Yoi is an important book, for it is the first published biography about Edith Cornelia Crosse, who was a most remarkable woman.
Widely known as Yoi, Edith was born in Hungary to a British father and a Hungarian/Polish mother.
Eventually Yoi moved to England where she lived with her grandmother.
She settled down to life as a married woman and a mother. But her life was to be changed dramatically when a major scandal blew up and changed her life for ever, when she ran away with a young lover.
Yoi had a love of travel and she roamed far and wide, visiting Tehran and Italy, where she lived with her second husband, a sculptor of some repute called Antonio Maraini.
Yoi began to find success as a writer, publishing several books of her travels, books which met with some success.
She also published a variety of articles in newspapers and magazines in Britain, including an interview with Mussolini.
Yoi was an interesting woman, cultured and refined yet not averse to stirring things up a little, if she felt so inclined.
The book is well researched and profusely illustrated and does bring to life Yoi.
The book is published by Matador at £17.99.
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