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Jonathan Cape

Oh Happy Day by Carmen Callil

A story of England and Britain, of Empire, migration; of poverty and rebellion in nineteenth-century England, in ‘Oh Happy Day’ Carmen Callil explores her roots and reclaims her ancestors from obscurity. Drawing telling parallels with our own times, Callil argues that social injustice in Britain today is a product of considerable misunderstanding of its history.


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Oh Happy Day
Those Times and These Times
By Carmen Callil
Jonathan Cape / November 2020 / hardback / £18.99

In this remarkable book, writer and founder of Virago Press Carmen Callil unearths the story of her British ancestors, beginning with her great-great-grandmother Sary Lacey. Born illegitimate in 1808, Sary was an impoverished stocking frame worker in Leicestershire. Through detailed research, we follow Sary from slum to tenement and from pregnancy to pregnancy. We also meet George Conquest, a canal worker, sentenced to seven years transportation to Australia for stealing a piece of hemp - and then faced with the extraordinary brutality of convict life. In Lincolnshire we meet Mary Ann and John Brooks, skivvies and silversmiths. Their lives traverse workhouses, gaols, pregnancies and villainies – and escape across the seas.

But for George, as for so many destitute and disenfranchised British people like him, Australia turns out to be his Happy Day. He survives, prospers and eventually returns to England, where he meets Sary again, after nearly thirty years. He brings her out to Australia, and they are never parted again.

Carmen Callil not only reclaims her ancestors from obscurity but draws telling parallels for our own times in this moving story of poverty, entitlement, injustice, empire and migration.


TALKING POINTS    

  • Has anything changed, fundamentally, in British society since the 19th century?

  • Austerity and Brexit are echoed in the battles the English fought amongst themselves over a hundred years ago.

  • How much do the British really know about the British Empire?

  • Has Britain been corroded by its Empire – how damaging is it to a society to misunderstand its own history?

  • An important account of English and British social and political history.

  • Illuminates the story of refugees and asylum seekers - migration then and migration now.  

    ‘An absorbing account of empire, migration, the poverty of injustice and enduring love…The book bristles with Callil’s righteous anger at the injustices meted out to her forbears, and at the parallels for our own times.’ Caroline Sanderson, The Bookseller (Editor’s Choice)


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ABOUT CARMEN CALLIL

Carmen Callil was born in Australia but has spent most of her career in the United Kingdom. She founded Virago Press in 1973 and in 1982 became managing director of Chatto & Windus. Her first book, Bad Faith: A Forgotten History of Family and Fatherland, was shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Award.

Carmen is available for interviews, features and events.


Selected praise for Bad Faith

‘A superb exploration of the fractured mind of French anti-Semitism’ - Simon Heffer, Literary Review

‘The story she has uncovered is so strange and powerful that it would be an unusual reader who was not profoundly moved’ - Kathryn Hughes, Mail on Sunday

‘A work of phenomenally thorough, generous and humane scholarship....Callil understands anguish, and lays bare its causes with clarity and precision. Bad Faith exemplifies what Primo Levi called the 'continuous intellectual and moral effort' that is the only adequate response to the events described here’
- Hilary Spurling, Daily Telegraph 

‘Bad Faith is a book of passion and anger which, nonetheless, manages to keep its head as a significant work of history’ - Mark Bostridge, Independent on Sunday

‘We cannot know what Anne Darquier would have thought of Callil's book, but my guess is that she would have been as moved, astonished and impressed as any other reader’
- Ruth Scurr, The Times

‘Extraordinary...touching... a masterpiece of lacerating satire’
- Peter Conrad, Observer

Bad Faith represents eight years of astonishing research...a remarkable book’
- Antony Beevor, Sunday Telegraph

‘A meticulous work of scholarship... [an] astonishing biography’
- Adam Thorpe, Guardian

‘Impeccably researched, Bad Faith is a work of great power and originality; Callil is to be congratulated on her achievement’ - Sunday Times

Big Sister, Little Sister, Red Sister by Jung Chang

A major new biography from the internationally-bestselling author of Wild Swans, Mao and Empress Dowager Cixi. A gripping story of sisterhood, revolution and betrayal, and three women who helped shape the course of modern Chinese history.


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Big Sister, Little Sister, Red Sister
By Jung Chang
Jonathan Cape / 17 October / Hardback / £25

They were the most famous sisters in China. As the country battled through a hundred years of wars, revolutions and seismic transformations, the three Soong sisters from Shanghai were at the centre of power, and each of them left an indelible mark on history.

Red Sister, Ching-ling, married the ‘Father of China’, Sun Yat-sen, and rose to be Mao’s vice-chair.

Little Sister, May-ling, became Madame Chiang Kai-shek, first lady of pre-Communist Nationalist China and a major political figure in her own right.

Big Sister, Ei-ling, became Chiang’s unofficial main adviser – and made herself one of China’s richest women.

 All three sisters enjoyed tremendous privilege and glory, but also endured constant mortal danger. They showed great courage and experienced passionate love, as well as despair and heartbreak. They remained close emotionally, even when they embraced opposing political camps and Ching-ling dedicated herself to destroying her two sisters’ worlds.

Big Sister, Little Sister, Red Sister is a gripping story of love, war, intrigue, bravery, glamour and betrayal, which takes us on a sweeping journey from Canton to Hawaii to New York, from exiles’ quarters in Japan and Berlin to secret meeting rooms in Moscow, and from the compounds of the Communist elite in Beijing to the corridors of power in democratic Taiwan. In a group biography that is by turns intimate and epic, Jung Chang reveals the lives of three extraordinary women who helped shape twentieth-century China.


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ABOUT JUNG CHANG

Jung Chang is the internationally bestselling author of Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China; Mao: The Unknown Story (with Jon Halliday); and Empress Dowager Cixi: The Concubine who Launched Modern China. Her books have been translated into over 40 languages and sold more than 15 million copies outside Mainland China where they are banned. She was born in China in 1952 and came to Britain in 1978. She lives in London.

Jung Chang is available for interview and events .


BOOK TOUR 2019/2020

·      Cheltenham Literary Festival – 12 October

·      Durham Literary Festival – 13 October

·      Manchester Literary Festival – 14 October

·      Linghams Bookshop – 15 October

·      Salisbury Literary Festival – 18 October (Salisbury Cathedral)

·      London Literature Festival / Asia House at Queen Elizabeth Hall, Southbank – 19 October

·      Dublin Festival of History – 20 October (Printworks of Dublin Castle)

·      Toppings, Edinburgh – 22 October (Greenside Church)

·      Toppings, Bath – 23 October (Christchurch)

·      Waterstones, Canterbury – 24 October

·      Blackwells, Oxford – 29 October (Newman Rooms)

·      Dulwich Literary Festival – 13 November (George Farha Auditorium)

·      Chorleywood Bookshop – 18 November (Chorleywood Memorial Hall)

·      Daunts, Marylebone High Street – 28 November

·      Cambridge Literary Festival – 1 December

·      How To Academy, Conway Hall – 2 December 

·      Aldeburgh Literary Festival – 5-8 March 2020