Brigid Keenan was never destined to lead a normal life From her early beginnings
- a colourful childhood in India brought to an abrupt end by independence & partition then a return to dreary post-war England & on to a finishing school in Paris with daughters of presidents & princes
- ordinary didn&t seem to be her fate When as a ten-year-old she overheard her mother describe her as &desperately plain& she decided then & there that she had to rely on something different glamour eccentricity character a career
- anything so as not to end up at the bottom of the pile & in classic Brigid style she somehow ended up with them all Fate often gave Brigid a helping hand
- in the late fifties in her teens she landed a job as an assistant at the Daily Express in London & by the tender age of twenty-one she was a Fashion Editor at the Sunday Times It was the dawn of the swinging sixties & London was the place to be Brigid worked with David Bailey & Jean Shrimpton had her hair cut by Vidal Sassoon drove around London in a mini-van covered the Paris Collections & was labelled a & Young Meteor& by the press Despite always trying her hardest Brigid&s enthusiasm
- & occasional naivete
- could lead to embarrassing moments such as when she turned up to report on the Vietnam war in a mini skirt Candid wickedly funny & surprisingly touching Full Marks for Trying is a coming-of-age memoir that will delight entertain & make you cry with laughter