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From the critically acclaimed author Sally Bayley, The Green Lady
is a poignant, brilliant exploration of the relationships between
children and their teachers. In the style of her memoir Girl with
Dove, this book explores a child’s search for artistic education
and a sense of self. Lyrical and playful, Sally Bayley’s writing
transports the reader into an eccentric world of teachers,
guardians and guiding spirits of place. Moved by her female
teachers, and guided by the artist J.M.W. Turner, Bayley’s
protagonist goes in search of her maternal ancestors, in particular
her grandmother, Edna May Turner. Following the narratives of other
women in history who have taken different routes to independence
and artistic freedom – including the educational suffragist Mary
Neal, actress Margaret Rutherford, and poet Stevie Smith – Bayley
considers the paths to happiness and the limitations social
convention imposes. Part novel, part memoir, The Green Lady
continues the traditions of Virginia Woolf’s Orlando as an
imagined biography which urgently understands the need for a space
of one’s own in which to thrive. As one of the book’s several
foster children, Bayley reminds us that families and homes can be
found and built within literature and the arts as well as nature's
green spaces.
'The word "mesmerising" is frequently applied to memoirs, but
seldom as deservedly as in the case of Girl With Dove' Financial
Times 'Reading is a form of escape and an avid reader is an escape
artist...' Brilliantly original, funny and clever Honor Clark,
Spectator, Book of the Year Growing up in a dilapidated house by
the sea where men were forbidden, Sally's childhood world was
filled with mystery and intrigue. Hippies trailed through the
kitchen looking for God - their leader was Aunt Di, who ruled the
house with charismatic force. When Sally's baby brother vanishes
from his pram, she becomes suspicious of the activities going on
around her. What happened to Baby David and the woman called Poor
Sue? And where did all the people singing and wailing prayers in
the front room suddenly go? Disappearing into a world of books and
reading, Sally adopts the tried and tested methods of Miss Marple.
Taking books for hints and clues, she turns herself into a reading
detective. Her discovery of Jane Eyre marks the beginning of a
vivid journey through Victorian literature where she also finds the
kind, eccentric figure of Charles Dickens' Betsey Trotwood. These
characters soon become her heroines, acting as a part of an
alternative family, offering humour and guidance during many
difficult moments in Sally's life. Combining the voices of literary
characters with those of her real-life counterparts, Girl With Dove
reads as a magical series of strange encounters, climaxing with a
comic performance of Shakespeare in the children's home where Sally
is eventually sent. Weaving literary classics with a young girl's
coming of age story, this is a book that testifies to the
transformative power of reading and the literary imagination.
Mixing fairy tale, literary classics, nursery rhymes and folklore,
it is the story of a child's adventure in wonderland and search for
truth in an adult world often cast in deep shadow.
'Nobody writes like Sally Bayley' Lemn Sissay From the brilliantly
original and critically acclaimed Sally Bayley, a literary story of
working class childhood, absent or broken men and the power of
literature to save and rebuild a world. In Sally Bayley's
childhood, the men were often missing. Missing because they were
drunk, or out of work, or wandering. Or missing because their
behaviour meant women banned them from the house. The man who was
around for Sally was Shakespeare, and he brought men with him to
fill the gaps. Sally grew up with a troupe of sad kings and lonely
heroes. Her mind ran away from home with Falstaff and Prince Hal,
with deceivers and mavericks and geniuses. In her signature and
extraordinary style, this is Sally's story of her childhood - one
lived with darkness snapping at heels, with real and imagined
people passing through interchangeably, and with trauma a spiky
memory to be skirted and avoided. Inventive, literary and
adventurous, this is a story of hard childhood and a testament to
the way that great literature and its characters can guard an
imagination against the bad.
In a beautiful literary exploration, Sally Bayley tracks the
evolution – and the potential twenty first century death of –
the diary, mourning what it means to lose the art of writing simply
for oneself. Diaries hold all manner of things: they allow us a
moment to be completely personal, to self-aggrandise, to focus on
self-reflection without concern of what someone on the outside
might think. Discovered or published diaries of the past have also
provided glimpses into history, eras and minds gone by, especially
the inner lives otherwise unknown. Tracing the history of the diary
from Samuel Pepys, whose record of the Great Plague and Great Fire
of London informed history, through the likes of Virginia Woolf’s
personal confessions in the twentieth century, and up to the age of
social media, Sally Bayley explores the beauty and the power of
recording one’s own life. Taking this thought all the way up to
our era of exposure, with confessional journalism and social media
barrage, Bayley explores what we might lose as individuals if we
let go of the diary as private confidante, choosing instead a
culture of public disclosure.
Interest in Sylvia Plath continues to grow, as does the mythic
status of her relationship with Ted Hughes, but Plath is a poet of
enduring power in her own right. This book explores the many layers
of her often unreliable and complex representations and the
difficult relationship between the reader and her texts. The volume
evaluates the historical, familial and cultural sources which Plath
drew upon for material: from family photographs, letters and
personal history to contemporary literary and cinematic holocaust
texts. It examines Plath's creative processes: what she does with
materials ranging from Romantic paintings to women's magazine
fiction, how she transforms these in multiple drafts and the tools
she uses to do this, including her use of colour. Finally the book
investigates specific instances when Plath herself becomes the
subject matter for other artists, writers, film makers and
biographers.
"From Self to Shelf is a marvellously rich and various exploration
of the interplay between biographical and aesthetic selves, ranging
from the great self-inventions of the Romantic poets, through the
complexities of revelation and impersonality that characterise
twentieth century art, and down to the knowing dramas of reticence
and display that distinguish the work of so many leading
contemporaries. It includes essays in literary criticism, chapters
in the history of painting and of music, biographical accounts, and
studies in popular culture, as well as reflections by eminent
practitioners. The editors have assembled an outstanding group of
contributors, with names both new and familiar, to produce a volume
at once absorbing and surprising, warmly alive to the human stories
it tells while remaining theoretically up-to-date, and creating a
book that is altogether as engaging and thought-provoking as the
masterpieces it illuminates."Seamus Perry.Fellow and Tutor in
English, Balliol College, Oxford.
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Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
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