Das Leben der Vita Sackville-West liest sich wie ein Roman: Geboren wurde sie 1892 als einziges Kind von Lord Sackville und seiner halbspanischen Ehefrau Victoria auf Schloß Knole in Kent. Mit vierzehn Jahren schrieb sie ihren ersten Roman und bis zu ihrem Tod war sie nur dann mit sich zufrieden, 'wenn sie ein Buch in Arbeit hatte'. 1913 heiratete sie den Diplomaten Harold Nicolson, mit dem sie um Sissinghurst Castle einen der schönsten Gärten Englands gestaltete. Die Ehe, die wohl die ungewöhnlichste Verbindung dieses Jahrhunderts war, bestand über neunundvierzig Jahre. Beide Partner hatten im Laufe der Zeit viele Affären, die aber ihrer Verbundenheit nichts anhaben konnten. Fesselnd geschrieben, zeichnet Victoria Glendinning das auch kulturgeschichtlich aufschlußreiche Leben dieser unkonventionellen Frau auf: Vitas außerordentliche Entschiedenheit, mehr sein zu wollen als eine 'verheiratete Frau', ihre Liebesbeziehungen zu Virginia Woolf, Violet Trefusius und anderen, ihre schriftstellerischen Leistungen und Erfolge, ihre gelassene Heiterkeit und ihre nie nachlassende Wärme in der Beziehung zu ihrem Mann und ihren Söhnen.
Victoria Glendinning Bücher
Diese angesehene britische Biografin, Kritikerin, Radiopersönlichkeit und Romanautorin ist Präsidentin von English PEN und Trägerin des James Tait Black Memorial Prize. Ihre Schriften befassen sich mit den Feinheiten der menschlichen Psyche und bieten aufschlussreiche Gesellschaftskommentare. Mit scharfem Intellekt und feiner Sensibilität erforscht sie komplexe Beziehungen und moralische Dilemmata und zeigt eine unverwechselbare Erzählerstimme.







Frankfurter Verlagsanstalt, Frankfurt, 1995. 519 S. mit zahlr. Ablichtungen auf Tafeln im Innenteil, Pbd.U. neuwertig/Aus dem Englischen von Karl A. Klewer
Trollope
- 551 Seiten
- 20 Lesestunden
Anthony Trollope is, with Dickens, perhaps the most enduringly popular Victorian novelist. Born in 1815, he initially made his living working for the Post Office, and introduced the pillar box into Britain. He was also an enthusiastic rider to hounds, a Liberal parliamentary candidate, a magazine editor, a traveller, the devoted friend of Thackeray and George Eliot and the author of over 60 books and a vast amount of journalism. This book explores Trollope's private life - his unhappy childhood, his relationships with his wife and a beautiful American, Kate Fielding - while creating a picture of the times in which he lived.
Vita
The Life of Vita Sackville-West
The Hon Victoria Mary Sackville-West, Lady Nicolson, CH (9 March 1892 – 2 June 1962), best known as Vita Sackville-West, was an English author, poet and gardener. She won the Hawthornden Prize in 1927 and 1933. She was known for her exuberant aristocratic life, her passionate affair with the novelist Virginia Woolf, and Sissinghurst Castle Garden, which she and her husband, Sir Harold Nicolson, created at their estate. This is her biography.
Leonard Woolf: A Biography
- 512 Seiten
- 18 Lesestunden
The biography delves into the life of Leonard Woolf, highlighting his role as a key figure in the Bloomsbury Group and his relationship with Virginia Woolf. Through meticulous research and new insights, the author explores his contributions to literature and thought during early 20th-century Britain. The inclusion of photographs enriches the narrative, offering a visual connection to Woolf's experiences and the vibrant cultural milieu he was part of.
By the time of his death, Thomas Stamford Raffles (1781-1826) was the founder of Singapore and Governor of Java, having left school in his early teens to become a clerk for the British East India Company. Charismatic and daring, Raffles forged an extraordinary path for himself in South East Asia - refusing to be satisfied with the trading posts available to the British, he defied Dutch governors and wrangled with warring local rulers to establish what is now a world city. An ardent linguist and zoologist, Raffles spoke fluent Malay and found time to write The History of Java, as well as naming several species of flora and fauna he discovered on his travels. He founded London Zoo and promoted the study of Malay alongside European languages in Southeast Asia.Raffles remains a controversial figure - a utopian imperialist, disobedient employee and knight of the realm who died deeply in debt, predeceased by all but one of his children. He built racial segregation into his urban planning, but was also a staunch abolitionist. Renowned biographer Victoria Glendinning charts Raffles' prodigious rise in this new edition, specially updated for the bicentenary of the foundation of Singapore in 1819. His life was short, complicated and shot through with tragedy, but Raffles' fame lives on.
Jonathan Swift
- 336 Seiten
- 12 Lesestunden
Poet, polemicist, pamphleteer and wit, Swift is best known as the author of "Gulliver's Travels". In this biography, Victoria Glendinning investigates the main events and relationships of Swift's life and provides a portrait set in a tapestry of controversy and paradox.
"I always wanted everything so frantically, and I'm just the person that can't have them.' Based on family papers and memories, this picture of middle class life at the end of the nineteenth century tells the poignant story of Winnie Seebohm, Victoria Glendinning's great-aunt, who in 1885 was one of the early students at Newnham College, Cambridge. Though much loved by her family, Winnie was stifled in her desire for life and died at the age of twenty-two.

