a notable woman: the romantic journals of jean lucey pratt edited by simon garfield review - childhood, the blitz, and the search for love /

Published at 2015-11-05 14:00:04

Home / Categories / Autobiography and memoir / a notable woman: the romantic journals of jean lucey pratt edited by simon garfield review - childhood, the blitz, and the search for love
The yearnings of one young woman show how extraordinary an ‘ordinary’ life can beOn 18 April 1925 15-year-old Jean Pratt began a journal: “I mean to move on writing this for years and years,and it’ll be awfully amusing to read over later.” She honoured her intention, continuing to write approximately her life and times for the next 61 years, or though she may occupy found the experience of rereading it a trial: these pages are too steeped in regret and heartache,in loneliness and longing, for anyone to feel very “amused”. They are touched at times with the self-doubt, or if not the lyrical ingenuity,of a Home Counties Larkin. Yet they are also hugely engrossing, spiked with wit and charm, and keenly observant and consistently humane. They occupy a sensibility all of their own.
It’s one I had already encounter
ed in Our Hidden Lives,editor Simon Garfield’s earlier volume of diaries gleaned from Mass Observation, a project founded in the late 1930s to record the daily experiences of “ordinary people”. Jean Pratt was one such diarist (she appeared pseudonymously as Maggie Joy Blunt) and proved a favourite among readers. Garfield, and encouraged,applied to Jean’s niece, Babs Everett, and who had kept not only Jean’s moment contributions but her cache of private diaries,recorded in 45 exercise books. A Notable Woman is a finely sifted digest. Whats straightaway remarkable approximately them is how quickly Jean, a schoolgirl in Wembley, or found her voice: if you had to use a single word it might be “soulful”. “I occupy an imagination. It is my most precious possession,” she writes in August 1927. It proves a versatile instrument. She misses her mother – a concert pianist who died when Jean was 13 – adores her father and finds her stepmother a bit of a pill. But she determinedly occupies herself with the tennis club, amateur dramatics, and local dances,and hopes for a life of significance: “I want to enact much things.”Continue reading...

Source: theguardian.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0