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WWI munitions worker from PQ No 7 |
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248p PERSEPHONE BOOKS ISBN 0953478009
PREFACE BY NICOLA BEAUMAN
Persephone Book No. 1 was 'written in a rage in 1918;
this extraordinary novel... is a passionate assertion of
the futility of war' (the Spectator). Its author
had been an actress and suffragette; after 1914 she worked
at the Scottish Women's Hospital at Royaumont and organised
Concerts at the Front. William - an Englishman was
written in a tent within sound of guns and shells; this
'stunning... terrifically good' novel (Radio 4's A
Good Read) is in one sense a very personal book, animated
by fury and cynicism, and in another a detached one; yet
is always 'profoundly moving'
(Financial Times).
In our view William is one of the greatest novels
about war ever written: not the war of the fighting soldier
or the woman waiting at home, but the war encountered by
Mr and Mrs Everyman, wrenched away from their comfortable
preoccupations - Socialism, Suffragettism, so gently mocked
by Cicely Hamilton - and forced to be part of an almost
dream-like horror (because they cannot at first believe
what is happening to them). The scene when William and
Griselda emerge after three idyllic weeks in a honeymoon
cottage in the remote hills of the Belgian Ardennes, and
encounter German brutality in a small village, is unforgettable.
The book, which won the Prix Femina-Vie Heureuse in 1919,
is a masterpiece, written with an immediacy and a grim
realism reminiscent of an old-fashioned, flickering newsreel.
The endpaper fabric is an Omega Workshop
linen, dating from 1913 when the novel begins. With its
pattern of abstract shapes outlined in black 'Pamela'
has an appropriate austerity; yet the soft curves evoke
the Belgian hills and the blue, green and purple recall
the suffragette colours. |