The Dangerous Edge of Things

The Dangerous Edge of Things

by Candida Lycett Green Green (Author)

Synopsis

1949: Candida Lycett Green describes one year in her magical childhood in the remote farming village of Farnborough in Berkshire, where she lived with her eccentric, bohemian upper-class parents among the local farming community. In one of the bleakest and highest spots in the county, 750 feet up in the windswept downland, Candida ran wild with a Gang of the children of the local farm labourers, and their discoveries and adventures are set against a vivid backdrop of village life and the unfolding agricultural and natural year. Parents play a minor part in the activities of The Gang, whose non-school hours are spent roaming freely around the countryside, and it is during these romps that Candida and her friend June become interested in the concept of Love. Their romantic imagination is fuelled by their secret surveillance of local beauty Ruby Mason, who they discover cleans the cottage of a reclusive German scientist working at the neighbouring Harwell Atomic Research Centre. A romance between Ruby and the German is imagined, or engineered, by Candida and June's stealthy intervention, and the two girls spend the summer revelling in the secret love affair they seem to have instigate

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 352
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Doubleday
Published: 01 Feb 2005

ISBN 10: 038560677X
ISBN 13: 9780385606776
Book Overview: 1949- English village childhood memoir recalling a single year in Candida Lycett Green's feral early years in the bohemian Betjeman household in Farnborough, running wild with the village children, combined with the mystery of scientist Klaus Fuchs, who lived locally and who gave the secret of the atom bomb to the Russians.

Author Bio
Candida Lycett Green is the author of over a dozen books including English Cottages, Goodbye London, The Garden at Highgrove (with the Prince of Wales) and The Perfect English House. She has also edited and introduced her father John Betjeman's letters and prose to critical acclaim. She has written and presented several television programmes including The Front Garden and The Englishwoman and the Horse for the BBC. She is a member of the Performing Rights Society through her song lyrics, a contributing editor to Vogue magazine, and was a commissioner for English Heritage for nine years. She writes a regular column for the Oldie. She has five children and eight grandchildren and lives with her husband Rupert in Oxfordshire.