Vera Chapman

Vera Chapman (8 May 1898 – 14 May 1996), also known as Vera Ivy May Fogerty, and within the Tolkien Society as Belladonna Took, was a British author and founder of the Tolkien Society in the United Kingdom, and also wrote a number of pseudo-historical and Arthurian books. [1] She held the title of Pendragon of The Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids from 1964 to 1991.

Vera Chapman
Born
Vera Ivy May Fogerty

(1898-05-08)8 May 1898
Bournemouth, England
Died14 May 1996(1996-05-14) (aged 98)
Croydon, England

Life

Chapman was born in Bournemouth, England on 8 May 1898 and lived in South Africa until she went to Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford where she was one of the first women to matriculate as a full member of Oxford University. She founded the Tolkien Society in Britain of which she was secretary. She persuaded J. R. R. Tolkien to become the Society's honorary president. She wrote her first novel in 1975 and continued writing until her death in 1996. Chapman wrote three fantasy novels based on Arthurian legend: The Green Knight (1975),King Arthur's Daughter (1976), and The King's Damosel (1976) [1]

Works

Novels

  • The Green Knight (1975) ISBN 0-901720-63-1 (UK edition)
  • King Arthur's Daughter (1976) ISBN 0-86036-012-1 (UK ed.)
  • The King's Damosel (1976) ISBN 0-86036-018-0 (UK ed.) – basis for the Warner Bros. animated movie Quest for Camelot
  • Judy and Julia (1977) ISBN 0-86036-020-2 (UK ed.)
  • Blaedud the Birdman (1978) ISBN 0-86036-080-6 (UK ed.)
  • The Wife of Bath (1978) ISBN 0-86036-057-1 (UK ed.) – adaptation of "The Wife of Bath's Tale"
  • Miranty and the Alchemist (1983) ISBN 0-233-98042-3 (UK ed.)
  • The Enchantresses (1998), by Chapman and Mike Ashley ISBN 0-575-06524-9 (UK ed.)

Omnibus

  • Three Damosels (1978) ISBN 0-575-06340-8 (UK ed.)

Collections

  • The Notorious Abbess (1993) ISBN 0-89733-387-X (US ed.)

Short stories

  • "Crusader Damosel" (1978); in the 1985 anthology Cosmic Knights
  • "A Sword for Arthur" (1995)

The 1995 anthology The Merlin Chronicles ISBN 1-85487-332-6 also contains stories by Chapman

gollark: Replying to https://discord.com/channels/346530916832903169/348702212110680064/750047961043697774Well, the zim people had to invest effort into writing it, I would not be surprised if it had some security issues, and it likely has worse bindings/higher-level tooling than SQLite3.
gollark: ... an x86 assembly typing test link?
gollark: > sqlite is not less complex than this formatYes. *But*, you don't actually have to interact with the SQLite disk format directly because libsqlite3 exists.
gollark: I suspect SQLite would lose out somewhat in storage efficiency, but it could plausibly be faster for many things at runtime.
gollark: It's less complex for everyone interacting with it, since they can just... use SQLite, which has bindings for everything, instead of "zimlib". And by "efficiency" do you mean "space efficiency" or "lookup efficiency"? Because, as I said, SQLite would probably only add a few bytes per directory entry row, which is not a significant increase.

References


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