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Lost Girls - Love, War and Literature: 1939-51 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R320
Discovery Miles 3 200
You Save: R72
(18%)
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Lost Girls - Love, War and Literature: 1939-51 (Paperback)
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List price R392
Loot Price R320
Discovery Miles 3 200
You Save R72 (18%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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A Times Book of the Year 2019 'You should not deny yourself the
pleasure of reading it' Sunday Times 'A remarkable work and an
important addition to the extraordinary wartime history of literary
London' Literary Review Who were the Lost Girls? At least a dozen
or so young women at large in Blitz-era London have a claim to this
title. But Lost Girls concentrates on just four: Lys Lubbock, Sonia
Brownell, Barbara Skelton and Janetta Parlade. Chic, glamorous and
bohemian, as likely to be found living in a rat-haunted maisonette
as dining at the Ritz, they cut a swathe through English literary
and artistic life in the 1940s. Three of them had affairs with
Lucian Freud. One of them married George Orwell. Another became the
mistress of the King of Egypt and was flogged by him on the steps
of the Royal Palace. And all of them were associated with the
decade's most celebrated literary magazine, Horizon, and its
charismatic editor Cyril Connolly. Lys, Sonia, Barbara and Janetta
had very different - and sometimes explosive personalities - but
taken together they form a distinctive part of the war-time
demographic: bright, beautiful, independent-minded women with tough
upbringings behind them determined to make the most of their lives
in a highly uncertain environment. Theirs was the world of the buzz
bomb, the cocktail party behind blackout curtains, the severed hand
seen on the pavement in the Bloomsbury square, the rustle of a
telegram falling through the letter-box, the hasty farewell to
another half who might not ever come back, a world of living for
the moment and snatching at pleasure before it disappeared. But if
their trail runs through vast acreages of war-time cultural life
then, in the end, it returns to Connolly and his amorous
web-spinning, in which all four of them regularly featured and
which sometimes complicated their emotional lives to the point of
meltdown. The Lost Girls were the product of a highly artificial
environment. After it came to an end - on Horizon's closure in 1950
- their careers wound on. Later they would have affairs with dukes,
feature in celebrity divorce cases and make appearances in the
novels of George Orwell, Evelyn Waugh, Anthony Powell and Nancy
Mitford. The last of them - Janetta - died as recently as three
months ago. However tiny their number, they are a genuine missing
link between the first wave of newly-liberated young women of the
post-Great War era and the Dionysiac free-for-all of the 1960s.
Hectic, passionate and at times unexpectedly poignant, this is
their story.
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