Author:Penelope Lively
A House Unlockedis Booker Prize winning author Penelope Lively's classic memoir.
The only child of divorced parents, Penelope Lively was often sent to stay at her grandparents' country house Golsoncott. Years later, as the house was sold out of the family, she began to piece together the lives of those she knew fifty years before.
In a needlework sampler, she sees her grandmother and the wartime children that she sheltered under her roof in 1940. Potted meat jars remind her of the ritual of doing the flowers for church. The smell of the harness room brings her Aunt Rachel - avant-garde artist, fervent horserider - vividly back to life.
In A House Unlocked, Penelope Lively delves into the domestic past of her former home, and tells of her own youth and the contrasts between life today and the way they lived then.
'Wonderful. Lively is brilliant and original . . . Every page of this book captures your attention' Daily Mail
'Remarkable, richly enjoyable . . . a captivating memoir' Helen Dunmore, The Times
'Engaging, curious, compelling, remarkable . . . Any time spent with Penelope Lively is a joy' Observer
Wonderful. Lively is brilliant and original . . . Every page of this book captures your attention
—— Daily MailRemarkable, richly enjoyable ... a captivating memoir
—— Helen Dunmore , The TimesEngaging, curious, compelling, remarkable ... Any time spent with Penelope Lively is a joy
—— ObserverAn ingenious memoir. The enchantment lies in its personal narrative: the portrait of a family and its progress through the twentieth century
—— Literary ReviewWhat distinguishes this account is the writing
—— Tom O'Sullivan , Financial TimesHis story...is affectionally recalled from darkness to light
—— Iain Finlayson , The TimesCombative, omnivorous and beady-eyed as ever, the author has no trouble in persuading us, nonetheless, that the 'pure city' is not quite ready to collapse into its primal mud
—— Jonathan Keates , The SpectatorIt is all here, in Ackroyd's dense and articulate prose. He writes in short, sharp sentences, firing out facts with machine-gun speed. He pulls the reader through the city's winding calli on a vivid, frenzied journey of discovery. It is an ever-shifting scenery of stern-faced Dogi, secretive statesman, canny merchants, thieve, whores, artists, geniuses: all jostling for favour in Ackroyd's city of intrigue.... Highly evocative...he writes beautifully and succinctly
—— Sarah Vine , The TimesAckroyd takes an erudite and entertaining look at the city of doges, gondolas, carnival masks and canals
—— Eithne Farry , Marie ClaireAckroyd has managed... to give us a beautifully crafted, ruminative, well-illustrated, and utterly readable volume...vibrant and evocative
—— David Laven , History TodayElegant and erudite
—— Sebastian Shakespeare , TatlerAckroyd's view of Venice is not that of an infatuated lover... but more the magisterial distillation of much knowledge and reading, conveyed in prose that aspires to the glassy elegance of La Serenissima herself
—— Harry Eyres , Financial Times, Travel books of the yearOpulent, shimmering prose
—— Celia Brayfield , The Times, Christmas booksAckroyd does Venice, his sonorous, scene painting prose advancing in rhythmic columns until no quarter of the city has escaped assimilation.
—— Ian Pindar , GuardianAckroyd's achievement is to bring the city back to life and help you to experience differently. Take it with you next time you visit.
—— Kate Quill , The TimesHis dark tapestry ... deserves a place in every visitor's luggage
—— IndependentAckroyd writes about Venice as an idea, with stylish meditations on such topics as time, light, water, sexuality, politics and psychopathology...he writes so well that at times he'd drive you mad - "Venice represented an idea that was itself eternal" - but if you just climb into his gondola and go where he takes you, the rewards are great indeed
—— Arminta Wallace , The Irish TimesMany books have been written about Venice by authors like Mary McCarthy and Jan Morris. Ackroyd's advantage is his poetic eye
—— Colin Waters , Sunday HeraldAckroyd writes beguilingly as he weaves his way around the lagoon, supplying interesting details en route...
—— Jane Knight , The Times