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Special Edition of this wonderful new book, numbered and signed in
a cloth slipcase Written in an even more vivid and direct style
than her celebrated memoirs, Diana Athill's letters to the American
poet Edward Field reveal a sharply intelligent woman with a
brilliant sense of humour, a keen eye for the absurd, a fierce
loyalty and a passionate zest for life. This intimate
correspondence spanning thirty years covers her final years as an
editor at Andre Deutsch, her retirement and immersion in her own
writing, her growing fame and encroaching old age, and gives a
fascinating insight into a life fully lived. Edited, selected and
introduced by Diana Athill, and annotated with her own delightful
notes, this funny, revealing and immensely readable collection will
bring enormous pleasure to her many thousands of readers.
Hailed as "a virtuoso exercise" (Sunday Telegraph), this book
reflects candidly, sometimes with great humor, on the condition of
being old. Charming readers, writers, and critics alike, the memoir
won the Costa Award for Biography and made Athill, then ninety-one,
a surprising literary star. Diana Athill was one of the great
editors in British publishing. For more than five decades she
edited the likes of V. S. Naipaul and Jean Rhys, for whom she was a
confidante and caretaker. As a writer, Athill made her reputation
for the frankness and precisely expressed wisdom of her memoirs.
Writing in her ninety-first year, "entirely untamed about both old
and new conventions" (Literary Review) and freed from any of the
inhibitions that even she may have once had, Athill reflects
candidly, and sometimes with great humor, on the condition of being
old-the losses and occasionally the gains that age brings, the
wisdom and fortitude required to face death. Distinguished by
"remarkable intelligence...[and the] easy elegance of her prose"
(Daily Telegraph), this short, well-crafted book, hailed as "a
virtuoso exercise" (Sunday Telegraph) presents an inspiring work
for those hoping to flourish in their later years.
What is it like to be old? Written in her nineties, when she was
free from any inhibitions she may have once had, Diana Athill
reflects frankly on the losses and occasionally the gains that old
age can bring, and on the wisdom and fortitude required to face
death. Lively, fearless and humorous, Somewhere Towards the End
encapsulates the vibrant final decades of Athill's life. Filled
with events, love and friendships, this is a memoir about
maintaining hope, joy and vigour in later life, resisting regret,
and questioning the beliefs and customs of your own generation.
England, in the mid-fifties. Meg Bailey has always aspired to live a respectable life. With her best friend, Roxane, she moves from secondary school to an un-bohemian art college in Oxford. Under the watchful eye of Roxanne's mother, Mrs Wheeler, the two girls flourish in Oxfordian society. But Meg constantly longs for more. Not content to stay in Oxford, she finds a job in London. Roxane stays behind and marries Dick, a man of Mrs Wheeler's choosing. As Meg's independence grows, Dick suddenly appears in London for work. A connection to her past, Meg and Dick's friendship flourishes, blurring the lines of loyalty between what is and what was in a way that changes life for these three friends forever. As sharp and starling now as when it was written, this unflinching and candid book of love and betrayal encapsulates Diana Athill's gift of storytelling at its finest.
This is a collection of short stories by writer Diana Athill.
Diana Athill helped shape some of the most celebrated books in
modern literature. For nearly five decades, she edited (and nursed
and coerced and coaxed) writers including Jean Rhys, V. S. Naipaul
and Philip Roth. From the pleasures, intrigues and complexities of
a life spent among authors and manuscripts to an account of Diana's
own turn to writing, this is the story of an illustrious career.
Written with an intimacy and spontaneity even more revealing than
her celebrated memoirs, Diana Athill's correspondence with the
American poet Edward Field covers thirty years of pleasure and
pain, fame and gossip, relationships and ailments. Edited, selected
and introduced by Athill, this collection of those letters covers
her career as an editor and the adventure of her retirement,
revealing a sharply intelligent woman with a keen eye for the
absurd, a brilliant turn of phrase and a wicked sense of humour.
Vivid, direct and entertaining, Instead of a Book is a wonderful
insight into a woman growing older without ever losing her zest for
life.
This is the story of how and why a talented writer came to take his
own life. When Diana Athill met the man she calls Didi, an Egyptian
in exile, she fell in love instantly and out of love just as fast.
Didi moved into her flat, they shared housework and holidays, and a
life of easy intimacy seemed to beckon. But Didi's sweetness and
intelligence soon revealed a darker side - he was a gambler, a
drinker and a womanizer, impossible to live with but impossible to
ignore. With painful honesty, Athill explores the three years they
spent together, a period that culminated in Didi's suicide - in her
home - an event he described in the journals he left for her to
read as 'the one authentic act of my life'.
Following a turbulent upbringing, a history of addiction and a
committal to an asylum, the teachings of Malcolm X changed Hakim
Jamal's life. He became an eloquent, rousing spokesperson for the
Nation of Islam movement, moved to London, began a relationship
with Gale Benson - the daughter of a British MP - and published a
book about Malcolm X, with Diana Athill. Before long, however, he
began behaving erratically again, and believed himself to be God.
Raw and unflinching, Make Believe is a memoir of friendship, love,
mania and injustice. A witness to his struggles, Athill reflects on
her relationship with Hakim with characteristic empathy and
candour, whilst charting the events that led to Gale's - and not
long after, Hakim's - murder.
Diana Athill, born in 1917, made her reputation as a writer with
the candour of her memoirs; through her commitment, in her words,
'to understand, to be aware, to touch the truth'. In a celebration
of her life and writing, Life Class brings together four of her
best-loved memoirs in one volume, spanning her very English
childhood, her life and loves during the Second World War, her
publishing career at Andre Deutsch, and her reflections on old age.
Introduced by Ian Jack, Diana Athill's selected memoirs are a
remarkable testament to an unusual and fully lived life.
What will you remember if you live to be 100? Diana Athill charmed
readers with her prize-winning memoir Somewhere Towards the End,
which transformed her into an unexpected literary star. Now, on the
eve of her ninety-eighth birthday, Athill has written a sequel
every bit as unsentimental, candid, and beguiling as her most
beloved work. Writing from her cozy room in Highgate, London, Diana
begins to reflect on the things that matter after a lifetime of
remarkable experiences, and the memories that have risen to the
surface and sustain her in her very old age. "My two valuable
lessons are: avoid romanticism and abhor possessiveness," she
writes. In warm, engaging prose she describes the bucolic pleasures
of her grandmother's garden and the wonders of traveling as a young
woman in Europe after the end of the Second World War. As her
vivid, textured memories range across the decades, she relates with
unflinching candor her harrowing experience as an expectant mother
in her forties and crafts unforgettable portraits of friends,
writers, and lovers. A pure joy to read, Alive, Alive Oh! sparkles
with wise and often very funny reflections on the condition of
being old. Athill reminds us of the joy and richness of every stage
of life-and what it means to live life fully, without regrets.
What matters in the end? In the final years of life, which memories
stand out? Writing from her retirement home in Highgate, London, as
she approaches her 100th year, Diana Athill recalls in sparkling
detail the moments in her life which sustain her. With vivid
memories of the past mingled with candid, wise and often very funny
reflections on the experience of being very old, Alive, Alive Oh!
reminds us of the joy and richness to be found at every stage of
life.
Yesterday Morning is a vivid recollection of Diana Athill's joyful
beginnings. It is also a remarkable insight into a now vanished
world; this is England in the 1920s, seen with a clear and
unsentimental eye from the vantage point of the 21st century.
Growing up in a Norfolk country house with servants, Athill's
upbringing was rich and loving: filled with the pleasures of horse
riding and the unfolding secrets of adults and sex. However, here,
she probes these foundations, asking: does privilege equate to
happiness?
SHORTLISTED FOR THE MAN BOOKER PRIZE WINNER OF THE 2006
COMMONWEALTH WRITERS' PRIZE LONGLISTED FOR THE IMPAC DUBLIN PRIZE A
BBC2 BIG JUBILEE BETWEEN THE COVERS READ London, 1806. William
Thornhill, happily wedded to his childhood sweetheart Sal, is a
waterman on the River Thames. Life is tough but bearable until
William makes a mistake, a bad mistake for which he and his family
are made to pay dearly. His sentence: to be transported to New
South Wales for the term of his natural life. Soon Thornhill, a man
no better or worse than most, has to make the most difficult
decision of his life.
Behind the bar at Jameel's in Cairo hang two mugs engraved with the
names of Ram and Font. During their years together in London, they
drank many a pint of Bass from these mugs. But there is no Bass in
Nasser's Egypt, so Ram and Font have to make do with a heady
mixture of beer, vodka and whisky. Yearning for Bass they long to
be far from a revolution that neither serves the people nor allows
their rich aunts to live the life of leisure they are accustomed
to. Stranded between two cultures, Ram and Font must choose between
dangerous political opposition and reluctant acquiescence. First
published in 1964, Beer in the Snooker Club is a classic of the
literature of emigration.
Despite her family's ailing finances, Diana Athill's childhood -
spent in a lovely house in Norfolk - was blissful. In 1932, she
fell in love with Paul: an undergraduate who tutored her younger
brother. Within several years, she had moved to Oxford to study and
they were engaged to be married. Then everything fell apart in the
cruellest possible way. Athill's debut is also her most personal: a
dissection of personal tragedy and the struggle to rebuild her life
amid severe disappointment and loneliness. Unfolding throughout the
Second World War, Instead of a Letter is an inspiring story of love
and loss, heartbreak and hope, and a testament to her strength of
character - her vivacity, honesty and perspicacity.
A charming, vibrant diary of Diana Athill's holiday to Florence in
the late 1940s. In August 1947, Diana Athill travelled to Florence
by the Golden Arrow train for a two-week holiday with her good
friend Pen. In this playful diary of that trip, Athill recorded her
observations and adventures - eating with (and paid for by) the
hopeful men they meet on their travels, admiring architectural
sights, sampling delicious pastries, eking out their budget and
getting into scrapes. Written with an arresting immediacy and
infused with an exhilarating joie de vivre, A Florence Diary is a
bright, colourful evocation of a time long lost, and a vibrant
portrait of a city that will be deliciously familiar to any
contemporary traveller.
Hakim Jamal (real name Alan Donaldson) was born in Roxbury, a black
district of Boston, in 1933. His father was a drunk, his mother
left when he was six. He started drinking at ten and was using
heroin at fourteen. In his early twenties he spent four years in
prison and was committed to an asylum for two attempted murders. At
twenty-seven he was converted by the teachings of Malcolm X, leader
of the Black Muslim movement, Nation of Islam, and his life
changed. He became an eloquent spokesman for the black urban
underclass in America. He was briefly Jean Seberg's lover. By the
late 1960s Hakim Jamal was living in London with Gale Benson, a
divorcee in her twenties, the daughter of an British MP, who took
the name Hale Kimga. Diana Athill met Hakim Jamal when she edited
his book, From the Dead Level: Malcolm X and Me, published by Andre
Deutsch. Against all odds, they became friends, sometimes lovers.
In Make Believe, originally published in 1993 and out of print for
some years, Diana Athill describes, with her trademark unflinching
honesty, her relationship with Hakim and his milieu, the
devastation wrought on his personality by his background, his
increasingly bizarre behaviour and
Diana Athill's memoir of a life spent working with some of the
charismatic characters who have dominated 20th-century literature.
In a prose style of inimitable wit and rare candour, she recounts
tales from a long life in publishing, including her reflections on
editing writers such as V.S. Naipaul, Jean Rhys, Gitta Sereny and
Brian Moore. She also provides an account of her own writing
career, whcih includes the two critically-acclaimed works, "Instead
of a Letter" and "After a Funeral".
When Diana Athill met the man she calls Didi, she fell in love
instantly and out of love just as fast. Didi's quirks, which at
first appeared so charming and sweet, soon revealed a darker
side-he was a gambler, a drinker, and a womanizer, impossible to
live with but impossible to ignore. After a Funeral explores the
years of their friendship; a period that culminated in Didi's
suicide (in Athill's apartment). This bravura work "gives a new
dimension to honesty, a new comprehension to love" (Vogue).
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