One moment can change your path forever. Katie Jarvis spoke to Clover Stroud - who will be appearing at the Bath Festival: May 19-28 - about her life-changing experience.
As a child, Clover Stroud lived an idyll, growing up in a big, old house in Minety, where she’d ride her ponies in the paddock and play with the kittens she and her sister, Nell, were given on her seventh birthday. “It was a bit like being children in storybooks, the old-fashioned ones that mum read aloud to us…”
That was the first part of her life. The 6,067 days, 866-and-a-half weeks, 145,608 hours, 8,736,480 minutes, 524,188,800 seconds she lived before horror ripped her life apart: “a jagged dark scar that separates the time immediately before the accident from the time after”.
On November 25, 1991, when Clover was 16, her mum went out for her usual ride - and never came back. Or, at least, the mum who left never returned. Falling from her horse on a disused airfield, Charlotte Stroud landed on her head, causing catastrophic brain injuries. From then until her death, in 2013, unable to communicate, she needed round-the-clock care: “alive and dead at the same time”.
The agony – the unendurable agony that had to be endured – of the ensuing years defined Clover’s life for ever, as she describes in her book, The Wild Other.
Clover, this must have been an almost-impossible book to write – not just because of your profound grief; but the life that grief propelled you into: sex, drugs, divorce, postnatal depression. You’ve finally found happiness and stability – but going public must have been difficult?
Denne historien er fra May 2017-utgaven av Cotswold Life.
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Denne historien er fra May 2017-utgaven av Cotswold Life.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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Gloucestershire After The War
Discovering the county’s Arts and Crafts memorials of the First World War
THE WILD SIDE OF Moreton-in-Marsh
The days are getting shorter but there’s plenty of reasons to be cheerful, says Sue Bradley, who discovers how a Cotswolds town is becoming more wildlife-friendly and pots up some bulbs for an insect-friendly spring display
Mr Ashbee would approve
In the true spirit of the Arts & Crafts Movement, creativity has kept the Chipping Campden community ticking over during lockdown
The Cotswolds at war
These might be peaceful hills and vales, but our contribution to the war effort was considerable
Trust in good, local food
‘I’ve been following The Country Food Trust’s activities with admiration since it was founded’
Why Cath is an open book
Cath Kidston has opened up almost every nook and cranny of her Cotswold idyll in a new book, A Place Called Home. Katie Jarvis spoke to Cath ahead of her appearance at this year’s Stroud Book Festival STROUD BOOK FESTIVAL – THIS YEAR FREE AND ONLINE: NOVEMBER 4-8
From the Cotswolds to the world
Most people know that the Cotswolds have featured in a fair few Hollywood movies and TV series.
The Wild Hunt
In search of the legendary King Herla in the Malvern Hills
Fighting spirit amid the flowers
Tracy Spiers visits Warwick, a beautiful town that is open for business and ready to welcome visitors
Final journey
Cheltenham author and volunteer on the Gloucestershire Warwickshire Steam Railway (GWSR), Nicolas Wheatley, recounts the fascinating story of funeral trains