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Imperial refugee [electronic resource] : Olivia Manning's fictions of war / Eve Patten.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: UPCC book collections on Project MUSE | UPCC book collections on Project MUSEPublication details: Cork, Ireland : Cork University Press, 2011 2012) 2015)Description: 1 online resource (1 electronic text (vii, 234 p.) :) digital fileISBN:
  • 9781908634214
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 823.914 23
LOC classification:
  • PR6063.A384 Z638 2011
Online resources:
Contents:
Acknowledgements -- Abbreviations -- Introduction -- Chapter one. A life in writing -- Chapter two. The Balkan trilogy: Romania and the far end of Europe -- Chapter three. From Athens to Alexandria: the contexts of personal landscape -- Chapter four. Egypt, the Desert war and the Levant trilogy -- Chapter five. 'John Bull's other Ireland': Manning's Palestine fiction -- Conclusion. The Rain forest -- Notes and references -- Bibliography -- Index.
Abstract: Olivia Manning's reputation as a difficult personality often threatens to obscure her reputation as a writer. Few twentieth century novelists can have inspired such consistent dislike. The publisher Dan Davin, for example, who was devoted to Manning's gregarious husband Reggie Smith, complained of her as a shrewish woman whose aim was to be as unpleasant to as many people as possible, while the legendary denizen of Fitzrovia, Julian Maclaren-Ross, recalled among his Stag's Head drinking circle the taciturn, undemonstrative and physically unattractive Olivia Manning who, from the vantage point of her bar-stool regarded the others with an expression of amusement, mingled with contempt. Fellow writer Inez Holden christened her "whiney" Manning; Anthony Powell, her otherwise generous editor at Punch, admitted her to be the world's worst grumbler and her publishers at Heinemann were forced to conclude that she was never an easy artist to handle. Even Kay Dick, her lifelong friend and correspondent, depicted Manning in her 1984 novel The Shelf as the spiteful gossip Sophie, who, with her wry fragility, delicate hands and penetrating voice . . . often reminded me of a goshawk about to bite.
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Issued as part of UPCC book collections on Project MUSE.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Acknowledgements -- Abbreviations -- Introduction -- Chapter one. A life in writing -- Chapter two. The Balkan trilogy: Romania and the far end of Europe -- Chapter three. From Athens to Alexandria: the contexts of personal landscape -- Chapter four. Egypt, the Desert war and the Levant trilogy -- Chapter five. 'John Bull's other Ireland': Manning's Palestine fiction -- Conclusion. The Rain forest -- Notes and references -- Bibliography -- Index.

Olivia Manning's reputation as a difficult personality often threatens to obscure her reputation as a writer. Few twentieth century novelists can have inspired such consistent dislike. The publisher Dan Davin, for example, who was devoted to Manning's gregarious husband Reggie Smith, complained of her as a shrewish woman whose aim was to be as unpleasant to as many people as possible, while the legendary denizen of Fitzrovia, Julian Maclaren-Ross, recalled among his Stag's Head drinking circle the taciturn, undemonstrative and physically unattractive Olivia Manning who, from the vantage point of her bar-stool regarded the others with an expression of amusement, mingled with contempt. Fellow writer Inez Holden christened her "whiney" Manning; Anthony Powell, her otherwise generous editor at Punch, admitted her to be the world's worst grumbler and her publishers at Heinemann were forced to conclude that she was never an easy artist to handle. Even Kay Dick, her lifelong friend and correspondent, depicted Manning in her 1984 novel The Shelf as the spiteful gossip Sophie, who, with her wry fragility, delicate hands and penetrating voice . . . often reminded me of a goshawk about to bite.

Description based on print version record.

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