On the 1st June Aurum Press will be publishing a
must-read book about female literary friendships. Male literary friendships are the stuff of legend; think
Byron and Shelley, Fitzgerald and Hemingway. But the world’s best-loved female
authors are usually portrayed as isolated eccentrics. Emily Midorikawa and Emma
Claire Sweeney seek to dispel this myth with a wealth of hidden yet startling
collaborations.
A Secret Sisterhood looks at Jane Austen’s bond
with a family servant, the amateur playwright Anne Sharpe; how Charlotte Bronte
was inspired by the daring feminist Mary Taylor; the transatlantic relationship between George Eliot and the
author of Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Harriet Beecher Stowe; and the underlying
erotic charge that lit the friendship of Virginia Woolf and Katherine Mansfield
– a pair too often dismissed as bitter foes.
Through letters and diaries
which have never been published before, this fascinating book resurrects these
hitherto forgotten stories of female friendships that were sometimes illicit,
scandalous and volatile; sometimes supportive, radical or inspiring; but
always, until now, tantalisingly consigned to the shadows.
A Secret Sisterhood evolved from the authors’ own friendship. Their blog, SomethingRhymed, charts female literary bonds and has been covered in the media and
promoted by Margaret Atwood, Sheila Hancock and Kate Mosse, showing that the
literary sisterhood is still alive today.
A
Secret Sisterhood
The hidden friendships of Austen, BrontŠµ, Eliot and Woolf
The hidden friendships of Austen, BrontŠµ, Eliot and Woolf
By Emily Midorikawa & Emma Claire Sweeney
Foreword by Margaret Atwood
Pub 1st June 2017 Aurum Press
Emma Claire Sweeney has lectured at City University, New York University in
London, the Open University and the University of Cambridge. Her work has won
Arts Council, Royal Literary Fund and Escalator Awards, and has been
shortlisted for several others, including the Asham, Wasafiri and Fish. She
writes for newspapers and magazines such as the Guardian, the Independent
on Sunday, The Times, and Mslexia. Her debut novel Owl
Song at Dawn was published by Legend Press in July 2016. The novel has been
shortlisted for the BookHugger Book of the Year Award, and Emma has been named
an Amazon Rising Star and a Hive Rising Writer.
Emily Midorikawa lectures at City University and at New York University’s
London campus. She has taught at the University of Cambridge and the Open
University, as well as writing for the Daily Telegraph, the Independent
on Sunday, The Times, Aesthetica and Mslexia. Her
memoir ‘The Memory Album’ appeared in Tangled Roots, an Arts
Council-sponsored collection that celebrates the stories of mixed-race
families. Emily is the winner of the Lucy Cavendish Fiction Prize 2015, and was
longlisted for the Mslexia Novel Competition. She was a runner-up in the SI
Leeds Literary Prize, judged by Margaret Busby, and the Yeovil Literary Prize,
judged by Tracy Chevalier.
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