Marghanita Laski
MARGHANITA LASKI was born in 1915 to a family
of Jewish intellectuals in Manchester; Harold
Laski, the socialist thinker, was her uncle. After
working in fashion she read English at Oxford,
married John Howard, a publisher, and worked in
journalism. She began writing once her son and
daughter were born: among her six novels were
Little
Boy Lost (1949), The
Village (1952) and The
Victorian Chaise-longue (1953). A
well-known critic, she wrote books on Jane Austen
and George Eliot. Ecstasy (1962) explored
intense experiences and Everyday Ecstasy
(1974) their social effects. Her distinctive voice
was often heard on the radio on The Brains Trust
and The Critics; and she submitted a large number
of illustrative quotations to the Oxford English
Dictionary. Her home was in Hampstead, where she
died in 1988. |