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Saturday, April 30, 2022

Rooms of their Own by Alex Johnson

 Rooms of Their Own: Where Great Writers Write (Hardback)


This is a really lovely book that tells us all about the preferred writing rituals of fifty well-known authors. It is the sort of book you can leave on your coffee table and pick up when you have five minutes, and become absorbed in the writing life of your favourite author. It has a nice balance of modern and traditional writers and is punctuated with fun, full-colour illustrations that bring a sense of light playfulness to the book.

This book would make a perfect gift for both writers and readers and it introduced me to several authors that I had not heard of before. It is full of interesting facts about each writer but more importantly, it made these great writers into real human beings - the portrait in Roald Dahl’s shed of his daughter who died aged seven; Colette’s habit of procrastinating and how she attempted to overcome it by being locked in a room for four hours to make her write; Emily Dickinson’s need for solitude; and I loved Margaret Mitchell’s envelopes! Many of the writers made efforts to create their own spaces in which to write. As a writer myself I felt a kinship with these authors as I realised that they struggled too, but they pushed through these struggles by ensuring they had the best conditions for them to write in. It has inspired me to take a good look at my own writing space!

I really recommend this book if you like to have a peek into the lives of other writers. There is much to be learned here. With thanks to Netgalley and Quarto-White Lion for providing an advance review copy. All opinions are my own.

Verdict: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐


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