A delightful tale of wartime romance and friendship
Stella Gibbons was born in London in 1902. She went to the North London Collegiate School and studied journalism at University College, London. She then worked for ten years on various papers, including the Evening Standard. Stella Gibbons is the author of twenty-five novels, three volumes of short stories, and four volumes of poetry. Her first publication was a book of poems, The Mountain Beast (1930) and her first novel Cold Comfort Farm (1932) won the Femina Vie Heuruse Prize for 1933. Among her works are Christmas at Cold Comfort Farm (1940) Westwood (1946), Conference at Cold Comfort Farm (1959) and Starlight (1967). She was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1950. In 1933 she married the actor and singer Allan Webb. They had one daughter. Stella Gibbons died in 1989.
Westwood captures the heart, right from its opening pages… as an
account of what it was like to be an ordinary young woman in
wartime London - no stockings, no chocolate, no men - it can hardly
be bettered. How did it, I wonder, evade fresh new soft covers for
so long?
*Observer*
A wartime masterpiece
*Evening Standard*
Stella Gibbons is the Jane Austen of the 20th century
*Lynne Truss*
Gibbons was an acute and witty observer, and her dissection of the
British class system is spot-on
*Mail on Sunday*
You show up a group of characters, all of whom are discontented and
unhappy. Yet the feeling that comes through very powerfully is that
life is wonderful, in spite of individual bitterness and
frustration.
*Letter to Stella Gibbons from Henry Parris*
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