The Good Bohemian
The Letters of Ida John
Michael Holroyd author Rebecca John author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:17th May '18
Should be back in stock very soon
In this compelling narrative, Ida Nettleship shares her passionate and complex life through letters, revealing her struggles and resilience in an unconventional marriage with artist Augustus John, ultimately leaving a lasting impression.
The Good Bohemian explores the life of Ida Nettleship, who married the renowned artist Augustus John just days before her twenty-fourth birthday in January 1901. Their marriage, held in secrecy at St Pancras Registry Office, defied the expectations of her conventional parents. Despite their disapproval, Ida's love for Augustus, a charismatic fellow student at the Slade, led her to pursue a life that would ultimately be marked by passion and complexity.
Through a collection of Ida's letters to friends, family, and Augustus, the narrative reveals her vibrant personality filled with wit and intensity. These correspondences shed light on the turmoil that arose within the Nettleship family due to her unconventional choices. As Augustus became involved with another woman, Dorelia, the marriage evolved into a complicated three-way relationship. Ida's letters candidly express her feelings of hurt and betrayal, yet also reflect her remarkable capacity for acceptance and resilience as she navigated the challenges of her unorthodox domestic life.
Ida's writing showcases her talent and depth, offering readers a glimpse into her world with a rare blend of honesty and social awareness for her time. Despite her untimely death at the age of thirty from puerperal fever after giving birth to her fifth son, Ida's letters resonate with vitality, humor, and poignant emotion. The Good Bohemian ultimately serves as a testament to her enduring spirit and the complexities of love and marriage in a changing society.
It is a terrible ending to a terrible story. You might say that it was all Ida’s fault. She was just a silly goose who mistook her grander for a phoenix. But that would not be true to the brave, witty, imaginative, sensitive, playful, talented woman who wrote these letters. It is right that, after more than one hundred years, she should have her say -- John Carey * Sunday Times *
In the letters, erotic energy occasionally seems to be pushing in all directions at once … She may have forfeited her chance to paint, but her letters, salvaged by her granddaughter Rebecca, after a century during which the renegade Ida was not mentioned in the family, make belated amends. Between baby-minding chores, she proved to be a witty, wickedly outspoken writer, which ensures that she will now not be forgotten -- Peter Conrad * Guardian *
The letters of Ida Nettleship, first wife of arch-bohemian Augustus John, are a case in point: gathered together here from diverse sources by her granddaughter Rebecca John and expertly introduced by John’s biographer Michael Holroyd,they constitute a rare epistolary treasure trove … they give us a startlingly vivid picture of what it was like to be bound by passion, loyalty and an ever-growing brood of offspring to a ‘genius’ ... the fine balance between tragedy and comedy in her situation finds expression in letters so fresh that it is hard to believe they were written more than a century ago -- Ariane Banks * Spectator *
Their sympathetic edition of her fascinating and painful letters reveals a courageous woman, gifted with a buoyant intelligence -- Dinah Birch * The Times *
Rarely have I come across a more engaging personality -- D.J. Taylor * Times Literary Supplement 'Books of the Year' *
A compelling glimpse of a lost age of bohemia that raises provocative questions about what it means to live freely -- Lara Feigel * Guardian *
The letters, published here for the first time, go a long way to recovering [Ida] and tell a painful story of an emotionally sophisticated, morally honest woman struggling with the trap in which she finds herself, trying by turns to escape and take control of the situation. To different correspondents she showed different facets of her predicament and the result is a portrait both fragmentary and poignant -- Rosemary Hill * London Review of Books *
The reader remains haunted by Ida’s story, but also left aware that letters offer something that the grand narrative of a good biography often sweeps over or ignores: small contingencies, sudden mood changes, or what falls between the cracks. Indeed the very human muddle that is found here -- Frances Spalding * Oldie *
These letters should resurrect [Ida] as a wit and object of fascination in her own right * Daily Telegraph *
ISBN: 9781408873595
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 290g
352 pages