Susan Coll

The Washington Post
A year in the life of a 60-year-old runaway (from marriage)

For the uninitiated, Nina Stibbe is a beloved and very funny British writer best known for her first book, “Love, Nina,” a collection of letters she wrote to her sister during her stint in the 1980sworking as a nanny to the children of Mary-Kay Wilmers, then the deputy editor of the London Review of Books, and the director and producer Stephen Frears. In other words, Stibbe, a keenly observant 20-year-old, had stumbled into a gold mine. That book, first published in the United States in 2014, was later turned into a BBC television series adapted by Nick Hornby. Stibbe has since gone on to write several acclaimed novels and works of nonfiction.

Read the full article at The Washington Post
PREVIOUSALL

more articles

Book Review
The New York Times
They sell frocks at F. G. Goode’s, these women in black, and when they arrive for work they don rayon crepe dresses that smell of frequent dry cleaning, cheap talcum powder and sweat.
Essay
Washingtonian Magazine
Don’t think you can skip reading Personal History because you’ve seen the movie The Post or read All the President’s Men. Graham is perhaps best known for presiding over her newsroom during Watergate as well as her courageous decision to publish the Pentagon Papers, but the events that put her at the helm of the Washington Post are just as dramatic.
Book Review
The Washington Post
“Tell me,” Kurt Vonnegut asks Jane Marie Cox, his future wife, “would you enjoy living with me, sleeping with me, leading a carnival life?”
Scroll to Top