House in France

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A01=Gully Wells
abroad
affairs secrets
aj ayer
Author_Gully Wells
autobiography
biography
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=DNC
Category=NL-BM
Category=NL-WT
Category=WTL
COP=United Kingdom
daughter mother
dee wells journalist
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_travel
family
Format=BC
growing up
HMM=198
IMPN=Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
infidelity unfaithfulness
ISBN13=9781408822258
Language_English
love dysfunctional
martin amis
memoirs
PA=Temporarily unavailable
PD=20120607
personal life
POP=London
Price=€10 to €20
provence
PS=Active
PUB=Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Subject=Memoirs
Subject=Travel & Holiday
WG=245
WMM=129

Product details

  • ISBN 9781408822258
  • Weight: 740g
  • Dimensions: 126 x 194mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Jun 2012
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: London, GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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A vivid, funny and moving memoir about growing up in an astonishing family; a love-letter to a mother and to an extraordinary house

'A superbly entertaining memoir full of delicious anecdote, witty portraiture, and unexpected pathos' Zoe Heller

'The cast of characters in Gully Wells's memoir is certainly entertaining ... exquisitely delivered' Sunday Times

In 2009, six years after her mother's death, Gully Wells returns to La Migoua, the house in Provence which belonged to her mother - the glamorous, funny, unpredictable and furiously rude American journalist, Dee Wells. Surrounded by the clutter of decades, Gully is taken back to her childhood, to her mother, her adored stepfather - the celebrated, brilliant, womanising Oxford philosopher, A. J. Ayer - and to the rich, sensual memories that the house evokes.

Gully's beautiful, rebellious mother Dee fled Boston when she was seventeen to join the Canadian Army, where she became a Sergeant Major. She married, had Gully, divorced and moved to London where she would meet, and fall madly in love with, the icon of logical positivism, Ayer, who she would later persuade to marry her. There they lived in an extraordinary, liberated and intellectual world, with friends and acquaintances including Bobby Kennedy, Mary Quant, Iris Murdoch, Jonathan Miller, George Melly and Bertrand Russell.

In the turbulent and vibrant milieu of sixties London, Gully develops from a cautious only child to a studious teenager. She has a childhood infatuation with the aristocratic homosexual Michael Pitt-Rivers, loses her virginity to a Provençal hairdresser and wins a scholarship to St Hilda's at Oxford, where she blossoms, studies French history under Theodore Zeldin, and falls in love with fellow student, Martin Amis. But as the affair ends, Gully moves on, explores love and travel, eventually settling down in New York.

La Migoua, perched on a hill above Bandol, halfway between Toulon and Marseilles, is inextricably woven into Gully's existence. Unsentimental and gloriously witty, The House in France is a vivid and moving love letter to a beloved mother, and a celebration of family, of growing up and of the spirit of a cherished house.

Gully Wells was born in Paris, brought up in London, educated at Oxford, and moved to New York in 1979. She is the Features Editor of Condé Nast Traveler magazine and writes for them regularly from all over the world. She is married, has two children, and lives in Brooklyn. This is her first book.

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