Published in 2016
600 pages
Janet Frame (1924 – 2004) was one of New Zealand’s most distinguished writers. She is best known for An Angel at My Table, which the Sunday Times of London called “one of the great autobiographies written in the twentieth century,” and inspired Jane Campion’s internationally acclaimed film. Throughout her long career, Frame received a wide range of awards, including every literary prize for which she was eligible in New Zealand, honorary membership in the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize for Literature.
What is this book about?
The autobiography of New Zealand’s most significant writer
New Zealand’s preeminent writer Janet Frame brings the skill of an extraordinary novelist and poet to these vivid and haunting recollections, gathered here for the first time in a single volume. From a childhood and adolescence spent in a poor but intellectually intense railway family, through life as a student, and years of incarceration in mental hospitals, eventually followed by her entry into the saving world of writers and the “Mirror City” that sustains them, we are given not only a record of the events of a life, but also “the transformation of ordinary facts and ideas into a shining palace of mirrors.”
Frame’s journey of self-discovery, from New Zealand to London, to Paris and Barcelona, and then home again, is a heartfelt and courageous account of a writer’s beginnings as well as one woman’s personal struggle to survive.
This book contains selections from the long out-of-print collection entitled Janet Frame: An Autobiography (1991), which itself was originally published in three volumes: To the Is-land, An Angel at My Table, and The Envoy from Mirror City.