daaclass.blogg.se

84 Charing Cross Road. by Helene Hanff
84 Charing Cross Road. by Helene Hanff




84 Charing Cross Road. by Helene Hanff 84 Charing Cross Road. by Helene Hanff 84 Charing Cross Road. by Helene Hanff

Unfortunately, she put it off too long – Doel died suddenly and the bookshop eventually closed. Hanff was writing play scripts during the time of these correspondences and kept putting off visiting her pen-pals because of financial difficulties – she referred to herself as a “poor writer with an antiquarian taste in books”. Post-war Britain saw acute food shortages and Hanff generously couriered food and Christmas gifts to the Doels and the staff, bringing them great joy. The early letters from Doel to Hanff were very prim and proper but Hanff, with her charm and outrageous wit, managed to chip away at his stiff-upper-lip exterior and eventually form the most precious of friendships. Hanff and her new foreign friends discussed a variety of topics in between Hanff’s book requests which Doel did his level best to fulfil, sometimes going to great lengths to unearth specific editions. One book wish-list led to another and this sparked off an unlikely friendship between two remarkable people that later expanded to include the staff at 84, Charing Cross, Doel’s family and even a neighbour of the Doels’. Hanff, a resident of New York City and a voracious reader constantly in search of rare classics to add to her collection, first wrote to Doel in 1949 to enquire about books she had long wanted which were either unavailable or unaffordable in New York.ĭoel responded, agreeing to send the books across from his store in London. 84, Charing Cross Road is a compilation of letters between author Helene Hanff and Frank Doel, a bookseller at 84, Charing Cross Road, London.






84 Charing Cross Road. by Helene Hanff