And this… I do love book hunting, especially when I strike literary gold!
I’ve been looking out for a copy of Nicola Beauman’sA Very Great Professionfor quite some time, so when I spotted this 1983 Virago edition how could I resist? Basically, it’s a study of middle-class women between the wars, as portrayed in novels of the time. By and large the authors featured are middle-class women, writing about the world they knew. Many have been forgotten for decades, while others have undergone something of a resurgence in recent years.
Beauman, of course, went on to found Persephone Books, which now publishes her book, but it was the Virago edition I wanted. There’s something immensely satisfying about those dark green spines…
I’m really looking forward to reading this. I think it’s a fascinating subject, and from a quick glance it seems that the seeds of the Persephone ethos are there in this book.
The women in the novels explored by Beauman in A Very Great Profession may feel frustrated and constrained by the narrowness of their lives, but they’re a world away from those created by Jean Rhys. Her heroines (if one can call them that) always seem to be cast adrift, buffeted by fate, unable to summon the will or the energy to change things.
She’s not what I would call a happy writer, and I’m not sure her work is enjoyable in the conventional sense – her stories are bleak, and there seem to be no happy endings, but I love the way she writes, and I’ve been hunting for some of her short stories for ages and ages and ages, so you can imagine how thrilled I was to find Tigers are Better-Looking. Itcontains eight short stories first published in 1939, as well as a selection from a collection originally issued in 1927 as The Left Bank, and I can’t wait to start reading – only I have several books on the go at the moment. I would love to be able to read one book at a time.
I'm a former journalist and sub-editor who loves needlework, reading and writing, and is still searching for the Meaning of Life, the Universe and Everything. Until I find the answer I'm volunteering at an Oxfam Book Shop and learning about Creative Sketchbooks!
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What lovely finds! I have the Beauman in the Persephone but I'd buy the Virago one if I saw it, too!
What wonderful finds. Jean Rhys writes wonderfully well, and that is a lovely edition of A Very Great Profession. I have a later Virago edition and I've never seen the lovely cover of the edition you found anywhere.
So glad to find another Jean Rhys enthusiast. Her books are increasingly difficult to find – I'm not sure if any of them are still printed, which is a shame because, as you say, she writes wonderfully well.
I kind of like Jean Rhys butt I am not sure why. The recent article about Persephone on Slate.com piqued my interest about Bauman. I love the edition you found.
I seem to have missed your comment Thomas, which is why I haven't replied before. Sorry! I know what you mean about Rhys. I'm not sure I can explain my reasons for liking her, especially as her work is so different to the kind of books I usually enjoy.
A collective of bibliophiles talking about books. Book Fox (vulpes libris): small bibliovorous mammal of overactive imagination and uncommonly large bookshop expenses. Habitat: anywhere the rustle of pages can be heard.
What lovely finds! I have the Beauman in the Persephone but I'd buy the Virago one if I saw it, too!
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They've both been on my Wish List for quite a while, so I'm really pleased.
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What wonderful finds. Jean Rhys writes wonderfully well, and that is a lovely edition of A Very Great Profession. I have a later Virago edition and I've never seen the lovely cover of the edition you found anywhere.
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So glad to find another Jean Rhys enthusiast. Her books are increasingly difficult to find – I'm not sure if any of them are still printed, which is a shame because, as you say, she writes wonderfully well.
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I kind of like Jean Rhys butt I am not sure why. The recent article about Persephone on Slate.com piqued my interest about Bauman. I love the edition you found.
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I seem to have missed your comment Thomas, which is why I haven't replied before. Sorry! I know what you mean about Rhys. I'm not sure I can explain my reasons for liking her, especially as her work is so different to the kind of books I usually enjoy.
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