| Home - Books - Reviews - Tutorials - Software - Download - Orders - Newsletter | |
| Subscribe here for our free email newsletter - monthly update |
Custom Search
|
Lytton Strachey by Himselfdiaries, journals, essays, and personal fragments
Lytton Strachey is best known through his letters, a voluminous outpouring which he maintained throughout his life. But those were written largely to amuse the recipients. This book gathers together his diaries, which he wrote in solitude for himself.
As Michael Holroyd admits in his linking commentary between the entries, this piece is guaranteed to infuriate Bloomsbury critics, but for those who are more sympathetic it offers a first-hand glimpse of what life was like amidst this group. It's also remarkably similar in style to Virginia Woolf's poetic meditations and her shorter experimental fictions. It hovers tentatively in the regions of what we now call Proustian 'moments', and it is interesting to note that like the Lancaster Gate piece, it ends on a note of erotic confession. This is a fairly lightweight compilation, but it fills in some gaps left by both the letters and the biography. Strachey is a fascinating character - far more complex than the picture of him as an effete neurasthenic which is commonly circulated. © Roy Johnson 2006 [more BLOOMSBURY GROUP books] Michael Holroyd (ed) Lytton Strachey by Himself, London: Abacus, 2005, pp.248, ISBN 0349118124 |
|
|
Customers who bought this book also bought
Bombay to Bloomsbury |
Customers who bought this book also bought
The Letters of Lytton Strachey |
| Home - Books - Reviews - Tutorials - Software - Download - Orders - Newsletter | |
|
Mantex - PO Box 100 - Manchester M20 6GZ - UK Tel: +44 0161 432 5811 — Email: info@mantex.co.uk Copyright © Mantex 2000—2008 |