From the Editors
After a long winter of disruptions, there’s definitely a feeling of spring in the air at Slightly Foxed. We know we’re not out of the woods yet where Covid is concerned, but the start of the year has been busy, and we’re still enjoying the novelty of meeting in the office instead of facing unflattering versions of ourselves on Zoom. Outside in the square the trees are just coming into bud, and the tatty old London pigeons are bowing and flirting on the ledge outside the office window.
It all feels like an invitation to be out and doing, perhaps in the kind of countryside captured by our spring cover. It’s by the landscape artist Sandra Graham, and was, she says, inspired by the many different shades of green she saw during a walk last year in the Midlands along the River Rea. We do enjoy choosing and commissioning the SF covers, and doing so has introduced us to artists and illustrators working in many different media, from oil and watercolour to wood engraving, lithography and mosaics.
Walking in parks and in the countryside was one of the things that made lockdown bearable for many of us, and this included our contributor Daisy Hay. On p.7 she describes the pleasure it gave her to walk in the country to the accompaniment of an audiobook reading of Trollope’s Barchester novels. The year she spent among the inhabitants of that imaginary cathedral town, with their ambitions, feuds and love affairs, transported her into a world soothingly far away from the stresses of the present day.
Our spring Slightly Foxed Edition Lark Rise (see p.14), Flora Thompson’s lightly fictionalized memoir of her rural childhood at the end of the nineteenth century, is another guaranteed de-stresser.
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