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Barbara Pym
(1913-1980)
Barbara Mary Crampton Pym was destined to become a writer.
She was born to Frederic and Irena Pym on June 2, 1913, in the
town of Oswestry, Shropshire, on the Welsh border. Barbara's sister
Hilary was born there in 1916. Since Irena Pym was assistant organist
at the parish church of St. Oswald, entertaining vicars and curates
became part of Pym family life--and would later provide Barbara with
some of her most enduring and endearing characters.
At the age of sixteen, inspired by Aldous Huxley's Crome Yellow,
Barbara attempted her first novel, "Young Men in Fancy Dress," a work that
remains in the Pym Archives at the Bodleian Library at Oxford University
but one that holds the seeds of her singular talent. Her dedication in the
manuscript read: "To H.D.M.G., who kindly informed me that I had the
makings of a style of my own." In 1931, Barbara entered St. Hilda's
College at Oxford. Her notebooks and diaries, also archived at the
Bodleian but with excerpts published as A Very Private Eye,
document her Oxford years. It was here that Barbara read English
literature, fell in love, and made life-long friends who would
later influence her literary career.
After earning her second-class honors degree in English Literature,
Barbara returned to Oswestry where she began writing Some Tame Gazelle
about two fiftyish spinsters. Remarkably, she projected herself and
Hilary thirty years in the future, wove her Oxford friends into the
story, and further refined the Pym style, marked by wit, humor and
delightful details of her characters' everyday life. She completed
this first novel in 1935 when she was only 22 and periodically
submitted it to publishers, but without initial success. Barbara
started other stories and novels in the 1930s, notably Crampton Hodnet,
which was published posthumously.
When war overtook Europe in 1940, Barbara was assigned to the
Censorship office at Bristol and after a painful romance, she decided
to join the Wrens (Women's Royal Naval Service). In 1944, she was
posted to Naples until the end of the war. There she continued
writing her diaries and notebooks, gathering material for the
"stuff" of her novels. One of the naval officers she knew in Naples
became the inspiration for Rocky Napier in Excellent Women.
After the war, Barbara took a job at the International African
Institute in London, and soon became the assistant editor for the
journal Africa. Here the world of anthropologists provided
rich and amusing fodder for Barbara's comedic pen. During this time,
Barbara lived with her sister Hilary, now with the BBC, in a
Pimlico flat where she wrote stories for women's magazines, but
without success. More significantly, she revised Some Tame Gazelle
and submitted it to the publisher Jonathan Cape in 1949. To her
delight it was accepted and published in 1950, to favorable reviews.
Her career as a published writer was launched.
From then on every few years a new Pym novel was produced.
Excellent Women was published by Cape in 1952, followed the
next year by Jane and Prudence. 1955 saw the publication of
Less Than Angels, A Glass of Blessings in 1958, and
No Fond Return of Love appeared in 1961. To scholars and
critics, these six early novels form the Barbara Pym canon,
a body of work that establishes her unique style and presages
her lasting importance. In them, she probes the human condition,
seen through the prism of such quotidian events as jumble sales
and walks in the woods. Her characters are unassuming people leading
unremarkable lives; Pym became the chronicler of quiet lives.
Two years after her modest success as a writer, in 1963, Barbara
submitted An Unsuitable Attachment to Jonathan Cape, her publisher;
to her dismay, it was rejected as being out of step with the times.
This was, of course, a severe blow. She tried sending
An Unsuitable Attachment to other publishers, only to have it
rejected. She revised it, but still the rejection letters came.
In all, twenty publishers refused to publish her latest novel.
This devastating experience plunged Barbara Pym into what she
and her friends would ruefully term "the wilderness," a literary
limbo from which it appeared she would never emerge. "I get
moments of gloom and pessimism when it seems as if nobody could
ever like my kind of writing again . . . . " she wrote in 1970.
But despite the bleak future, she continued to write. Drawing on
her relationship, at the age of forty-nine, with a thirty-two-year-old
antiques dealer, Barbara started writing The Sweet Dove Died,
a darker novel than her previous works, that brings to life the
incomparable Leonora Eyre, who seeks to possess a younger man.
It, too, was rejected by several publishers in the late sixties
and early seventies.
Misfortune of another kind struck Barbara in 1971--she was
diagnosed with breast cancer and underwent a mastectomy; in 1974
she suffered a minor stroke. She then retired from the Institute
and went to live with Hilary at her cottage in Finstock, Oxfordshire.
Still writing, Barbara turned her energies toward a new novel
inspired by her recent retirement. The story of four office workers,
two on the verge of retirement, became Quartet in Autumn,
darker still than The Sweet Dove Died but unmistakably Pym.
Inexplicably, Jonathan Cape rejected the book in 1976, as did
another publisher.
A few months later her fortunes changed with startling suddenness.
In the January 21,1977 issue of the Times Literary Supplement,
Barbara Pym was twice named (by Philip Larkin and Lord David Cecil)
as "the most underrated novelist of the century." With astonishing speed,
she emerged from "the wilderness" after sixteen years of obscurity,
to almost instant fame and recognition. Macmillan accepted
Quartet in Autumn for publication in 1977 and it was
short-listed for the Booker Prize. In 1978, Macmillan published
The Sweet Dove Died; both new novels drew critical acclaim
in the United Kingdom and Macmillan hastened to reprint all the novels.
American audiences were quickly introduced to Barbara by E.P.
Dutton which, in 1978, began publishing all of her novels.
Furthermore, the books were translated into many foreign languages
and Pym enjoyed international acclaim.
But fate intervened once again, dealing its final blow to Barbara.
Only two years after her rediscovery, her cancer returned and this time,
treatments were unsuccessful. She rushed to finish her new novel,
A Few Green Leaves, and she died at the Michael Sobell House,
a hospice in Oxford, on January 11, 1980. She is buried in the
churchyard at Finstock.
Hazel Holt, Barbara's close friend, Institute colleague, and
literary executor in 1982 prepared An Unsuitable Attachment
for publication, followed by Crampton Hodnet in 1985. In
1987 Civil to Strangers was published, together with several short
stories selected by Hazel Holt.
Barbara Pym novels still sparkle as brightly as jewels on the
literary landscape. The real world has changed enormously in the
twenty-one years since she wrote her last story, but the
"entirely recognizable world" she created remains forever intact,
beckoning readers to return time and again. They are rewarded anew
by the richness of Pym's unique gifts to her readers. It appears
that Barbara Pym has achieved the "immortality that most authors
would want--to feel that their work would be immediately recognized
as having been written by them and nobody else."
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