Myself When Young: The Shaping of a Writer
By (Author) Daphne Du Maurier
Introduction by Helen Taylor
Little, Brown Book Group
Virago Press Ltd
26th May 2004
1st April 2004
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
823.912
Paperback
224
Width 126mm, Height 194mm, Spine 14mm
161g
Both her novels and her non-fiction reveal Daphne du Maurier's overwhelming desire to explore her family's history. In Myself When Young, based on diaries that she kept from 1920-1932, the most famous du Maurier probes her own past, beginning with her earliest memories and encompassing the publication of her first book and her subsequent marriage. Here, the writer is open and sometimes painfully honest about the difficult relationship with her father; her education in Paris; early love affairs; her antipathy towards London life and the theatre; her intense love for Cornwall and her desperate ambition to succeed as a writer. The resulting portrait is of a captivating and complex character.
'The girl we meet, a strong-winged bird homing in to the steep banks of a Cornish river, is herself no mean romantic enigma' SUNDAY TIMES 'A delightful book, full of amusing and charming stories, pinpointing the literary influences and the first stirrings of books to be written in later years, and with a happy and romantic ending' THE TIMES
Daphne du Maurier was born in 1906 and educated at home and in Paris. She began writing in 1928, and many of her bestselling novels were set in Cornwall, where she lived for most of her life. She was made a DBE in 1969 and died in 1989.