Review by Booklist Review
Whitbread Prize-winner Taylor has written a collective biography of a group of young women often overshadowed by Bloomsbury and the Algonquin orbit. These women, born in the first two decades of the twentieth century, came together around the influential literary critic Cyril Connolly and worked as editors and dogsbodies at his influential Horizon magazine. In the first half of the book, Taylor demonstrates how the combination of beauty, intelligence, and psychological neediness led these young women, including Lys Lubbock, Barbara Skelton (who married Connolly), Janetta Parlade, and Sonia Brownell (who married George Orwell), to the center of mid-century literature while also describing their scandalous and sometimes sad lives of multiple marriages, abandoned children, and sexual misadventures. Taylor then traces their appearances in the work of Orwell, Anthony Powell, Nancy Mitford, and Evelyn Waugh, often in savage portrayals. Taylor gives his subjects dimension, sympathy, and credit for their contributions to letters. This book opens a window onto a fascinating literary and social period and will inspire readers to explore it further in both history and fiction.--Barbara Egel Copyright 2020 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
The tale of a small group of upper-middle-class young women who inhabited the rarefied world of literary London during and after World War II.Drawing on rich archival sources and the many memoirs, novels, and stories written by his prolific cast of characters, British biographer, novelist, and cultural historian Taylor (The New Book of Snobs, 2017, etc.), winner of the Whitbread Prize for Biography, creates a brisk, spirited portrait of the astonishingly beautiful women who "fizzed" around Cyril Connolly, "a genuine literary power-broker, a grand panjandrum, a makerand breakerof reputations," in 1940s Britain. Self-aggrandizing, self-indulgent, "easily wounded, unforgiving, dislikeable, delightful," according to a male friend, Connolly inspired "unfeigned devotion" in his female admirers. "Whether they were living with him, employed by him, pursued by him or merely wistfully regarded by him from afar," Taylor writes, "he was the fulcrum on which their existence turned." Among those in his orbit, the author focuses mostly on four: Lys Lubbock, a devoted caretaker and survivor of a nine-year affair with Connolly; fiery Barbara Skelton, who married him; his editorial assistant, Sonia Brownell, who married George Orwell; and Janetta Parlad, who was 17 when Connolly anointed her his "muse." Christened "the lost girls" by poet and critic Peter Quennell, they had "spent their adolescence scheming to escape" oppressive, often fractured, family life. Flouting convention and flaunting independence, still, they yearned for security and love. Physically, they were a type: notably attractive, "tallish, slim to the point of skimpiness" (except for Sonia). Financially vulnerable, each spent the war years "moving from place to place and billet to billet as the demands of work, romance and inclination took her." Living in an unheated bedsitter, they might depend on "an eligible or not so eligible suitor" to pick up the tab at upscale restaurants. "Glamorous, edgy and inimitable," the lost girls, Taylor concedes, left no indelible legacy except perhaps as a link between emancipated young women of the 1920s and the "Dionysiac hordes of the 1960s and 1970s."Captivating, gossipy social history. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.