Yesterday Morning

A Very English Childhood

Diana Athill author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Granta Books

Published:2nd Jun '22

£9.99

Available to order, but very limited on stock - if we have issues obtaining a copy, we will let you know.

Yesterday Morning cover

Written with Diana Athill's trademark insight and wry humour, a memoir of Diana's childhood, in England in the 1920s, that asks: does privilege equate to happiness?

Yesterday Morning is a vivid recollection of Diana Athill's joyful beginnings. It is also a remarkable insight into a now vanished world; this is England in the 1920s, seen with a clear and unsentimental eye from the vantage point of the 21st century. Growing up in a Norfolk country house with servants, Athill's upbringing was rich and loving: filled with the pleasures of horse riding and the unfolding secrets of adults and sex. However, here, she probes these foundations, asking: does privilege equate to happiness?

A joy to read from start to finish * Sunday Independent *
Athill's astringent prose has the remarkable quality of making one look forward to old age * Evening Standard *
Yesterday Morning is a captivating book. It is as if she had set out with a butterfly net to catch everything about her early life in an upper-middle-class English family before it - or she - vanished: the beloved grand house in Norfolk, the servants, her unhappily married parents. -- Kate Kellaway * Guardian *
Athill's honesty in describing her feelings as a young girl and old woman makes her memoir universal. * The Independent *
Athill's writing is like a really good apple: crisp, juicy, at once sweet and tart. She describes youthful games and discoveries in a voice that manages to combine delighted immediacy and ironic distance....The book feels at times like a grab bag, a collection of all the odds and ends Athill traces to her early years * The New York Times Book Review *
A compulsively readable memoir of a golden age * The Times *
Athill has added importantly to those works of literature which illuminate the vagaries of human emotion. * Daily Telegraph *

  • Short-listed for Joe Ackerley Prize.

ISBN: 9781783788163

Dimensions: 198mm x 129mm x 10mm

Weight: 130g

176 pages