Why did I love this book?
I love this book because it’s a cracking good story, full of intriguing characters, beautifully written with passion and imagination, all illuminated by a convincing political analysis.
Anna Funder, in choosing to write a biography of the fascinating Eileen O’Shaughnessy (Orwell’s wife) was faced with the fact that her subject had left only nine letters. More significantly, major biographies of Orwell had hardly mentioned his wife at all. In the end, Funder has written the history of a person who had been systematically written out of history.
Her text is a mix of straightforward narrative based on both primary and secondary sources, Eileen’s six surviving letters (set in italics), sections of perfectly plausible but imagined context (clearly set off and indented), her feminist analysis, and revelations of her own experience as “a writer and a wife” which show the merging of the personal and the political.
5 authors picked Wifedom as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
At the end of summer 2017, Anna Funder found herself at a moment of peak overload. Family obligations and household responsibilities were crushing her soul and taking her away from her writing deadlines. She needed help, and George Orwell came to her rescue.
"I've always loved Orwell," Funder writes, "his self-deprecating humour, his laser vision about how power works, and who it works on." So after rereading and savoring books Orwell had written, she devoured six major biographies tracing his life and work. But then she read about his forgotten wife, and it was a revelation.
Eileen O'Shaughnessy married Orwell…