| |
|
 |
 |
| |
1 Canonbury Park
North, Islington |
| |
|
200p PERSEPHONE BOOKS ISBN 1903155517
PREFACE BY ADAM GOPNIK
'We were just an ordinary, suburban, Victorian family,
undistinguished ourselves and unacquainted with distinguished
people.' Thus Molly Hughes in one of the great classics
of autobiography, A London Child of the
1870s (1934) in which she describes her everyday life
in a semidetached house in Islington as the youngest of
a large, characterful family. On first reading, writes
Adam Gopnik of The New Yorker, A London Child seemed
'the most perfect and moving record of ordinary life in
English' and when he re-read it twenty years later 'Molly's
book seems to me more painful now than it did when I first
read it, but still finer as writing. Here is an ordinary
life rendered truly, and joyfully, with a voice at once
so self-abnegating yet so gay and funny and precise that
we are reminded, in the end, of the one truth worth remembering,
that there are no ordinary lives.' As Adam Gopnik says,
it is Molly's pictures of everyday life that most stick
in the mind: traveling by bus to the West End, making toffee
in the afternoon, walking to St Paul's on Christmas Day...
The endpaper is taken from 'Daisy',
a wallpaper designed by William Morris in 1864, manufactured
by Jeffrey & Co of Islington, London
|