Skip navigation
London Review of Books London Review Bookshop

Patrician Poverty subscriber-only content

Rosemary Hill

  • Quicksands: A Memoir by Sybille Bedford

Beginning in the middle, as she announces at once she intends to do, Sybille Bedford starts her memoir in 1953, the middle, more or less, of her long life and of ‘our frightful century’ whose history is as much her subject as her own peculiar story. Her opening scene is a summer morning in Geneva, where she passed a few hours between trains, a woman in her early forties, ‘free to live where, if not how, I chose’, a neutral observer in a neutral country. It is a brief moment of calm before we plunge from the middle into the midst of events.

subscriber-only content Subscribers to the print edition can log in to view the entire article. For information about subscribing to the London Review of Books click here. This article is available for purchase online. Buy this article.

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

LRB cover artwork

From the archive

Lust for Leaks
Neal Ascherson: The Cockburns of Cork

On the Blower
Peter Clarke on the Journals of Woodrow Wyatt

A keen horseman with a new pair of green suede chaps is guaranteed to ride into the sunset
Jenny Diski on A Slight and Delicate Creature: The Memoirs of Margaret Cook

Not My Fault
John Lanchester: New Labour’s Terrible Memoirs

Through the Trapdoor
Jeremy Harding: Walter Benjamin’s Last Day