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Recognition for writer and pioneer
The Guardian
|December 13, 2025
'The thing all women hate is to be thought dull," says the title character of Sylvia Townsend Warner's Lolly Willowes, an early feminist classic about a middle-aged woman who moves to the countryside, sells her soul to the devil and becomes a witch.
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Though their lives are so limited by society, Lolly observes in the 1926 novel, women "know they are dynamite... know in their hearts how dangerous, how incalculable, how extraordinary they are".
Warner herself was anything but dull: a writer, translator, musicologist and political activist who wrote seven novels, extensive poetry and contributed more than 150 short stories to the New Yorker, more than any other female writer. She was also a communist who volunteered for the Red Cross during the Spanish civil war and an LGBTQ+ pioneer, living with the poet Valentine Ackland for decades in a quiet Dorset village, in a partnership they described as a marriage.
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