Christina Foyle

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Christina Foyle
Christina Foyle.jpg
Born(1911-01-30)30 January 1911
London, England
Died8 June 1999(1999-06-08) (aged 88)
NationalityBritish
OccupationFoyles bookshop owner

Christina Agnes Lilian Foyle (30 January 1911 – 8 June 1999) was an English bookseller and owner of Foyles bookshop.

Life[]

Miss Foyle (as she liked to be called) was born in London, England. At age 17, after leaving a Swiss finishing school, she started working at her father's bookshop, and never left. The store, Foyles, on Charing Cross Road in the West End of London, had been started in 1904 by her father, William Foyle. She resisted unionisation of bookshop staff, sacking most employees just before they had worked there six months, when they would gain limited job protection rights. In the late 1930s, she founded the Right Book Club to counter the influence of Victor Gollancz's Left Book Club. It offered a variety of titles with Conservative and classical Liberal themes.[1]

In 1945, control of the shop passed to her. It was under her that the shop stagnated, with little investment and poorly paid staff who could be fired on a whim.[2] She refused to install electronic tills or calculators, and orders would not be taken by phone. The shop would, however, order expensive books from as far off as Germany without prepayment.

The shop operated a payment system that required customers to queue three times: to collect an invoice for a book, to pay the invoice, then to collect the book: because sales staff were not allowed to handle cash.[3] There was a shelving arrangement that categorised books by publisher, rather than by topic or author.[2] A quote of this period is: "Imagine Kafka had gone into the book trade."[4] In the 1980s a rival bookshop placed an advertisement in a bus shelter opposite Foyles: "Foyled again? Try Dillons".[4]

For 70 years Christina Foyle presided over Foyles lunches. Her idea for bringing readers, writers and thinkers together came after she recommended The Forsyte Saga to an elderly customer who was looking for something to read on the train. The gentleman bought a copy. However he returned it to her a short time later with the words "For the young lady who liked my book – John Galsworthy."[5]

Foyle met many leading literary and political figures during her life. Her collection of personal correspondence included a letter from Adolf Hitler, responding to her complaint about Nazi book-burning. Her literary friends included Kingsley Amis, Charles de Gaulle, D. H. Lawrence, Yehudi Menuhin, J. B. Priestley, George Bernard Shaw, Margaret Thatcher, Evelyn Waugh and H. G. Wells.

Foyle was the niece of Charles Henry Foyle, inventor of the "folding carton" and founder of Boxfoldia.

The Foyle Foundation[]

The Foyle Foundation was founded in 2001 under the terms of Christina Foyle's will. It makes grants to other UK charities, mainly in the fields of the arts and learning (until 2009, also health). The 2010 accounts showed funds of over £76 million.[6] Among other grants it made a large donation to the appeal to purchase the oldest intact European book, the St Cuthbert Gospel, for the British Library in 2011/12.[7] To the year ending June 2010 £41.4m worth of grants had been offered by the Foyle Foundation.[8]

In popular culture[]

Screenwriter Anthony Horowitz has said that Miss Foyle was the namesake for the title character, Christopher Foyle, in the ITV series Foyle's War.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Right Book Club - Book Series List, publishinghistory.com. Retrieved 10 November 2019.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b John Walsh, "Foyles, the bookshop that time forgot", The Independent, 23 January 2003.
  3. ^ Michael Handelzalts, "Foyled and found again", Haaretz, 30 May 2003.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Warren Hoge (11 June 1999). "Christina Foyle, 88, the Queen of the London Bookstore, Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved 21 May 2012.
  5. ^ Pearson, Richard (13 June 1999). "Christina Foyle, Owner of London Bookshop, Dies at Age 88". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  6. ^ "About us", Foyle Foundation website. Retrieved 17 April 2012; accounts are a linked PDF
  7. ^ "British Library acquires the St Cuthbert Gospel – the earliest intact European book", BL Press release. Retrieved 17 April 2011
  8. ^ "School Playground Funding Guide".

External links[]

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