Unravelled

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A01=Fanny Mills
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Alastair Boyd
Antisemitism
Aristocracy
Art
Author_Fanny Mills
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Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=BG
Category=DNB
Category=WQY
Central School of Art
Ceramics
Charles Babbage
Churchill
Communism
COP=United Kingdom
Dartington Hall School
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Downshire Hill
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eq_nobargain
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Eton
Family
Fernand Leger
Hampstead
James Joyce
Jewish experience
John Berger
Judaism
Language_English
Left-wing politics
Lviv
Mark Gertler
Martin Amiss
Memoir
Mental health
Modernism
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Painting
Portraits
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Ronda
Sculpture
softlaunch
Suicide
Textile design
Trinity College Cambridge
Twentieth Century
White Mischief

Product details

  • ISBN 9781911397724
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Oct 2023
  • Publisher: Unicorn Publishing Group
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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In Unravelled the author unpicks the threads of her comically nuclear family with its deep silences to find what lay hidden, never to be spoken of.

Beneath the carefully woven fabric of her family life, she finds clash of cultures – on one side Jews fleeing the pogroms of Eastern Europe, and on the other the highest levels of the British aristocracy, from the Earl of Erroll of White Mischief fame to the Twenties socialite Mimi Wimborne. The writer and thinker John Berger mysteriously links both worlds. She finds two grandmothers whose bids to find freedom and fulfilment ended in utter disaster. Her parents, shiny young communists of the 1950s airbrushed both women out of history. But what happens when you deny the past? How do you negotiate your sense of identity?

Fanny Mills grew up in Hampstead, a stone’s throw from the Heath and was educated locally and then at North London Collegiate School, before attending Oxford University in the 1980s. Her first career was at the V&A Museum, where she worked in the Exhibitions Department helping to create, amongst others, Streetstyle, an exhibition of sub-cultures from Zoot suits to Mods and beyond. After moving to Devon with her husband, she raised three children and joined the theatre scene, writing and performing in community plays exploring themes of exclusion, colonisation and isolation in the

rural community.

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