ANNA FUNDER is the author of Stasiland and All That I Am, and the novella The Girl with the Dogs. Stasiland, hailed as a ‘classic’, tells true stories of ordinary people who heroically resisted the communist dictatorship of East Germany, and of others who worked for the Stasi. In 2004 Stasiland won the UK’s premier award for non-fiction, the Samuel Johnson Prize, and was a finalist for many other awards. Anna’s novel All That I Am is an homage to four German anti-Hitler activists living bravely but precariously in exile in London in the 1930s. All That I Am won many literary awards including Australia’s most prestigious, the Miles Franklin Prize, and was a finalist for the International IMPAC Dublin Award and the Commonwealth Writers Prize. It spent over a year on the bestseller lists, was BBC Book of the Week and Book at Bedtime, and The Times Book of the Month. Both books are international best sellers, published in over twenty-four countries. Originally trained as an international human rights lawyer, Anna is a former DAAD Fellow in Berlin, Australia Council Fellow, and Rockefeller Foundation Fellow. She has lived in Paris, Berlin, and Brooklyn, and now lives in Sydney, Australia.
"Simply, a masterpiece. Here, Anna Funder not only re-makes the art
of biography, she resurrects a woman in full. And this in a
narrative that grips the reader and unfolds through some of the
most consequential moments--historical and cultural--of the
twentieth century." —Geraldine Brooks, winner of the Pulitzer
Prize, author of Horse
"A marvelous book . . . I just loved it all, and have a permanently
marked-up, dog-eared copy on my shelf for the next generation."
—Tom Hanks
"Funder is a boundary-breaking, risk-taking writer whose previous
books synthesized memoir, fact and imagination to impressive
effect. . . . At her best, Ms. Funder shows that radical
compassion—which is not the same as forgiveness—will move one
closer to understanding, in marriage and biography, every time."
—Donna Rifkind, The Wall Street Journal
"With the precision of a historian, Funder cobbles together scant
details to reconstruct a life. And with the imaginative force of a
novelist, she speculates in clearly sign-posted moments on what
that life was like. . . .For the first time, in this book, Eileen
is given a voice — her voice. .
. Wifedom is spectacular achievement of both
scholarship and pure feeling." —Jessica Ferri, Los Angeles
Times
"A brilliant, creative hybrid of life writing, feminist polemic and
literary criticism, which upends the way we read. . . . A dashing
addition to a genre of books that bring out of obscurity the women
(and occasional man) behind famous writers and artists."
—Susan Wyndham, The Guardian (Australia)
"Radical. . . . Funder does a virtuoso performance on the theme,
adding personal memoir, some fictional reconstructions and a
glittering sense of purpose. . . . [She] squeezes every drop from
the sources, to make Eileen real. . . . Funder stresses that she
has no wish to “cancel” Orwell, a writer she finds inspiring. Her
aim is rather to rescue Eileen and other women from having been
canceled themselves.” –Sarah Bakewell, The New York Times
Book Review
"[Wifedom] dwells imaginatively upon six letters. . . written by
Orwell’s first wife, Eileen O’Shaughnessy, and seeks to liberate
her from his shadow — a task that also involves reassessing
him . . . . Wifedom is radical in its outlook and
distinguished by a creative writer’s imaginative insights. It is
composed in elegant, mournful prose that occasionally froths into
indignation at the lot of this “invisible worker” and “invisible
warrior”. . . . It is a spellbinding achievement." —Jason Harding,
Financial Times
"Electrifying. . . . a genre-melding hybrid that allows Eileen’s
likeness to be partially recovered through her own words and the
testimonies of those who remembered her, as well as reimagined in
fictional passages to flesh out the gaps in the record. . .
. Wifedom is a vital portrait of a woman whose unseen
work was instrumental in the creation of books that became
cornerstones of 20th century literature, the extent of her
contribution impossible to measure, obscured as it is by the role
of 'wife'." —Stephanie Merritt, Observer (UK)
"Now Anna Funder’s fascinating, furious, inventive biography of
Eileen takes us more immersively into the Orwell’s world. And
Funder is a formidable writer for the job. . . .
In Wifedom she blends fiction, biography and
autobiography to bring Eileen vividly alive on the
page." —Alice O'Keeffe, The Times (UK)
"Elegantly and imaginatively (resurrects) Eileen." —The
Economist
"Audaciously brilliant." —Jessie Thompson, Independent (UK)
"In this rattlingly fierce book, Anna Funder sets out to unmask the
“wicked magic trick” by which Eileen O’Shaughnessy Blair has been
made to disappear…readers will be simply thrilled – and shaken – by
this passionately partisan act of literary reparation." —Sunday
Times (UK)
"An extraordinary blend of forensic historical detective work and
evocative fiction, as well as snatches of memoir. It not only
writes O’Shaughnessy back into the story but also questions how far
we’ve really come in terms of gender equality. To read about
O’Shaughnessy is to fall in love with her." —Radio Times (UK)
"Anna Funder is a premier-league writer who can roll fiction,
reportage, criticism and memoir into glinting prose, her sentences
like handheld treasures you keep turning over, admiring for their
graceful contours and crafted precision." —Marina Benjamin, The
Spectator
★"Eileen O’Shaughnessy, George Orwell’s first wife, takes center
stage in this potent biography. . . . Stylistic flourishes enhance
the account, most notably the novelistic interludes interspersing
Funder’s narration with first-person passages drawn from
O’Shaughnessy’s letters that recreate scenes from her life. . . .
Full of keen psychological insight and eloquent prose, this
shines." —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
★ "By dint of extensive research and literary daring, Funder
retrieves Eileen from the shadows in a provocative mix of facts and
“a fiction that tries not to lie,” using her remarkable subject's
vivid letters as prompts for imagined scenes that fill the
maddening gaps in Orwell’s autobiographical accounts and those of
his biographers. Eileen emerges as a brilliant, funny, resourceful,
stoic, hard-working Oxford graduate. . . . Laced with personal
reflections and charged with a searing critique of the patriarchy
and its smothering of women's lives and legacies, Funder's gripping
and insightful portrait of the hidden Eileen Orwell is
incandescent." —Donna Seaman, Booklist (starred review)
★ "An electrifying biography of George Orwell’s first wife. .
. . [Wifedom] is not a traditional biography but rather a
pastiche of Eileen’s letters to her friend Norah Symes, Funder’s
invented scenes of the Orwells’ lives, and a first-person account
of Funder’s own life as the mother of teenage daughters as the
“revelations of #MeToo erupt,” a time of “unspeakable truths.”
Eileen is a worthy subject in her own right, but the author ably
depicts the balance of power between the Orwells, particularly the
way George wrote Eileen out of the narrative. . . . Funder creates
a convincing, vivid portrait of Eileen as an irreplaceable font of
unpaid labor for George. . . . Daring in both form and content,
Funder’s book is a nuanced, sophisticated literary achievement. . .
. A sharp, captivating look at a complicated relationship and
a resurrection of a vital figure in Orwell’s life." —Kirkus Reviews
(starred review)
"A truly wonderful biography. . . Anna Funder has written another
brilliant human portrait." —Claire Tomalin
"Wonderful, unexpected and exciting from beginning to end."
—Antonia Fraser, author of Marie Antoinette: The Journey
"A strikingly original study that casts Orwell in new light. Deeply
perceptive, it is a testament to forgotten wives of famous men
everywhere." —Julia Boyd, author of A Village in the Third
Reich
"Wifedom is both an immovable and an irresistible book, an object
and a force . . . another great and important narrative of
oppression and covert suppression." —Michael Hofmann,
Australian Book Review
"George Orwell’s first wife emerges vividly from Anna Funder’s new
book . . . welcome and necessary, returning life to a woman who was
gifted, vivid, complex and highly intelligent, who gave up her own
ambitions in the furtherance of her husband’s."
—Geordie Williamson, Weekend Australian
"Funder is the perfect writer to integrate Orwell’s legacy. She,
too, has devoted her writing life to the subject of surviving
tyranny." —The Conversation (Australia)
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