Available Formats
The Green Lady: A Spirit, A Story, A Place
By (Author) Sally Bayley
HarperCollins Publishers
William Collins
19th November 2024
4th July 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Biography: writers
Biographical fiction / autobiographical fiction
Modern and contemporary fiction: general and literary
Feminism and feminist theory
823.92
Paperback
208
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 24mm
160g
From the critically acclaimed author Sally Bayley, The Green Lady is a poignant, brilliant exploration of the relationships between children and their teachers.
In the style of her memoir Girl with Dove, this book explores a childs search for artistic education and a sense of self. Lyrical and playful, Sally Bayleys writing transports the reader into an eccentric world of teachers, guardians and guiding spirits of place.
Moved by her female teachers, and guided by the artist J.M.W. Turner, Bayleys protagonist goes in search of her maternal ancestors, in particular her grandmother, Edna May Turner. Following the narratives of other women in history who have taken different routes to independence and artistic freedom including the educational suffragist Mary Neal, actress Margaret Rutherford, and poet Stevie Smith Bayley considers the paths to happiness and the limitations social convention imposes.
Part novel, part memoir, The Green Lady continues the traditions of Virginia Woolfs Orlando as an imagined biography which urgently understands the need for a space of ones own in which to thrive. As one of the books several foster children, Bayley reminds us that families and homes can be found and built within literature and the arts as well as nature's green spaces.
EARLY PRAISE FOR THE GREEN LADY:
Sally Bayleys The Green Lady is a beguiling, experimental mixture of biography, fiction and family historyThe prose is glancing and poetic, suffused with gentle melancholy, yet bursting with connections that anticipate, tease and delight There is much here of art and literature as succour for the soul, and this charming, original and poignant book shines with intellectual and imaginative fire SPECTATOR
With each new book, Sally Bayley seems to invent a new literary genre. The Green Lady is another bulletin from her unique imagination a marvel of formal originality and verbal ingenuity. There is no other writer remotely like her MATT ROWLAND HILL, author of Original Sins
In a beguiling blend of memoir and storytelling, the author of Girl with Dove and No Boys Play Here explores the relationship between children and their teachers, and the sustaining power of literature, especially for those growing up in poverty or dealing with neglect and abuse. In search of a better plot, Bayleys protagonist seeks out her maternal ancestors, and other women in history who have paved a path to independence, happiness and artistic freedom in a space of ones own. No one writes quite like Bayleyshes a true, precious original CAROLINE SANDERSON, The Bookseller
A unique piece of writing which is enthralling and leaves one tasting the salt air of nostalgia. The reader delights in her word play, her deftness and playfulness, painterly and yet essentially three dimensional: a living canvas which is a feat of magic and alchemy Pratima Mitchell
Sally Bayley is a Teaching and Research Fellow at the Rothermere American Institute at the University of Oxford and from September 2018 she will be teaching writing in Oxford as a Royal Literary Fund Fellow. Sally has written widely on visual responses to literature, including a jointly authored study of Sylvia Plath's relationship to the visual arts: Eye Rhymes: Sylvia Plath's Art of the Visual and a study of Plath as a cultural icon: Representing Sylvia Plath. In 2010 she completed a cross-media study of Emily Dickinson as a way of thinking about America's relationship to space and place: Home on the Horizon: America's Search for Space, from Emily Dickinson to Bob Dylan. She is the author of The Private Life of the Diary (Unbound, 2016).