I admit that I'm still reeling a bit from last Thursday's referendum in the U.K., and I considered delaying this post because I wasn't feeling like putting up a cheerful blog entry after such a momentous event. But as some fellow bloggers have pointed out, perhaps cheerful posts and (particularly) good books are what we'll all need going forward after what the Persephone Post rather shockingly called "the most devastating day for Britain since
September 3rd 1939." And indeed that statement, poignantly, perhaps makes today's announcement just a bit more appropriate. I've often taken inspiration, in rough times, from reading about the WWII Home Front and how people bravely soldiered on in the midst of terrible tragedy, so I'm rather glad, for what it's worth, that my last announcement is about one of the very best such books I know.
And so we come to the last of the announcements of the new titles being released as Furrowed Middlebrow Books this October. And I've been excited about all of them, but as I hinted a few days ago, this one in particular is a doozy!
And so we come to the last of the announcements of the new titles being released as Furrowed Middlebrow Books this October. And I've been excited about all of them, but as I hinted a few days ago, this one in particular is a doozy!
The other two authors I've
announced—Rachel Ferguson and Winifred Peck—were both included on my initial
"wish list" sent to Dean Street Press. But the third author was not.
Why, you ask? Certainly not because I wouldn't have been thrilled at the
prospect of publishing her. Rather, it was because I had already been in email
contact with the author's son, and knew he was planning to release his her work
himself. As far as I was concerned, therefore, she was "off the
market," and I was resigned to merely looking forward, as a fan, to the
release of her books.
But a few weeks after
submitting my wish list to Dean Street, I suddenly thought that it really
couldn't hurt to check in with the author's son to see how things were
progressing. Purely innocently, of course, and with no ulterior motives… Ahem. I
sent him an email, asked how the books were proceeding, and just happened to
mention our new publishing venture. And to my amazement and delight, within a
few days we had his provisional agreement to let us publish his mother's work!
Now, as I said, I love all the
authors we're reprinting (or we wouldn't have pursued them to begin with), but
this one is particularly exciting. Because if I had asked you all, a few months
ago, "Of all the books I've discussed on this blog, which one do you most
wish you could get your hands on?", I'll bet a fair number of you would
have replied that you wanted the chance to read this author's breathtaking, gut-wrenching, endlessly entertaining
memoir of the Blitz in London.
That's right.
I can hardly believe it.
My first batch of new titles
contains my all-time favorite WWII memoir—Frances Faviell's A Chelsea Concerto (1959), a book that
absolutely deserves to be appreciated as a classic among WWII writings and
among memoirs more generally. I reviewed it (and raved about it at length) here,
so I won't reiterate all of my passionate adoration, but suffice it to say the
book needs to become a movie ASAP. (I'm torn between Cate Blanchett and Kate
Winslet in the lead role...)
I was never able to find the original cover online, but thanks to John Parker, the author's son, we're able to share it now; it's also an original artwork by Faviell herself! |
To some extent, in fact, the
book is already a recognized classic among researchers and historians, many of
whom have relied on it for books and anthologies about the Blitz. Most
prominently, Virginia Nicholson featured Faviell prominently in her book Millions Like Us: Women's Lives During
the Second World War. In a letter to the Daily Telegraph in 2010, Nicholson referred to the book as one of
the finest examples of "Blitz lit" and bemoaned the fact that
Faviell's books remained out of print. Happily, our edition of A Chelsea Concerto will contain a new
introduction by Nicholson herself!
I know a couple of you have
managed to track this book down and read it, despite its very limited
availability, but I can't wait for the rest of you to have a chance to read it.
Inexplicably, there was never even an American edition of the book.
But Faviell's work doesn't end
with this one title. We'll also be reprinting her acclaimed earlier memoir, The Dancing Bear (1954), about her life
in Berlin (where her husband had a diplomatic job) immediately after the end of
the war. Although the bombs are no longer falling during these years, the human
drama is intense and fascinating. As in Concerto,
Faviell's intelligence, attention to detail, and sensitivity bring the ruins of
Berlin, the struggles of the German people, and the sometimes idiotic
bureaucracy of the city's various sectors vividly to life. I learned about
numerous aspects of postwar life in Germany that I've never encountered
elsewhere, and much of it is centered around one German family the author
befriended soon after her arrival. Had she not written one of the most brilliant
of all WWII memoirs, Faviell would deserve to be remembered for The Dancing Bear.
And I'm delighted to note that
Furrowed Middlebrow Books will also be reprinting Faviell's three critically
acclaimed novels—A House on the Rhine
(1956), Thalia (1957), and The Fledgeling (1958)—which have likewise been
out of print for decades. I haven't yet written here about her fiction, but
stay tuned.
Sadly, since Faviell (real name
Olivia Parker) died of cancer at the tragically young age of 46, these five
titles constitute her entire literary output. I'm delighted, however, to know
that we're able to make this underrated author's complete body of
work available for the first time in decades.
And that's that! A first
rollout of nine titles (plus two related Dean Street Press titles). If your
memory needs jogging (and also just as an excuse to see the whole list
together, which gives me enormous pleasure), here's the full list of October
releases:
Rachel Ferguson, A
Harp in Lowndes Square (1936)
Rachel Ferguson, A
Footman for the Peacock (1940)
Rachel Ferguson, Evenfield
(1942)
Winifred Peck, Bewildering
Cares (1940)
Frances Faviell, The
Dancing Bear (1954)
Frances Faviell, A
House on the Rhine (1956)
Frances Faviell, Thalia
(1957)
Frances Faviell, The
Fledgeling (1958)
Frances Faviell, A
Chelsea Concerto (1959)
Plus, also from Dean Street Press, but not Furrowed Middlebrow titles:
Winifred Peck, The
Warrielaw Jewel (1933)
Winifred Peck, Arrest
the Bishop? (1947)
After that, our second
batch of titles is set for release in early 2017. We have a few titles already
confirmed that are among my very favorites (and have been written about here
already, though I can't tell you which ones they are just yet) and a couple more
authors (also written about) that we're pursuing (wish us luck with rights and
heirs!). So, more announcements will follow in due course.
I hope you're even a tenth as
excited about these titles as I am.