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'Passionate, lucid, risky, rash, hard to put down and impossible to forget.' Hilary Spurling, OBSERVER Angelica Garnett may truly be called a child of Bloomsbury. Her Aunt was Virginia Woolf, her mother Vanessa Bell, and her father Duncan Grant, though for many years Angelica believed herself, naturally enough, the daughter of Vanessa's husband Clive. Her childhood homes, Charleston in Sussex and Gordon Square in London, were both centres of Bloomsbury activity, and she grew up surrounded by the most talked-about writers and artists of the day - Leonard and Virginia Woolf, Roger Fry, the Stracheys, Maynard Keynes, David Garnett (whom she later married), and many others. But the book is also a record of a young girl's particular struggle to emerge from that extraordinary and intense milieu as a mature and independent woman. With an honesty that is by degrees agonising and uplifting, the author creates a vibrant, poignant picture of her mother, Vanessa Bell, of her own emergent individuality, and of the Bloomsbury era.
An illustrated guide to Charleston, the Sussex farmhouse where
Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant provided a gathering place for the
Bloomsbury group, which included such literary and artistic
luminaries as E. M. Forster, Lytton Strachey, and Virginia
Woolf.
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