Janet Somerville taught literature for 20 years in Toronto. Since 2015, she has been wholly immersed in Martha Gellhorn’s life and words, privileged to have ongoing access to Gellhorn’s restricted papers in Boston, Massachusetts.
[Review of hardcover: ] This is history as it was lived, and shared
in intimate and emotional detail, among Gellhorn's lovers, husband,
family and friends who were among the most important doers and
thinkers of the time. Curated with valuable context by Janet
Somerville... It's her own love letter of sorts to a woman she
calls "a wonder"... This new offering reminds us how we read
history through two prisms: a recollection of the past and a
reflection on our own time. So much has changed, and so much is
much the same, since our last Martha moment, reason enough to
savour a new account... Now we have more of her own words, and
those who admired and embraced her, to reflect again on her world
and ours.--Lyse Doucet "Observer" (12/1/2019 12:00:00 AM)
[Review of hardcover: ] Book of the Year... Gellhorn was a
glamorous novelist, social-justice activist, and fearless war
correspondent who covered almost every major conflict of the 20th
century. Yet she is most often treated as a historical footnote
because of her short-lived marriage to Ernest Hemingway. Thanks to
Somerville's tireless efforts, Gellhorn may finally receive the
attention she rightfully deserves.-- "Quill and Quire" (12/1/2019
12:00:00 AM)
[Review of hardcover: ] You don't need to be familiar with
Gellhorn's other writing in order to enjoy her letters; this
collection simply fuels the desire to seek out and read all of her
work. Her correspondents and Somerville speak so movingly about
Gellhorn's reporting that the reader aches to experience these
pieces first-hand, and reading how Gellhorn herself describes her
fiction-writing process prompts a yearning to track down the final
product.... It is important that Gellhorn take her place as a
trailblazing journalist and author who made the world better for
having written about what she saw.-- "Quill and Quire" (10/1/2019
12:00:00 AM)
Yours, For Probably Always is an essential book, a ticket into the
past, a life spent wildly, often bravely, sometimes not so
wisely... Janet Somerville has done a marvelous job with marvelous
material. Bravo. Martha Gellhorn was courageous and committed in
love and in war. What a pleasure reading her correspondence and
being reminded of how beautifully she wrote, filled with passion
and insight. Yours, for Probably Always is a rich resource about an
extraordinary life well-lived. The literary stream-of-consciousness
letters, uncensored and intimate, read like a novel. There are
dramatic flashpoints, but also revelations of everyday existence
that are equally absorbing. The book provides genuine insight about
Martha Gellhorn and how real she was. It was a huge job to pull
this all together and make it read smoothly when you are covering
so much territory and Janet Somerville did that with perfect
aplomb. She chose wisely so you see Gellhorn's wit, her charisma,
but also her hard work and dedication to mankind. The remarkable
Martha Gellhorn leaps from the pages of these vivid, witty, deeply
human and humane letters. Through her loving curation and
attention, Janet Somerville gives voice to a 20th century literary
pioneer, too long in shadow. As much as any woman in the twentieth
century, Martha Gellhorn succeeded in her ambition to 'go
everywhere and see everything and sometimes write about it.' It is
wonderful to have this compendious new collection of letters from
and to her, a few newly discovered. Janet Somerville has carefully
set each group of correspondence in its historical context and
further enriched them with photographs which even longtime Gellhorn
admirers will not have seen.--Ward Just, author of American
Romantics and An Unfinished Season (1/1/2019 12:00:00 AM)
[Review of hardcover: ] (starred review) Somerville makes an
impressive book debut with a life of novelist, journalist, and
intrepid war correspondent Martha Gellhorn (1908-1998), told
through a captivating selection of her letters to friends, family,
husbands, and lovers. The volume is enriched by Somerville's
biographical narrative and her decision to include responses of
many recipients and, in some cases, letters between individuals who
were especially significant in Gellhorn's life... An engrossing
collection that burnishes Gellhorn's reputation as an astute
observer, insightful writer, and uniquely brave woman.-- "Kirkus"
(7/8/2019 12:00:00 AM)
[Review of hardcover: ] [An] enthralling collection of Gellhorn's
correspondence from the 1930s and 1940s.--Fintan O'Toole "The New
York Review of Books" (10/8/2020 12:00:00 AM)
[Review of hardcover: ] A book I guarantee you is going to make
waves.--Deborah Dundas "Toronto Star" (8/30/2019 12:00:00 AM)
[Review of hardcover: ] A fitting tribute to a remarkable life and
career.-- "Publishers Weekly" (6/21/2019 12:00:00 AM)
[Review of hardcover: ] A must-read... Captures an extraordinary
period in Gellhorn's life... Yours, for Probably Always offers love
letters, family exchanges, reports on daily life and missives about
politics and conflict. The book is history, geography, psychology
and biography all at once... The book includes letters she
exchanged with an amazing cast of characters, including H.G. Wells,
Eleanor Roosevelt, and Ernest Hemingway -- a riveting fabric that
author Somerville stitches together for the reader with a fine
thread of biographical detail, bits of conversation, concurrent
events and keen observation. Somerville is a magician here, somehow
organizing and conveying a mountain of biographical information
with brevity and great style.--Liz Braun "Toronto Sun" (11/2/2019
12:00:00 AM)
[Review of hardcover: ] One wonders what will happen when future
generations want to understand current famous figures. Look at
Twitter accounts? Scrape emails? Thankfully, journalist Martha
Gellhorn -- married to Hemingway for a short time -- corresponded
by letter with some of the most famous people of her time. This
book compiles these missives, many newly discovered, creating a
portrait of a modern woman and a chronicle of the 20th
century.--Deborah Dundas "Toronto Star, Gift Guide 2019"
(11/29/2019 12:00:00 AM)
[Review of hardcover: ] This carefully curated collection of
letters between war correspondent, journalist and novelist Gellhorn
and her friends, colleagues and lovers -- among them Dorothy
Parker, Chiang Kai-shek and her husband, Ernest Hemingway --
reveals the exciting life of a brilliant woman whose work paved the
way for many who followed behind her.-- "Globe and Mail" (9/21/2019
12:00:00 AM)
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