A Life of One’s Own

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What to expect

I took off my wedding ring - a gold band with half a line of 'Morning Song' by Sylvia Plath etched inside - and for weeks afterwards, my thumb would involuntarily reach across my palm for the warm bright circle that had gone. I didn't throw the ring into the long grass, like women do in the movies, but a feeling began bubbling up nevertheless, from my stomach to my throat: it could fling my arms out. I was free.

A few years into her marriage and feeling societal pressure to surrender to domesticity, Joanna Biggs found herself longing for a different kind of existence. Was this all there was? She divorced without knowing what would come next.

Newly untethered, Joanna returned to the free-spirited writers of her youth and was soon reading in a fever - desperately searching for evidence of lives that looked more like her own, for the messiness and freedom, for a possible blueprint for intellectual fulfillment.

In A Life of One's Own, Mary Wollstonecraft, George Eliot, Zora Neale Hurston, Virginia Woolf, Simone de Beauvoir, Sylvia Plath, Toni Morrison, and Elena Ferrante are all taken down from their pedestals, their work and lives seen in a new light. Joanna wanted to learn more about the conditions these women needed to write their best work, and how they addressed the questions she herself was struggling with: Is domesticity a trap? Is life worth living if you have lost faith in the traditional goals of a woman? Why is it so important for women to read one another?

This is a radical and intimate examination of the unconventional paths these women took - their pursuits and achievements but also their disappointments and hardships. And in exploring the things that gave their lives the most meaning, we find fuel for our own singular intellectual paths.

Critics Review

  • A beautiful, deeply philosophical book about reading as a form of existential consolation . . . wonderfully inconclusive, moving and original . . . a brilliant exploration of uncertainty and a compelling anti-guide to art and life

    LITERARY REVIEW
  • A meditation, by turns glorious and aching, on what it means to be a woman and to try to be free

    AMIA SRINIVASAN, author of THE RIGHT TO SEX
  • Acute and tender . . . alive with discovery and desire

    OBSERVER
  • Joanna Biggs is an unmissable writer. She gives new scope and fresh meaning to the idea of literary empathy

    ANDREW O'HAGAN, author of MAYFLIES
  • [Biggs] explores how exceptional writers of the past might guide today’s women in charting a path after life-altering events. The result is a moving biblio-memoir that’s a gift to readers of all ages. Engaging . . . poignant . . . uplifting

    WASHINGTON POST
  • I adored this book. I started turning down pages to note favourite parts, then found myself turning down almost every other page. It’s such a generous, enlivening work, destined to be passed from friend to friend for a long time to come

    MEGAN HUNTER, author of THE END WE START FROM

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