Sarah Gristwoodová, absolventka Oxfordu, se po studiu stala novinářkou se zaměřením na umění a ženská témata. Její práce se objevila v předních britských denících, kde se věnovala otázkám relevantním pro současné čtenářky. S citem pro detail a hlubokým porozuměním společenským souvislostem přináší její psaní pohled na témata, která rezonují s širokým publikem. Její analytický přístup a schopnost propojovat osobní zkušenosti s širšími společenskými proudy činí z jejího díla poutavé čtení.
An internationally admired figure Queen Elizabeth II is the most high-profile
monarch in the world, and her enduring popularity is tantamount to her many
supporters. Following the twists and turns of her life and key turning points,
including her teenage years during the war, marrying the Duke of Edinburgh and
her ascension to the throne.
"United across centuries, these women's voices open doors to lost worlds and make them seem familiar. A modern classic." —Alison Weir A captivating collection of extracts from women’s diaries, looking back over four centuries to discover how women’s experience—of men and children, sex and shopping, work and the natural world—has changed down the years. And, of course, how it hasn’t. In this fascinating anthology, with a selection of entries for every day of the year, you’ll find Lady Anne Clifford in the seventeenth century and Loran Hurscot in the twentieth both stoically recording the demands of an unreasonable husband; Joan Wyndham and Anne Frank (at much the same time, but in wildly different settings) describing their first experiences with sex; and Anne Lister in the eighteenth-century north of England exploring her love affairs with women alongside Alice Walker in twentieth-century California. From Barbara Pym purchasing daring lingerie and Virginia Woolf relishing her new haircut to Sylvia Plath chronicling her ups and her downs and a stoical Amelia Stewart Knight on the pioneer trail, this book contains a rich mix of incredibly well-known diarists and more obscure ones, and often the voices echoing down the centuries sound eerily familiar today.
A smaller, cheaper edition of this acclaimed illustrated biography of Beatrix
Potter. Respected biographer Sarah Gristwood discovers a life crisscrossed
with contradictions and marked by tragedy, yet one that left a remarkable
literary - and environmental - legacy.
An extraordinary life lost in history: the compelling biography of Arbella Stuart spans both Tudor and Stuart courts, and encompasses espionage, a clandestine marriage, imprisonment and eventual death in the Tower of London. Arbella Stuart was the niece of Mary Queen of Scots and first cousin to James VI of Scotland. Acknowledged as her heir by Elizabeth I, Arbella’s right to the English throne was equaled only by James. Kept under close supervision by her grandmother, but still surrounded by plots -- most of them Roman Catholic in origin -- she became an important pawn in the struggle for succession, particularly during the long, tense period when Elizabeth I lay dying. Her fate was sealed however when, upon James’s succession and having been invited back to court, Arbella made a treasonous marriage for which she was forced to flee England. She was intercepted off the coast of Calais and escorted to the Tower, where she died some years later, alone and, most probably, from starvation. For fans of historical biography, Arbella is possibly the most romantic heroine of them all. Hers was a story just waiting to be told.
In sixteenth-century Europe, an extraordinary set of women created a unique
culture of feminine power that saw them run the continent for decades Epic in
scale, this game of queens is a remarkable spectacle of skill and ingenuity,
confronting the challenges faced by women in power - many of which still hold
relevant today.
‘Entrancing, compelling, and beautifully written…This is the historical novel as literary fiction – and damned good literary fiction at that.’ Alison Weir
Eigentlich hatte Truman Capote für die Verfilmung seines Romans Breakfast at Tiffany's Marilyn Monroe als Hauptdarstellerin vorgeschlagen. Doch dieser war die Rolle angeblich zu anrüchig. So spielte Audrey Hepburn das New Yorker Playgirl Holly Golightly, und zwar so erfolgreich, dass Frühstück bei Tiffany zum Kultfi lm wurde und sie zur Ikone der 1960er-Jahre. Die gesamte Entwicklung von der Kurzgeschichte bis zur ersten Reaktion des Publikums schildert Sarah Gristwood in kenntnisreichen Texten und anhand von über 120 Fotos, Skizzen und Dokumenten, die erstmals in einem Band versammelt sind. Dieses in Zusammenarbeit mit Paramount Pictures entstandene Buch bietet einen einzigartigen Einblick in den Entstehungsprozess und die Hintergründe dieses Filmklassikers, der auch nach 50 Jahren nichts von seinem Zauber verloren hat.