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The Last Landlady

The Last Landlady

£9.99

A memoir of the time Laura spent with her publican grandmother as a child

An eclectic mix of social history and elegy, ironic comedy and indelible Englishness. It is about the pub as theatre’ The Spectator

 

Laura Thompson’s grandmother Violet was one of the great landladies. Born in a London pub, she became the first woman to be given a publican’s licence in her own name. Just as pubs defined her life, she seemed in many ways to embody their essence.

Laura spent part of her childhood in Violet’s Home Counties establishment, mesmerised by her gift for cultivating the mix of cosiness and glamour that defined the pub’s atmosphere, making it a unique reflection of the national character. Her memories of this time are just as intoxicating: beer and ash on the carpets in the morning, the deepening rhythms of mirth at night, the magical brightness of glass behind the bar…

Through them Laura traces the story of the English pub, asking why it has occupied such a treasured position in our culture. But even Violet, as she grew older, recognised that places like hers were a dying breed, and Laura also considers the precarious future they face. 

Part memoir, part social history, part elegy, The Last Landlady pays tribute to an extraordinary woman and the world she epitomised. It was selected as a Spectator book of the year in 2018.

 

A lyrical portrait of a fast-vanishing way of life . . . Thompson is a terrific writer New Statesman

The Last Landlady is Laura Thompson's exquisitely observed and brilliantly written memoir of the life and times of her grandmother, the first woman in England to hold a pub licence Kathryn Hughes, Mail on Sunday

A wonderfully observed story about female agency in the post-war period The Guardian

 

Paperback: 272pp
Published: Wilton Square (December 2025)
ISBN: 9781783528455

 

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The mission of Wilton Square Books is to publish fiction and non-fiction that increases our understanding of the world and the people in it.

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