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Harman Claire - Sylvia Townsend Warner: a biography

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Harman Claire Sylvia Townsend Warner: a biography

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Winner of the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize
One of the most shamefully under-read great British authors of the past 100 years Sarah Waters
The poet Sylvia Townsend Warner rose to sudden fame with the publication of her classic feminist novel Lolly Willowes in 1926, but never became a conventional member of London literary life, pursuing instead a long writing career in her own individualistic manner. Cheerfully defying social norms of the day, Warner lived in an openly homosexual relationship with the poet Valentine Ackland for almost forty years. Together, they were committed members of the Communist party and travelled twice to Spain during the Civil War, but Warner paid for her outspokenness with years of neglect, and channelled much of her emotional and intellectual energy into letters, poems and heart-breaking diaries that remained unpublished during her lifetime. In this enthralling and enlightening biography, Claire...

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Contents Claire Harman SYLVIA TOWNSEND WARNER A Biography - photo 1
Contents Claire Harman SYLVIA TOWNSEND WARNER A Biography PENGUIN BOOKS UK - photo 2
Contents
Claire Harman

SYLVIA TOWNSEND WARNER
A Biography
PENGUIN BOOKS UK USA Canada Ireland Australia India New Zealand - photo 3
PENGUIN BOOKS

UK | USA | Canada | Ireland | Australia
India | New Zealand | South Africa

Penguin Books is part of the Penguin Random House group of companies whose addresses can be found at global.penguinrandomhouse.com.

First published by Chatto Windus 1989 Published by Minerva Press 1991 - photo 4

First published by Chatto & Windus 1989
Published by Minerva Press 1991
Published in Penguin Books 2015

Copyright Claire Harman, 1989

Cover The Cecil Beaton Studio Archive at Sothebys

The moral right of the author has been asserted

ISBN: 978-0-241-96444-6

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Claire Harman is the award-winning biographer of Sylvia Townsend Warner (1989), Fanny Burney (2000) and Robert Louis Stevenson (2005) and the author of the bestselling Janes Fame: How Jane Austen Conquered the World (2009). She writes regularly for the literary press on both sides of the Atlantic and was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2006. Her most recent work is Charlotte Bront: A Life (2015).

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PENGUIN BOOKS

SYLVIA TOWNSEND WARNER

Praise for Sylvia Townsend Warner

A living and revelatory biography, as passionate and truthful, elegant and enchanting as its subject. Claire Harman restores Sylvia Townsend Warner to her real place as, in her best works, second only to Virginia Woolf among the women writers of our century George D. Painter

A fascinating and moving tale, told with insight, sympathy and objectivity Times Literary Supplement

Harman skillfully weaves Sylvias stories and letters into the biography, and the brilliance of the samples on display constantly takes you aback Outstanding John Carey, Sunday Times

Really interesting and totally gripping. It evokes a person and a period and a whole world in a very effective way Victoria Glendinning

As lively and perceptive as this idiosyncratic, rewarding writer deserves New Statesman

Praise for Robert Louis Stevenson

A delight from beginning to end Stevenson has found a worthy biographer at last John Carey, Sunday Times

Superbly readable Evening Standard

Full, rich, intelligent and smooth a continuous pleasure to read Allan Massie, Literary Review

It takes real skill to preserve a sense of overall shape, as Harmans excellent biography does. Her judgements are crisp yet unobtrusive she allows Stevenson to bring himself to life, letting his peculiar sparkle flicker through Sunday Telegraph

Both the life and the writing are irresistibly entertaining Theo Tait, Daily Telegraph

Vivid and engaging Stevenson emerges from her pages as a vital, courageous, contrary and exhilarating figure Times Literary Supplement

To A.M.P.

Illustrations

Acknowledgements:

, Dorset County Museum.

Acknowledgements

The author and publishers would like to thank the following for permission to reproduce copyright material: Susanna Pinney and William Maxwell, Executors of the Estate of Sylvia Townsend Warner, and Chatto & Windus Ltd. for extracts from Letters by Sylvia Townsend Warner (1982); the Estate of Sylvia Townsend Warner and Carcanet Press Ltd., for extracts from Collected Poems by Sylvia Townsend Warner (1982); Susanna Pinney and William Maxwell, Executors of the Estate of Valentine Ackland, and Chatto & Windus for extracts from The Nature of the Moment by Valentine Ackland (1973) and For Sylvia: An Honest Account (1985); the Estate of Robert Frost and Jonathan Cape for extracts from The Letters of Robert Frost to Louis Untermeyer (1964); The Collection of American Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University (as owners only) for extracts from letters of Sylvia Townsend Warner to George Plank and to Leonard Bacon, extracts from the journal of Alyse Gregory and from the letters of Valentine Ackland to Alyse Gregory in their possession; Chatto & Windus for extracts from letters of Sylvia Townsend Warner to Charles Prentice in their archive at Reading University; Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, The University of Texas (as owners only) for extracts from letters of Sylvia Townsend Warner to Nancy Cunard and to Alyse Gregory.

I would like to express my thanks to Susanna Pinney and William Maxwell who gave me full access to the Sylvia Townsend Warner and Valentine Ackland papers in the Dorset County Museum and permission to quote from the published and unpublished writings of both Sylvia and Valentine. Without their generous help and encouragement, and that of the trustees of Sylvia Townsend Warners estate, Joy Finzi and Peg Manisty, I would have been unable to write this book.

I must record my gratitude to Janet Pollock, Bea Howe, Peg Manisty and Angela Pitt for their invaluable help and friendship and to Jean Larson, Mary Dene, Steven Clark, Julius Lipton and all of the above for kindly allowing me to quote from material in their possession. The late Rosemary Manning was particularly generous in loaning me Valentines letters to Alyse Gregory, now at Yale University, and the late Hilary Machen was as generous with his time, reminiscences and encouragement.

I would like to thank Roger Peers, of the Dorset County Museum, for his help and interest in my research, and also Michael Bott, of Reading University Library, and A.D.K. Hawkyard and J.S. Golland of Harrow School.

Many people have spoken or written to me about Sylvia, and significantly increased my understanding of my subject: Sybil Chase, Marchette Chute and the late Joy Chute, the late Vivien Elgood, the late David Garnett, the late Kenneth Hopkins, Colin House, the late George Howe, Peter Jones, J. Lawrence Mitchell, George D. Painter, O.B.E., Trekkie Parsons, the late Mrs Lucy Penny, the late Edgell Rickword, Ruth and Antony Scott, the late Norah Smallwood, Janet Stone, the late Grafin Antonia von & zu Trauttmansdorff, Mrs Elizabeth Warner and Elizabeth Wade White.

I would also like to thank my editor at Chatto & Windus, Jeremy Lewis, a model of patience, my family and Jacky Quigley and Nancy Stenhouse.

1 18931917 I On 5 December 1893 the bell of Harrow School Chapel was tolling - photo 6
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