Sandi Toksvig - Valentine Grey - Little, Brown Book Group
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  • Paperback £12.99
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    • ISBN:9781844088324
    • Publication date:06 Sep 2012
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    • ISBN:9781405512152
    • Publication date:06 Sep 2012
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    • ISBN:9781844088331
    • Publication date:04 Jul 2013

Valentine Grey

By Sandi Toksvig

  • Hardback
  • £16.99

From one of the nation's best-loved writers and performers comes a wonderful novel about gender, liberty, empire and injustice.

London 1897 and a young girl, Valentine Grey, arrives in England. She's been brought up in the remote and sunny climes of India and finds being forced into corsets and skirts in damp and cold country insufferable. The only bright spot: her exciting cousin, Reggie. Reggie, and his lover Frank seek out the adventure the clandestine bars and streets of London offer and are happy to include Valentine in their secret, showing her theatre, gardens - even teaching her how to ride a bicycle.

And then comes the Boer War and Reggie's father volunteers him; the empire must be defended. But it won't be Reggie who dons the Volunteer Regiment's garb. Valentine takes her chance, puts on her cousin's uniform, leaving Reggie behind and heads off to war. And for a long while it's glorious and liberating for both of the cousins, but war is not glorious and in Victorian London homosexuality is not liberating . . .

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  • ISBN: 9781844088317
  • Publication date: 06 Sep 2012
  • Page count: 352
Biographical Notes

After graduating from Cambridge Sandi Toksvig went into theatre as a writer and performer. Well known for her television and radio work as a presenter, writer and actor, she has written more than twenty books for children and adults. She also writes for theatre and television: her film The Man starring Stephen Fry and Zoe Wanamaker was broadcast on Sky Arts in June 2012 and her play Bully Boy starring Anthony Andrews opened the St James Theatre, London, autumn 2012. She is the new Chancellor of Portsmouth University. Sandi Toksvig lives in London and Kent.

Teasing out untold stories of the battlefield and of gay history, Toksvig's historical revisionism follows in the footsteps of the likes of Sarah Waters and Pat Barker . . . Toksvig's seemingly effortless ability to entertain shines through — Independent - Lucy Scholes
Toksvig's warm characterisation drives the narrative, especially when set against her droll yet richly details evocation of an unedifying period of modern history . . . It's a novel not just about the Boer War, but about a more subtle war against people who used to think it acceptableto treat women and blacks and gays abysmally. Fighting on both fronts is Toksvig's shining creation, Valentine Grey, a courageous and captivating character just begging for a sequel — Sunday Telegraph - Lucy Beresford
06 Mar
New Theatre Royal, Portsmouth

Sandi Toksvig event

Sandi Toksvig event at the New Theatre Royal in Portsmouth

Virago

At Break of Day

Elizabeth Speller

Sandi Toksvig

Following a first-class degree from Cambridge, Sandi Toksvig went into the theatre as a writer and performer and was a founder member of the Comedy Store Players. Well known for her television and radio work as a presenter, writer and actor, she has written six books for children. Her first adult novel, WHISTLING FOR THE ELEPHANTS, was published in 1999.

Sphere

The Chain Of Curiosity

Sandi Toksvig

Sandi Toksvig - broadcaster, writer, actor, and seeker of all things whimsical, has turned her probing mind to many of the most intriguing questions of our times in the pages of the Sunday Telegraph for many years. Now, for the very first time, these musings have been collected in one hilarious collection. In The Chain of Curiosity, Sandi takes the reader on a side-splitting journey through life's peculiarities in a book packed with wit, wisdom and wonderment. From pondering the joys of World Pencil Day to examining the intricacies of applause etiquette, and from tip-toeing around the delicate art of school report vocabulary to researching the oddest way to meet a sticky end, the tickling tidbits and intriguing revelations contained within the book will delight Sandi's fans, both old and new.

Sphere

Gladys Reunited

Sandi Toksvig

In the Autumn of 1971, having been thrown out of a rather fancy private school, Sandi Toksvig was sent to the only remaining option - Mamaroneck High School, New York. She was thirteen years old and that year changed her life. Sandi auditioned and was chosen for the lead role in a production of The Skin of our Teeth by Thornton Wilder. Three girls were cast in the part of Gladys Antrobus, playing her at different ages of her life, and Sandi was the youngest. The three actresses soon became known as the Gladys' and this was the beginning of a friendship with a group of females that still influences her to this day. Soon all the girls in the cast and crew were becoming members of The Gladys Society. In the end there were twelve of them.GLADYS REUNITED records Sandi's recent travels in America catching up with her eleven fellows. It is a biography, a travel journal and a portrait of American women today. It's about friendship but also about Sandi herself, as she explores the origins of her career as a performer and her sense of national identity - where exactly does she fit?

Sphere

Flying Under Bridges

Sandi Toksvig
Sphere

Melted Into Air

Sandi Toksvig
Little Brown Book Group

The Lavender Widow

Sandi Toksvig
Sphere

Whistling For The Elephants

Sandi Toksvig

There are two basic types of animal in Nature's Kingdom. The first, like lions and turtles, produce many offspring and simply hope that some will survive. The second, like elephants and people, produce one or two at long intervals and make great efforts to rear them. My mother belonged in a class of her own. She produced two at short intervals and made no effort to rear them whatsoever.Thus Dorothy, aged ten, finds herself making her own way in Sassaspaneck, New York in 1968. Her English father, who never talks above a whisper due to a youthful injury with a cricket ball, has tucked her and her mother away where the potential for embarrassment can be limited. All the other children in town have gone to camp, so Dorothy must provide her own entertainment. She comes across a small, faded zoo on the outskirts of town, and as she begins to get to know the eccentric group of women who live there she begins to discover a world way beyond the one she has glimpsed so far.

12 Apr
Glasgow

Sandi Toksvig at Glasgow Book Festival

Sandi Toksvig at Glasgow Book Festival

22 Feb
Newham Books, London

Sandi Toksvig event

Sandi Toksvig at Newham Bookshop

07 Mar
Essex Book Festival

Sandi Toksvig event

Sandi Toksvig at the Essex Book Festival

25 May
Hay Festival

Sandi Toksvig event

7:10pm

Sandi Toksvig event at Hay festival

13 Jun
Althorp Literary Festival

Sandi Toksvig event

3:30pm

Sandi Toksvig event at Althorp Literary Festival

Hachette Digital

Heavenly Date And Other Flirtations

Alexander McCall Smith
Virago

Liza's England

Pat Barker

Dauntless Liza Jarrett, born at the dawn of the twentieth century, is now in her eighties, frail and facing eviction with her cantankerous parrot Nelson, when she is visited by Stephen, a young gay social worker. As she learns to trust him, she recalls her life - her embittered, exhausted mother, her shell-shocked spiritualist husband, her beloved son and chaotic daugter. Their friendship, deepening with the unfolding of their stories, comes to sustain Liza through her last battle and brings new courage to Stephen.

Virago

Union Street

Pat Barker
Virago

Blow Your House Down

Pat Barker
Abacus

The Boer War

Thomas Pakenham

The war declared by the Boers on 11 October 1899 gave the British, as Kipling said, 'no end of a lesson'. It proved to be the longest, the costliest, the bloodiest and the most humiliating campaign that Britain fought between 1815 and 1914.Thomas Pakenham has written the first full-scale history of the war since 1910. His narrative is based on first-hand and largely unpublished sources ranging from the private papers of the leading protagonists to the recollections of survivors from both sides. Out of this historical gold-mine, the author has constructed a narrative as vivid and fast-moving as a novel, and a history that in scholarship, breadth and impact will endure for many years.

Abacus

The Year Of Liberty

Thomas Pakenham