Sofka Zinovieff
Author
Books
Sofka Zinovieff was born in London. She trained as an anthropologist at Cambridge. She has worked as a journalist and book reviewer for various British publications, and has lived in Russia, Italy and Greece.
For more information about this author, please visit her website.
Latest publication:
THE MAD BOY, LORD BERNERS, MY GRANDMOTHER AND ME (Jonathan Cape, 2014)
Faringdon House in Oxfordshire was the home of Lord Berners, composer, writer, painter, friend of Stravinsky and Gertrude Stein, a man renowned for his eccentricity – masks, practical jokes, a flock of multi-coloured doves – and his homosexuality. Before the war he made Faringdon an aesthete’s paradise, where exquisite food was served to many of the great minds, beauties and wits of the day.
Since the early thirties his companion there was Robert Heber-Percy, twenty-eight years his junior, wildly physical, unscholarly, a hothead who rode naked through the grounds, loved cocktails and nightclubs, and was known to all as the Mad Boy. If the two men made an unlikely couple, at a time when homosexuality was illegal, the addition to the household in 1942 of a pregnant Jennifer Fry, a high society girl known to be ‘fast’, as Robert’s wife was simply astounding.
After Victoria was born the marriage soon foundered (Jennifer later married Alan Ross). Berners died in 1950, leaving Robert in charge of Faringdon, aided by a ferocious Austrian housekeeper who strove to keep the same culinary standards in a more austere age. This was the world Sofka Zinovieff, Victoria’s daughter, a typical child of the sixties, first encountered at the age of seventeen. Eight years later, to her astonishment, Robert told her he was leaving her Faringdon House.
Her book about Faringdon and its people is marvellously witty and full of insight, bringing to life a vanished world and the almost fantastical people who lived in it.
Press
As classy and consuming a memoir as you’re likely to read all autumn.
- Bookseller
Prepare to be seduced by outlandish delights and strange creatures.
- Tatler
Sumptuous.
- Sunday Times
A vivid sketch of the extraordinarily glamourous society of Farringdon in its heyday, especially during the 30s.
- Guardian
Zinovieff is an entertaining and amiable companion on this, at times, uncomfortable romp through her family saga.
- The Times
Formidably researched and wonderfully enjoyable book.
- Oldie
I enjoyed every word.
- Lady
A book that is unputdownable and…gloriously lavish, something fascinating to gaze at on every page.
- Observer
It’s an extraordinary story, well told and illustrated.
- Choice Magazine
The delicacy of Zinovieff’s perceptions, the abiding redolence of her descriptions and the captivating moods of her subjects make The Mad Boy, Lord Berners, My Grandmother and Me a book of rare pleasure.
- The Times Literary Supplement
Fiction
Publication Details | Notes |
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2012 Short Books | The House on Paradise Street is an epic tale of our times. Taking the reader from the war-torn streets of 1940s Athens to the partisans’ mountain caves after the war, through the ‘Regime of the Colonels’ and on into the present day, this is a sweeping tale of love and loss, and what happens when ideology threatens to subsume our sense of humanity. |
Non-Fiction
Publication Details | Notes |
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2008 GRANTA | From a privileged childhood in Tsarist St Petersburg to dedicated member of the British Communist party, the life of Princess Sofka Dolgorouky reads like a seismograph of the great upheavals of the twentieth century. |
2004 Granta | In the 1980S, a young English woman went to Greece as a student and fell in love with the country. In the summer of 2001, married to an expatriate Greek and the mother of two young daughters, she returned for good... |