Author:Ved Mehta
Returning to 1960s' India after decades beyond its borders, Ved Mehta explores his native country with two sets of eyes: those of the man educated in the West, and those of the child raised under the Raj. Travelling from the Himalayas in the east to Kerala in the west, Ved Mehta's observations and insights into India and some of its most interesting figures - including Indira Gandhi, Jaya Prakash Narayan and Satyajit Ray - create one of the twentieth century's most thought-provoking travel memoirs.
His fall into blindness had broken open his perception so that nothing escapes him . . . he has a clarity that is sometimes like clairvoyance
—— Peter AckroydWell-chosen details represent more than themselves... The trick is to choose the details, which Mehta does with consummate, sly skill
—— Michael WoodFascinating... Farndale's panoramic view of pre-war German society on the verge of irreparable change is persuasively evoked.
—— THE OBSERVERA novel rich in historical detail, but wearing its research lightly, and the story is told in a French Lieutenant's Woman kind of way, veering from the present to the past with superb flair. With the rise of the alt right again polluting our democracies, this novel has an uncomfortable prescience, with a plot twist at the end which is ingenious.
—— IRISH INDEPENDENTEnthralling... profound and moving, this is a beautifully written evocation of turbulent times.
—— DAILY EXPRESS / DAILY MIRRORA masterly exploration of conflicting loyalties set against the 1936 Olympic Games. Sharply characterised, richly atmospheric and completely engrossing.
—— JOHN PRESTON, author of THE DIGA darkly compelling novel, powerfully evocative and beautifully written.
—— JENNY McCARTNEY, author of the The Ghost FactoryFarndale interweaves history and fiction in a heady mix... engrossing, intriguing and thought-provoking.
—— NB MAGAZINESelina Todd’s portrait of the artist against the backdrop of her changing times pays a warmly illuminating tribute to Delaney's unique voice… Todd shows in jaw-dropping detail the depth of the hostility to Delaney and her unapologetic work
—— Boyd Tonkin , The Arts DeskDelaney was a trailblazer... Tastes of Honey is a biography of a writer whose output has – at times – been overshadowed by distorted versions of her story. By carefully emphasizing the radical qualities of Delaney’s oeuvre, and challenging many of the clichés that make up the mythology, Selina Todd offers a more nuanced view
—— Anna Coatman , Times Literary SupplementTodd shows how Delaney anticipated the concerns of the Women's Liberation Movement of the 1970s, and reveals her continuing influence in the light of similar problems facing working-class women now…fascinating
—— J A Hopkin , ProspectTodd presents a warm but balanced view of a woman who made her own choices. Her work benefits from excellent digging in the BBC archives and many detailed interviews
—— Jad Adams , Literary ReviewNot just a terrific study of the life and work of an extraordinary talent but a bracing contextualisation of her in terms of class, culture, sex, youth, politics and the North. Selina Todd’s biography of Delaney is as tough, smart and lively as Shelagh herself
—— Stuart MaconieSparky . . . captures what made that 1958 play [A Taste of Honey] an era-defining classic
—— Daily TelegraphA breezy, readable new biography… Todd’s portrait is enlivened by anecdotes from friends and family… she uses a polyphonic approach…including many examples from other ordinary women’s adjacent experiences
—— Holly Williams , iI...hugely enjoyed Tastes of Honey, Selina Todd’s heroic attempt to do the impossible and explain the life and work of the mysterious Shelagh Delaney. Alongside Andrea Dunbar, Delaney was our most unexpected and gifted postwar playwright
—— David Hare , New Statesman, *Books of the Year*[A] brilliant biography
—— Steven Long , Crack