Based on the cover information, with its author
photograph
The writer, DAVID EAGAR, trained in geography,
ecological research, and copy editing. After a
career in government countryside planning, he
completed an MPhil in playwriting, specialising
in historical fiction and the subgenre of climate
fiction: Cli-fi. 'Environment as creative inspiration:
the British climate play (2007-14).
With that background, and looking for a medium
for his ideas and instinct, David chose the
internationally famous landscape artist John
Constable, RA.
The artist's sky paintings made on London's
Hampstead Heath, 1820-22, are world-renowned
for their realism. In 1999, University of Birmingham
meteorologist, John E Thornes, published his
research into the weather in Lodon across those
three years. Amazingly, Thornes was able to date
twelve of John Constable's sky paintings to
a specific day.
Here we present in one volume both the original
play and the novel that David wrote based
on the drama. Novels and short stories have
inspired plays, films, and television
adaptations. Here is an example of a play
inspiring a novel. You may enjoy comparing
the two media.
Skying Years should appeal to readers of
historical or climate fiction, or if you are
immersed in drama and looking for something
different, something rooted in an understanding
of climate change.
Skying Years is a story in two halves.
You could say there were eight women in John
Constable's life. There was his mother, Ann, his
three sisters, Ann, Martha, and Mary, his wife,
Maria (Bicknell), his mother-in-law, Maria Elizabeth
(Rhudde), and his two daughters who lived to
maturity, Maria Louisa and Isabel.
John marries his childhood sweetheart, Maria
Bicknell. Anne Fisher, their friend, who is wife of
the Revd. Edward (John) Fisher leads us right
through the novel.
John and Maria grew up in the village of East
Bergholt, where the county of Suffolk meets Essex
county by the River Stour. John's father was a miller,
and it was around Flatford Mill that the young John
Constable perfected his art with numerous drawings
and 'oil sketches'. Best known is his late 'Hay Wain'
painting, made alongside the mill in 1821. It depicts
a wagon cooling its metal rimmed wheels in the river
on a sultry summer's day. The sky is superbly painted
with the thorough understanding of clouds and skies,
which Constable had mastered.
Britain is valued for its landscapes, and here is the
British master of representing them.
In 2025, John Constable deserves a more honoured
place in Britain's renewed and international connection
with its weather, and what our skies foretell and bring.
An annual Constable & Turner Climate Award perhaps?
Rezensionen / Stimmen
The novel was written this year, 2025, and has yet to be reviewed.
The play on which it is based, and published with the novel, was
reviewed by three people.
'David's style of writing Cumulus reminds me
of the Irish playwright, Brian Friel'
Not a coincidence as Friel lived in the rural
north west of Ireland, and David grew up and
often lived in north west Wales.
WELSH PLAYWRIGHT AND ACADEMIC
WLLIAM LEWIS
After a close read of 'Cumulus and Cirrus',
The 'Skying Years':
'The play clearly draws on considerable
research and knowledge-building related to art
history, climate change, and the contemporary
practices of media organisations. I learned
about Constable's interest in changing skies
and clouds, about cloud science in the early
nineteenth century, and about Constable's life.
'Among the play's real strengths, I particularly
liked the way the contrast is drawn between
his deep awareness of the ways in which
changes in skyscapes presage change in
weather patterns; and the ambivalence
articulated in some areas of contemporary
social life regarding climate change.'
I'also liked the way in
which the Cumulus sections depicted the
lasting friendship between John Constable
and Edward (John) Fisher.'
SOCIOLINGUIST
MARILYN MARTIN-JONES
'Congratulations on publishing the book.'
DR EBEN MUSE, READER IN
BOOKSELLING,BANGOR UNIVERSITY
David Eagar's family were mainly London Scots. Yet he grew up near the Isle
of Anglesey's coast, before reading geography, then ecology, in Birmingham
and Bangor, respectively. He entered the civil service after training in copy
editing with Unilever advertising. Whilst at the Countryside Commission and
in Whitehall, David trained in town and country planning.
For over a decade, he worked with three county councils: Hampshire, Norfolk,
and Gwynedd. David returned to the Countryside Commission in its Midlands
region and policy directorates, then transferring to the new Countryside
Council for Wales. There he led on recreation and access policies, before
developing Wales's unique landscape information system, LANDMAP, and
writing the design guide, 'Wales: making places.'