Like a lot of my books, this one was sitting on the shelf for some time, waiting to be read. There are some wonderful photographs in it, so it had not been completely ignored, but it took my recent visit to Charleston to get me to actually read it through. I have to say firstly that to anyone interested in the Bloomsbury Group, Charleston is everything you might want it to be. It is a beautiful house, filled to the brim with wonderful artworks by Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant, and decorated throughout by them in their unique and inspiring style.
As for this book, it is a great reminder of my visit, but more than just a visitor's guide, as it has a text made up of memories of the house and people who inhabited it, by Quentin Bell, (Vanessa's son), and a more researched viewpoint from Virginia Nicholson (Quentin's daughter), who also brings her own memories of holidays spent at the farmhouse with her father and grandparents.
The usual Bloomsbury characters make regular appearances - Maynard Keynes, Lytton Strachey, Frances Partridge, Bunny Garnett etc., and there are plenty of photographs of them from Vanessa Bell's album to accompany the modern colour photographs of Alen MacWeeney. This is a great book about a remarkable house, and I just want to get out my paintbrushes and cover my walls in mesmerizing colours and patterns - if I only had the talent!