Description
Few biographers can equal Claire Tomalin’s reputation as the queen of British biography. After her beginnings in journalism, she’s had a long and glittering career writing about the illustrious lives of Dickens and Pepys, Mary Wollstonecraft, Henry James, Jane Austen, Thomas Hardy, and Katherine Mansfield - an amazing roll call.
Modest and self-effacing herself, Tomalin has also shed life on women who have been forgotten by history or overshadowed - like the actress Nelly Tiernan, who was Dickens’ lover, and another actress,Mrs Jordan, a royal mistress of William the Fourth who bore him ten illegitimate children.
As well as being dauntingly prolific, she manages to be both scholarly and popular. Since this interview, Tomalin has published her tenth biography, of the young HG Wells, announcing that it would be her last book, which is fair enough when you are 88.
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Donald Horne was Australia’s leading public intellectual in the sixties and seventies and coined the phrase The Lucky Country in his bestselling book of the same title. The phrase has entered the Australian vernacular, and is often misused and interpreted as a sign of national complacency.
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Published 07/11/24
There has never been anyone like Russian impresario Serge Diaghilev.
The Russian impresario shook up the dusty world of ballet, making it the centre of the avant garde in the early part of the twentieth century, especially in Paris where the premieres of L’Apres Midi ‘D’un Faune and the Rite...
Published 07/04/24