
Rural Hours
the country lives of virginia woolf, sylvia townsend warner and rosamond lehmann
$25.51
- Paperback
384 pages
- Release Date
23 June 2025
Summary
A Room of Their Own: Women, Writing, and the Call of the Country
A joyful, rule-breaking experiment in biography, which celebrates ‘country life’ as a state of mind.
- 1917: Virginia Woolf arrives at Asheham, on the Sussex Downs, immobilized by nervous exhaustion and creative block.
- 1930: Feeling jittery about her writing career, Sylvia Townsend Warner spots a modest workman’s cottage for sale on the Dorset coast.
Book Details
ISBN-13: | 9780141998596 |
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ISBN-10: | 0141998598 |
Author: | Harriet Baker |
Publisher: | Penguin Books Ltd |
Imprint: | Penguin Books Ltd |
Format: | Paperback |
Number of Pages: | 384 |
Release Date: | 23 June 2025 |
Weight: | 284g |
Dimensions: | 197mm x 128mm x 21mm |
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What They're Saying
Critics Review
An outstanding piece of literary scholarship … A biography that is far more intimate than most … By choosing to embrace the daily routines of rural life, Baker proposes, these women found that the quality of their attention shifted … Rural Hours is also a provocation to the present. No one could finish this book without concluding that the most important thing to any writer is solitude … [It] reminds us that today we too often fail to afford our writers this necessity – Charlotte Stroud * Financial Times *Rural Hours is beautifully written, and Baker’s reading is wide and deep * Observer *Rural Hours is a page turner - lively, inspiring and beautifully crafted. It’s a reminder of the value of rural living and quiet observation for the imagination. Most literary biographers struggle to get the right balance between life writing and critique, but Baker has achieved it seamlessly with this astonishingly confident debut. She has made literary criticism exciting again. – Johanna Thomas-Corr * The Sunday Times *A delightful read, enhanced by quirky photographs – including several of these visionary writers with their goats * Independent *Rural Hours is Harriet Baker’s first book and it is immensely readable. It bristles with evocative detail and she invests each chapter with the narrative drive of a short story. […] Baker is extremely good at finding significance in the ordinary and has a feel for the thinginess of domestic existence, for what teacups or the grocer’s bill can reveal. She sifts quiet periods of homemaking for meaning and honours the bulb-planting, sheet-folding, list-making and resourceful cooking that contributed to the texture of the subjects’ days and fed back into their writing. * Literary Review *Baker is an elegant and eloquent storyteller – and authoritative even while she’s in thrall, rightly, to the three women who make this book so often fascinating. * Spectator *An absorbing study of the impact of country living on Woolf, Townsend Warner & Lehmann. A meditative exploration of renewal, visionariness—interior & exterior, generative & tormenting—grievous loss, & love—cool & passionate, fragile & enduring – David HaydenA superb portrait of the complex imprint the countryside makes on the life of the mind, this exquisite book reveals three writers, each vividly drawn in the particularities of her own surroundings, her own difficulties and joys. This book is a thoughtful exploration of rural life and creativity, drawing on deep archival roots and Harriet Baker’s unique warmth and eloquence. A treasure – Doireann Ní Ghríofa, author of A Ghost in the ThroatBaker conjures the sights and sounds of mid-20th-century rural England with vivid lyricism * The Sunday Times *In this warm, perceptive, eloquent study, Harriet Baker collects some overlooked moments in these women’s lives, and with great honesty and empathy, captures what it felt like to live and write through them. Like Baker’s protagonists in their countryside boltholes I felt “socketed” by this book. I know I’ll return to it again and again – Lauren Elkin, author of Flâneuse and Art Monsters
About The Author
Harriet Baker
Harriet Baker has written for the London Review of Books, the Paris Review, the New Statesman, the TLS, Apollo and frieze. She read English at Oxford and holds a PhD from Queen Mary, University of London. In 2018, she was awarded the Biographers’ Club Tony Lothian Prize. She lives in Bristol.
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