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E-book
Author Pratt, Jean Lucey, author

Title A notable woman : the romantic journals of Jean Lucey Pratt / edited by Simon Garfield
Published Edinburgh : Canongate Books, 2015

Copies

Description 1 online resource
Contents Machine generated contents note: pt. ONE Architecture -- 1. Into a Cow -- 2. Jean Rotherham -- 3. Such a Long Way Down -- 4. Two Girls Who Whispered Once -- 5.A Man Shorter than Myself -- 6. The Popular Idea of Love -- 7. All His Honeyed Deceit -- 8. Of Her Own Accord -- 9. The Young Girl Glider -- 10. Twentieth-Century Blues -- 11.T.S. Eliot Surprised Me -- 12. Like a Knife, He Said -- 13. Israel Epstein -- 14. Into the Woods -- pt. TWO News as it Happens -- 15. The Boys in the Village -- 16. Your Mother in Englant -- 17. Gas-Filled Cell -- 18. The Big Moment Passionate -- 19. Francis -- 20. The Whole World Involved -- 21. What Being a Woman Means -- 22. Asbestos Front -- 23. Hiduminium Aluminium -- 24. Good Dyed Squirrel -- 25. The Robot Plane -- 26. Arsenic Blue -- 27. Plenty of Time for Dick -- 28. Oh, the Swine! -- pt. THREE A Starving Europe -- 29.A Large Bag of Biscuits -- Chocolate and Plain -- 30. No More Ghosts -- 31. The Problem of Palestine -- 32. Of Course He Stayed -- 33. Howl My Heart Out
Note continued: 34. Auragraph -- 35. Guardian Aunt, Rather Exciting -- 36. Destroy, Destroy, Destroy -- 37. To Be Published -- 38.X-Ray Man -- 39. How She Smells -- 40. The Latest Boogie-Woogie -- 41.A Deadly Sting -- 42. Self-knowledge -- pt. FOUR The Village's Book Supplier -- 43. The Colour of Nurses -- 44. Hags and Bitches -- 45. Terminex -- 46. Gloss and Plastic and What Have You -- 47. Slough of Despond -- 48. Now We Know
Summary 'Extraordinary. Timeless, funny and utterly absorbing' HILARY MANTEL In April 1925, Jean Lucey Pratt started a journal that she would keep for the rest of her life, producing over a million words in 45 exercise books. For sixty years, no one had an inkling of her diaries' existence, and they have remained unpublished until now. Jean wrote about anything that amused, inspired or troubled her, laying bare her life with aching honesty, infectious humour, indelicate gossip and heartrending hopefulness. She recorded her yearnings and disappointments in love. She documented the loss of a tennis match, her unpredictable driving, catty friends, devoted cats and difficult guests. With Jean we live through the tumult of the Second World War and the fears of a nation. We see Britain hurtling through a period of unbridled transformation and the shifting landscape for women in society. A unique slice of living, breathing British history, Jean's diaries are a revealing chronicle of life in the twentieth century
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
Notes Online resource; title from READ title page (OverDrive, viewed November 18, 2015)
Subject Pratt, Jean Lucey -- Diaries
Women -- Great Britain -- Diaries
Diaries, Letters & Journals.
LITERARY COLLECTIONS/Letters/
LITERARY COLLECTIONS/Essays/
LITERARY COLLECTIONS/Diaries & Journals/
Manners and customs
Women
SUBJECT Great Britain -- Social life and customs -- 20th century. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056953
Subject Great Britain
Genre/Form autobiographies (literary works)
Autobiographies
Diaries
Autobiographies.
Autobiographies.
Form Electronic book
Author Garfield, Simon, editor
ISBN 1782115714
9781782115717