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Returning from her time in Berlin, Amory's plans to scandalise London prove to be all too successful. Read by Barbara Flynn.

Returning from her time in Berlin, Amory's plans to scandalise London prove to be all too successful.

William Boyd's novel follows one remarkable woman through the decades of the 20th century.

In 1915, Amory’s uncle unknowingly sets her life on its course when he gives her a Kodak Brownie No 2 as a present for her seventh birthday, igniting a lifelong passion for photography. Her camera will take her from high society London in the 1920s to the cabaret clubs and brothels of inter-war Berlin; to 1930s New York, the Blackshirt riots in London’s East End, and to France and Germany during the Second World War, where she becomes one of the first female war photographers.

She eventually comes to rest on a remote Scottish island, where she drinks, writes and looks back on a personal life that has been just as rich and complex as her professional one. She remembers the men that have been closest to her – her father, her brother, her lovers – irreparably scarred by two world wars, and reflects upon her own experiences of conflict and loss, passion and joy.

Read by Barbara Flynn
Abridged by Sara Davies
Producer: Mair Bosworth

First broadcast on Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4 in September 2015.

15 minutes

Credits

Role Contributor
Reader Barbara Flynn
Author William Boyd
Abridger Sara Davies
Producer Mair Bosworth

Broadcasts

  • Thu 24 Sep 2015 22:45
  • Thu 2 Jan 2020 14:00
  • Fri 3 Jan 2020 02:00

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