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A girl in winter

Front Cover
25 Reviews
Faber & Faber Limited, 1975 - Fiction in English - 248 pages
The story of a fateful winter day in the life of a European woman who has fled to England during WW II.

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Review: A Girl in Winter

User Review  - Mosca - Goodreads

************************** The first three paragraphs, as well as the last two paragraphs clearly intone our somber isolated world and its dilemmas. These act as bookends for a work also structured as ... Read full review

Review: A Girl in Winter

User Review  - Laura - Goodreads

From BBC Radio 4 - Classical Serial: In wintery wartime Britain, Katherine Lind, exiled and alone, endures her job as an assistant in an obscure provincial library with an unpleasant boss and ... Read full review

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About the author (1975)

Philip Larkin was a British poet, novelist, critic, and essayist. Born in 1922 in Coventry, England, he graduated from St. John's College, Oxford, in 1940 and then pursued a career as a librarian, becoming the librarian at the University of Hull in 1955. Although he led a retiring life and published infrequently, producing only one volume of poetry approximately every 10 years, Larkin was still considered one of the preeminent contemporary British poets. He is often associated with the "Movement," a 1950s literary group that, through the use of colloquial language and common, everyday subjects, endeavored to create poetry that would appeal to the common reader. However, this association came about mainly because Larkin's poem "Church Going," for which he first gained critical attention, was published in New Lines, an anthology of the "Movement" poets. In reality, his work, particularly his later poems, is not typical of the group. Larkin's published a total of only four volumes of poetry: The North Ship (1945), The Less Deceived (1955), The Whitsun Weddings (1964), and High Windows (1974). He also wrote two novels, Jill and A Girl in Winter, and published two volumes of prose, Required Writing and All That Jazz, a collection of his reviews of jazz records. Philip Larkin died in 1985.

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