Self Portraits – pictures and programmes
Back from my travels to Cheshire, I must first report on a brilliant bookshop I found. (Well, friend SH had spotted it and merely commented on the flattened older ladies she had to pick up as I stampeded into the shop).
Before I forget, an excellent programme on BBC4 about self portraits through the centuries was on tonight. Laura Cumming looked at these amazing works and I thought it was very interesting. I was really taken in the self portrait by Laura Knight, and thought that her paintings looked wonderful on the http://www.damelauraknight.com website. In order to avoid copyright issues I found a cover of a book that featured one of Knight’s wartime pictures, which are worth looking at

I do have a copy of this book found in a bargain shop. The print is so small that while it looks fascinating, it will need some close study. Working for Victory: a Diary of life in a Second World War Factory edited by Sue Bruley. It certainly does not look as racy as Love Lessons that I mentioned last week.
Back to that bookshop. http://www.bookstore-uk.co.uk/ has plenty of information about the two bookshops which sell excellent books at good prices (new). I bought far too many for my bank account (and friend carrying books). Oh for a trolly…
One that I could not resist – for writing purposes, obviously.

What Every Woman Should Know – Lifestyle lessons from the 1930s. It features copies of pages from the Daily Mail of the time. Not a book to read, as such, but looks to be a good book to dip into for inspiration.Maybe I should get Daughter who has just learnt dressmake to make me some 1930s outfits. Then I could pretend to be Our Vicar’s Wife from the Diary of a Provincial Lady…


This is the diary of a teenage girl in wartime London. This is no misty eyed account of bravery under fire, but instead the bohemian lifestyle of artists, writers and colourful characters in a Chelsea studio. Even Joan’s parents are strange and daring, with extreme Catholicism and eccentricity as standard. The book is full of teenage angst, disappointment and upset, but also the excitement of war, and the uncertainty of destruction on a nightly basis. Joan goes through all the agonies of unrequited love and growing up fast against a unique, challenging background. It is also a very funny book, painful in its realism and daring in its detail. A dour account of war it certainly isn’t. There are torrid tales of passion and bad cooking. Joan varies between childlike delight in cakes and mature pondering on why her objects of adoration always have another mistress on the go. I’m not sure how much this is true autobiography, and the two further volumes of diary do not attract me much, but this is a good read on its own. And it is an excellent antidote to grim wartime diaries.











