From Publishers Weekly
This passionate memoir reflects a sharp, incisive interiority and is written in a style that's even more lyrical and engaging than the style that propelled Bedford into the literary world with her first book,
Sudden View, in 1953. Mentored by Aldous Huxley (she later wrote his definitive biography), raised in a Europe struggling to retain and later regain its soul, Bedford (b. 1911) crossed paths with many compelling characters in the years during, between and after the world wars, including a few close to Hitler and to the Fascists. Her detailed autobiography is also a memoir of the evolution of an author, and Bedford writes as movingly of 9/11 as she does of the occupation and liberation of Europe. Bedford counters the perils of political darkness with the first flushes of romantic passions, and, throughout, describes the landscape of her world: her youth in the countrysides of Europe, and her adulthood in London, Paris, Berlin, Rome, Florence and New York. Her eye and ear for the ever-changing and challenging world in which she has lived moves her seamlessly from one era to the next. It's heady stuff, no less so for Bedford's ruminative style, her introspection and insight.
Agent, Kim Witherspoon. (Apr.)
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
Born in pre-World War I Germany and raised in Italy, England, and France, Bedford made her literary debut in 1953 with
A Visit to Don Otavio, acclaimed by critics as one of the finest travel books of the twentieth century. Her distinguished dossier also includes coverage of criminal trials (from Auschwitz to Jack Ruby) and a much-heralded biography of her mentor, Aldous Huxley. This memoir--her first book in 10 years--offers insight into the woman behind the writing, from her struggles penning prose (striving for what Hemingway called the "one true sentence") to her colorful collection of literary colleagues and friends (including Truman Capote, Eudora Welty, and a German baroness once linked to Francisco Franco). One of Britain's nine Companions of Literature (V. S. Naipaul and Harold Pinter are fellow honorees), Bedford describes her life as "intermittent rushes with the catastrophic events of the century and a largely unharmed continuance of my existence as an individual, freer than many. By the grace of chance." Bedford goes a bit overboard on details in this otherwise lively account of a literary life.
Allison BlockCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.