House, The Story of Holly and Ivy, which makes me cry, and each time I read, or re-read, I see something new.
Profile Image for Jacqueline.
182 reviews2 followers
May 1, 2025
I had never heard of Rumer Godden until I picked up this biography. I learned a lot about her and the life she had. I enjoyed reading about her life in India and then back in Great Britain. A very well done, thorough book about a writer who made inroads in literature.
309 reviews47 followers
May 14, 2025
Found this book very interesting - didn't know anything about Rumer Godden's life although I can remember reading many of her books several years ago. Must look out for the DVDs of the various films made from her books.
Profile Image for Jill.
7 reviews
August 12, 2020
It's a great biography of this author. Very engaging, it reads almost like a novel itself.
2,414 reviews6 followers
January 30, 2023
Prior to this book I only knew of Rumer Godden as the author of a couple of children’s books. Her life turned out to be much more complex than I was expecting
Profile Image for Candy Wood.
1,206 reviews
Read
August 2, 2013
The first volume (of two) of Rumer Godden’s autobiography ends in 1945, with her return to England; it takes Anne Chisholm 9 of 15 chapters to get that far, a good indication that for Chisholm, Godden’s life in India is the important part of the story. Her novels A Fugue in Time and China Court, both set in England, receive about a sentence each, while any books set in India are described in greater detail, and Chisholm devotes a whole chapter to a firsthand account of Godden’s 1994 visit to India to make a BBC documentary. Perhaps because Godden wrote for both children and adults, this biography’s opening suggests that Chisholm had a dual audience in mind, but the later accounts of failed marriages and multiple house moves would not be very interesting to young readers. I’ll look for a biography that pays more attention to the writing.
Profile Image for Lizzie.
560 reviews19 followers
August 20, 2018
Biography of the Anglo-Indian writer who I first discovered when I read In This House of Brede in high school. I've enjoyed her other novels, some about nuns as well as those about India. Her father was a businessman prior to independence and because of World War I she and her sisters stayed with their parents instead of being sent "home" to England for their education, and they all grew up with a deep love for India. She always knew her destiny was to be a writer, and worked at her craft till the end of her long life. It's not a thrilling story, but interesting to watch as she develops her skills and see how she shapes her experiences into stories.
Profile Image for Andrea Hickman Walker.
790 reviews34 followers
March 17, 2013
I love Godden's novels and remember the enjoyment I had from her children's stories as a child. Sadly I've not yet been able to locate any of her children's books except the Mousewife, but I am still in hopes of doing so. I knew nothing about Godden except that she'd grown up in India and wrote wonderful stories. I found this fascinating and informative. There's just something about knowing about the mind behind the stories that I enjoy. For some reason it makes me enjoy the work even more.
Profile Image for Kathryn Parmeter.
32 reviews2 followers
January 11, 2010
Biographies are very hard to make readable. This one simply did it. I will look for more by Ms. Chisholm; but in particular, her rendering of Ms. Godden made the excellence of Godden's prose all the better for me.
Profile Image for Simon Gisore.
34 reviews3 followers
April 30, 2015
...Masterpiece, sends one into a deep vortex where you think deeply about yourself... and what's real to you and what's not... Also gives you an opportunity to cope with whatever "hazardous" event that has ever happened to you... pick yourself and move forward is the main message of this book.
Profile Image for Carolynne.
813 reviews26 followers
April 15, 2011
This biography emphasizes Godden's years in India. Her life was fascinating, often troubled, sometimes dangerous. It will be enlightening to lovers of her fiction.
Profile Image for Jodi.
186 reviews
January 29, 2013
19 January 2011 -- enjoyed this biography immensely.
37 reviews3 followers
April 16, 2013
Fascinating life of a difficult woman. Explains why I found her books so riveting as a girl. Can't wait to read more of them.
Profile Image for Peveril.
302 reviews
July 8, 2023
Excellent biography. A very interesting life of course but also just about the right amount of detail and relevant but limited commentary.
Displaying 1 - 24 of 24 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.