Find a book

A Book a Month

We can send a book a month for six or twelve months - the perfect gift. More »

Café Music

Listen to our album of Café Music while browsing the site. More »

A parallel in pictures to the world of Persephone Books.

To subscribe, enter your email address below and click 'Subscribe'.

3rd October 2025

Interior at the Cottage is by Luke Martineau (b1970) who frequently paints domestic subjects. It illustrates how, in so many ways, kitchens are timeless and unchanging; this one could be contemporary or from one of several centuries. 


2nd October 2025

Violet in the Kitchen (1995) by Hector McDonnell (b1947) encapsulates the way in which so much domestic and family life happens in the kitchen now that it is often no longer separate from the rest of the household. In the past, family portraits would not have been set in a kitchen, but now that it is where  homework, crafts, eating, reading, playing, and ever-changing tablescapes all take place, it has become a natural backdrop.


1st October 2025

Alice Mumford (b1965) is based in Hayle near St Ives in Cornwall and not too far from Penzance and Newlyn; she often captures the lovely light there in her paintings of domestic subjects in the same way the Newlyn School artists did. While tables, ranges, and dressers have long been be included in kitchen interiors, new-fangled appliances such as dishwashers also have their own merits. They create spontaneous and ever-changing still lifes for Alice Mumford who says, "There are excellent dark shadows in the back of the dishwasher that contrast with the light falling on the variety of cups, saucers, mugs, plates, knives and forks. Its fiendishly difficult to paint as there is so much going on". This is Around Again (2025).


30th September 2025

This is Blue Kitchen (1996, Usher Gallery)by Mary Mabbutt (b1951) with overtones of the gentle paintings by Winifred Knights. It is a softly lit image of serene ironing which may not be how everyone views their pile of laundry, but no-one can deny the appeal of the warm, Aga-heated kitchen seen, perhaps, from a window in front of the sink. Mary Mabbutt has also created a series of kitchen table paintings, one of which is in The Met. Recent exhibitions include those at, appropriately, The Table in Hay-on-Wye.


29th September 2025

This week, for a change, we have paintings by contemporary artists, all of whom are inspired by what is often the hub, the heart, and the most-used room in the home: the kitchen. In the past, the majority of kitchen interiors featured staff, servants, cooks, and paid helps. But now that most people run their home without help, the kitchen is a timeless and ever-fascinating subject for both painters and viewers. This is A Corner of a Stockwell Kitchen (2023) by Eleanor Crow who recently had a selling exhibition at Town House Spitalfields.


26th September 2025

Here we see two women reading their newspapers at a Lyon's Teashop on Piccadilly in London in a 1953 photograph by Bert Hardy for Picture Post. Sadly, newspapers are no longer provided for customers in British cafes (many European cafes continue to have national and  local papers, and what a joy this is) but readers still read and writers still write their books in cafes, just as Simone de Beauvoir et al did at the Café de Flore.


25th September 2025


When Jane in High Wages was a lowly employee in Chadwick's drapers she used to "gaze with longing at the dummy tea in...the Victoria Café". But when she becomes the proprietress of a dress shop, she feels emboldened to join the "high-class" (male) clientele and to share the "big table" with them as an equal. The novel is earlier than this painting, Café (1948, Herbert Art Gallery) by Oldham-born James Fitton (1899-1982), but this in itself reflects the fact that most tea rooms and cafes did not change for decades, which is why the likes of Lyons disappeared in the 1970s. One of the few to survive is the small group of Bettys tea rooms in Yorkshire which have not changed, and are all the better for it. 

Back to top