- Barbara Pym
Barbara Mary Crampton Pym (
2 June 1913 –11 January 1980 ) was an Englishnovel ist.Biography
Pym was born in
Oswestry ,Shropshire . She was privately educated atHuyton College , nearLiverpool . After studying English atSt Hilda's College, Oxford , she served in theWomen's Royal Naval Service duringWorld War II . Her literary career is noteworthy because of the long hiatus between 1963 and 1977, when, despite early success and continuing popularity, she was unable to find a publisher for her richly comic novels.The turning point for Pym came with a famous article in the "
Times Literary Supplement " in which two prominent names,Lord David Cecil andPhilip Larkin , nominated her as the most underrated writer of the century. Pym and Larkin had kept up a private correspondence over a period of many years. Her comeback novel, "Quartet in Autumn", was nominated for theBooker Prize . Another novel, "The Sweet Dove Died", previously rejected by many publishers, was subsequently published to critical acclaim, and several of her previously unpublished novels were published after her death.Pym worked at the
International African Institute inLondon for some years, and played a large part in the editing of its scholarly journal, "Africa", hence the frequency with which anthropologists crop up in her novels. She never married, despite several close relationships with men, notably Henry Harvey, a fellow Oxford student, and the future politician,Julian Amery . After her retirement, she moved into Barn Cottage atFinstock inOxfordshire with her younger sister, Hilary, who continued to live there until her death in February 2005. Ablue plaque was placed on the cottage in 2006. The sisters played an active role in the social life of the village.Barbara Pym died of
breast cancer , aged 66. Following her death, her sister Hilary continued to champion her work, and the Barbara Pym Society was set up in 1993. The sisters are both buried in Finstock churchyard.Works and themes
Several strong themes link the works in the Pym "canon", which are more notable for their style and characterisation than for their plots. A superficial reading gives the impression that they are sketches of village or suburban life, with excessive significance being attached to social activities connected with the Anglican church (in particular its Anglo-Catholic incarnation). However, the dialogue is often deeply ironic, and a tragic undercurrent runs through some of the later novels, especially "Quartet in Autumn" and "The Sweet Dove Died".
Her diaries were also published posthumously, under the title, "
A Very Private Eye " (1985) ISBN 0-394-73106-9Novels
*"
Some Tame Gazelle " (1950) ISBN 1-55921-264-0
*"Excellent Women " (1952) ISBN 0-452-26730-7
*"Jane and Prudence " (1953) ISBN 1-55921-226-8
*"Less than Angels " (1955) ISBN 1-55921-388-4
*"A Glass of Blessings " (1958) ISBN 1-55921-353-1
*"No Fond Return Of Love " (1961) ISBN 1-55921-306-X
*"Quartet in Autumn " (1977)
*"The Sweet Dove Died " (1978) ISBN 1-55921-301-9
*"A Few Green Leaves " (1980) ISBN 1-55921-228-4
*"Crampton Hodnet " (completed circa 1940, published 1985) ISBN 1-55921-243-8
*"An Unsuitable Attachment " (written 1963; published posthumously, 1982)
*"An Academic Question " (written 1970-72; published 1986)References
*Hazel Holt - "A Lot to Ask: A Life of Barbara Pym" (1990)
*Hazel K Bell (ed.) - "No Soft Incense: Barbara Pym and the Church" (2004)
*Orna Raz - "Social Dimensions in the Novels of Barbara Pym, 1949-1962: the Writer as Hidden Observer" (2007)External links
* [http://www.barbara-pym.org The Barbara Pym Society] based at St Hilda's College, Oxford.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.