![]() The other thing at play was that I was deep into my dissertation research, so this was light relief, or perhaps just an elaborate form of procrastination.Īs historians, we're keen on process questions (which also appear, delightfully, in your introduction). And that absence sparked my curiosity all over again. ![]() But not only was there no biography, there wasn’t even a Wikipedia page, so I had very little to go on. An old friend gave me a copy of Marjorie Hillis’s first book, Live Alone and Like It, several years ago - it was just after my father had died suddenly, so partly for that reason, and partly for the book’s own sake, I responded really powerfully to it, and wanted to find out whatever I could about the author. The answer to that is really one of those writerly clichés - I wrote the book I wanted to read. The first and most obvious question we ask is always "how did you come to write this book?" You discuss this in the text, of course, so feel free to recap, re-hash, or re-word however you like! (Joanna recently moderated a panel at the New-York Historical Society with Lauren Elkin about her book on the history of female walkers in the city our Tuesday interview.) ![]() Today on Gotham, editor Nick Juravich sits down with Joanna Scutts to discuss her new book, The Extra Woman: How Marjorie Hillis Led a Generation of Women to Live Alone and Like it. ![]()
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