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London Review of Books

Strenuously Modern subscriber-only content

Rosemary Hill

  • Bombay to Bloomsbury: A Biography of the Strachey Family by Barbara Caine

For nearly three generations, from the high-water mark of the Victorian age to the eve of the Second World War, the Stracheys were prominent in English life. Noted for their intellect and their boisterousness in argument, and characterised, in most cases, by long limbs and large spectacles, they struck Leonard Woolf as ‘much the most remarkable family I have ever known’. His wife, on the other hand, who knew several Stracheys well, thought them ‘a prosaic race, lacking magnanimity, shorn of atmosphere’.

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Rosemary Hill’s book about Pugin, God’s Architect, is out in paperback this summer.