Barbara Comyns (1909–1992) was born in Bidford-on-Avon, in the English county of Warwickshire, one of six children of an increasingly unsuccessful Birmingham brewer. Living on the run-down but romantic family estate and receiving her education from governesses, she began to write and illustrate stories at the age of ten. After her father’s death, she attended art school in London and married a painter, with whom she had two children she supported by trading antiques and classic cars, modeling, breeding poodles, and renovating apartments. A second marriage, to Richard Comyns Carr, who worked in the Foreign Office, took place during World War II. Comyns wrote her first book, Sisters by the River (1947), a series of sketches based on her childhood, while living in the country to escape the Blitz, which is also when she made an initial sketch for The Vet’s Daughter. This, however, she put aside to complete Our Spoons Came from Woolworths (1950), about her first marriage, and Who was Changed and Who was Dead (1955). The Vet’s Daughter was published in 1959. Among Barbara Comyns’s other books are the novels The Skin Chairs (1962) and The Juniper Tree (1985), and Out of the Blue into the Red (1960), a work of nonfiction about Spain, where she lived for eighteen years.
“Comyns's world is weird and wonderful. Tragic, comic and
completely bonkers all in one, I'd go as far as to call her
something of a neglected genius.” —Lucy Scholes, The Guardian
“Comyns has a pictorial eye, and though she wrote stories from a
young age, she originally thought of herself as a sculptor and
painter...[her] wild but exact style is always instantly
recognizable, a mix of looseness and compression.” —Jé Wilson, The
New York Review of Books
"I’d like also to recommend The Vet’s Daughter by Barbara Comyns,
which hit me like a dangerous drug earlier this year: one of the
best books I’ve ever read." --Wesley Stace, The Believer
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