Cover Image: Rooms of Their Own

Rooms of Their Own

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Member Reviews

A really interesting book, I loved the premise and thought it was good. I'd have loved a hardcopy over phone version and think this would make a great gift!

Thanks for the arc.

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Have you ever wondered what your favorite writers writing space looks like? When I was younger, I went to Ernest Hemingway’s Key West home and in the back of the house is a separate space where he would write over looking the Atlantic Ocean towards Cuba. It made me wonder where other authors placed their pad of paper, their pencil, their typewriter or their computer and created away.
Rooms of Their own by Alex Johnson is that book for 50+ authors and where they choose to write, their favorite supplies and their writing schedule habits. Each page covers one author and an illustration of that author’s space and supplies and possible food items.
The colorful watercolored illustrations by James Oses were perhaps my favorite parts of this book. The squished shared space of the Brontë sisters… some facts weren’t really needed like Dicken’s anal problems, however most of it was informative and delightful.

Rooms of Their Own by Alex Johnson makes for a quirky gift for a reading or writing friend. Also a good thing to have sitting in your formal living room for guests to flip through and entertain themselves.

Thanks, for the advanced reader’s copy!

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Rooms of Their Own
Alex Johnson

This fantastic book is must for anyone interested in the art of writing and writers and this would be a great gift for readers too. I know that it is only June but this is the ideal Christmas present.

Firstly, lets talk about the fantastic illustrations, bringing to life the writing routines of famous writers. These colourful images bring together this book and I would love to have one of these on my wall one day.

This book gives deep insight into habits and rituals of writers including the Brontees, Agatha Christie (the best time to plan a book is while you're doing the dishes), Hilary Mantel, Haruki Murakami and Zadie Smith. There is a big variety of authors with different approaches to writing.

This is an inspiring book. I had a digital copy of this book from Netgalley but will be definitely be buying a physical copy.

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A wonderful collection of varying writer's rooms throughout time, with expressive artwork that really brings the reader deeper into each place.

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I did love the content of this, and the peek into other writers lives and habits. And the illustrations were charming … and yet I really wanted to see photos of the real places instead!

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A book about where authors wrote their own works and books? With watercolor illustrations? Sign me up! This book was really fun. It has brief 1-2 page descriptions of where all our beloved best selling authors wrote their masterpieces, what they used to write them, and quirky little facts about their habits. Some have beautiful watercolor illustrations to accompany them and all of them are super interesting. This is a book I would love to keep on my coffee table, or display on a shelf because it's gorgeous and a great quick grab.

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If you have ever wondered where and when Steven King puts down all of his crazy thoughts for his great novels, then this is the book for you. I found it very interesting reading about some of the greatest authors and where they have written their books, along with their preferences of time and whether they need background noise or absolute silence, etc.

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I looked forward to indulging in the writing lives of so many featured authors. From preferred stances (lying down, standing up, sitting in an uncomfortable chair) to locations (she-sheds, boathouses, villas ad nondescript hotel rooms) Rooms of Their Own nourishes readers with many trivia facts, tidbits, and quotes from favorite authors.

**I received a digital copy of this book from the publisher, through Netgalley, in exchange for an honest review

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ROOMS OF THEIR OWN: Where Great Writers Write - by Alex Johnson, illustrations by James Oses

I adored this book.
A charming, interesting, uplifting and enjoyable book discussing the rooms in which famous writers wrote.

The mini chapters are absolute delights to read. We enter the rooms of the Bronte Sisters, Hemingway, Doyle, Dickens, Agatha Christie, Chandler. The book uncovers the unique spaces, habits, hobbies and work rituals the writers had throughout their careers.

The text is fun, punchy, yet descriptive and informative. Beautiful illustrations are found amongst the pages to bring the descriptions even more to life. I was immediately inspired, interested, entertained and ready to pick up a notebook myself.

There’s something for every reader and every writer. A book you can pick up for a moment or engulf in one sitting.
Rooms of Their Own is for lovers of reading and writing and lovers of reading about writing .

Thank you to Netgallery and Quarto-White Lion Publishing for the digital copy.

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This is an enjoyable read about where authors like to write, their habits and methods. There’s a wide range of writers covered from classic to contemporary with lots of trivia. It has pretty illustrations throughout but I think I’d’ve preferred photos where available. But it’d be a lovely gift for any well read person who wants a light read about some of their favourite authors (although I really didn’t need to know about Dickens’s anal fistula!)

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Rooms of Their Own
Where Great Writers Write
by Alex Johnson
Pub Date 19 Apr 2022
Quarto Publishing Group – White Lion, Frances Lincoln
Biographies & Memoirs



I am reviewing a copy of Rooms of Their Own through Quarto Publishing Group, White Lion and Netgalley:



How do you write? What is it you require from your room or desk? Do you have a favorite pen, typewriter? Did they find a routine, that fit their creativity perfectLy? These are the questions that were asked about writers, crossing centuries, genres and continents.


In Rooms of their own you will not only discover the unique spaces, habits and rituals in which famous writers created their most notable works, but you’ll also discover how each great writer penned their famous texts, and the routines and habits they perfected.


Meet authors who rely on silence and seclusion and those who need people, music and whisky. Meet novelists who travel half-way across the world to a luxury writing retreat, and others who just need an empty shed at the bottom of the garden. Some are particular about pencils, inks, paper and typewriters, and some will scribble on anything – including the furniture. But whether they write in the library or in cars, under trees, private islands, hotel rooms or towers – each of these stories confirms that there is no 'best way' to write.


In this book you’ll discover James Baldwin, writing in the small hours of the morning in his Paris apartment, to DH Lawrence writing at the foot of a towering Ponderosa pine tree, to the Brontë sisters managing in a crowded co-working space, this book takes us into the lives of some of history's greatest ever writers, with each writing space illustrated in evocative watercolour by James Oses.


If you’re looking for a quick peek into the ways which writers like Maya Angelou, and Ray Bradbury I highly recommend Rooms of Their Own.

Five out of five stars!


Happy Reading!

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How a certain place could be completely yours in its essence and it could be beautiful because that could be a place to call home. This book talks about the places writers used to creat and their connection with them. Very poignant, interesting and soothing. I loved reading every pages of it.

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Cute idea about the spaces that famous writers have used to write some of their famous works. A bit text heavy and can't say that I loved the drawings. Some of the pages were also upside down.

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Rooms of Their Own by Alex Johnson looks at where and how various famous writers wrote, from writing in huts, cars, libraries or their bedroom masterpieces were created.

I will admit, I mainly read the stories to those authors I knew those included are Jane Austen, Maya Angelou, Agatha Christie, Charles Dickens, Emily Dickinson, Thomas Hardy, Judith Kerr Haruki Murakami, Sylvia Plath, Beatrix Potter and J.K. Rowling. Out of the 50 author, poets and novelists included in the book I read 35.

I loved connecting with each author spending time in their space, learning interesting facts and how they made their choices.
It also includes information on typewriters, word count, ink and more.

From Colette being locked in her "prison" room with her husband telling her she couldn't leave until she produced results - to - D.H. Lawrence writing under trees being at one with nature.

"All the world's a desk." - Hilary Mantel

"Don't write for money. Write because you love to do something. If you write for money, you won't write anything worth reading." - Ray Bradbury

This book is a perfect gift for bibliophiles.

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This is a really lovely book that tells us all about the preferred writing rituals of fifty well-known authors. It is the sort of book you can leave on your coffee table and pick up when you have five minutes, and become absorbed in the writing life of your favourite author. It has a nice balance of modern and traditional writers and is punctuated with fun, full-colour illustrations that bring a sense of light playfulness to the book.

This book would make a perfect gift for both writers and readers and it introduced me to several authors that I had not heard of before. It is full of interesting facts about each writer but more importantly, it made these great writers into real human beings - the portrait in Roald Dahl’s shed of his daughter who died aged seven; Colette’s habit of procrastinating and how she attempted to overcome it by being locked in a room for four hours to make her write; Emily Dickinson’s need for solitude; and I loved Margaret Mitchell’s envelopes! Many of the writers made efforts to create their own spaces in which to write. As a writer myself I felt a kinship with these authors as I realised that they struggled too, but they pushed through these struggles by ensuring they had the best conditions for them to write in. It has inspired me to take a good look at my own writing space!

I really recommend this book if you like to have a peek into the lives of other writers. There is much to be learned here. With thanks to Netgalley and Quarto-White Lion for providing an advance review copy. All opinions are my own.

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Rooms of Their Own by Alex Johnson looks at where and how various famous writers wrote their masterpieces.

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A lovely read getting a peek into the rooms of these wonderful authors from Virginia Woolf to Emily Dickinson and more.The illustrations were beautifully done really enhanced each description of the authors personal rooms.A book I will be purchasing for myself and give as gifts .#netgalley #quartobooks

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What a great book! It’s interesting and inspiring. I loved the whimsical and vibrant drawings in place of photographs. Some authors I was already familiar with, some I only met in these pages. This would make a great gift for any writer.

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This is such a fun read! Writers and readers will enjoy this book. I didn't expect the book to be this entertaining. I expected a serious read about writers but with the illustrations and the possible assumptions on each of these famous writers made a very enjoyable read.

Love the illustrations. Please don't take everything so seriously when you happen to read this book. If you are a writer, you will understand better what I mean to say here. But also, you will get to learn a lot more about the writers mentioned.

And I loved Virginia Woolf's A Room of One's Own a lot.

It's fun to read this compilation!

Thank you, Quarto Publishing Group White Lion, for the advance reading copy.

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Clearly the title of this book plays homage to Virginia Woolf in the nicest possible way. Alex Johnson in this delightfully illustrated book shares stories about where writers like to go when they want to write. There are fifty writers included in this volume which can be dipped into according to one’s fancy. I looked first to some of my favorite authors and then moved on to others who were equally interesting.

Just a few of those included are Jane Austen, James Baldwin, Agatha Christie, Charles Dickens, Emily Dickinson, Thomas Hardy Astrid Lindgren, Haruki Murakami, Sylvia Plath, Beatrix Potter and J.K. Rowling. Each author’s entry includes interesting facts and a most evocative illustration or two.

I adored spending time in these writers’ spaces and learning about how they made their choices. For example, Emily Dickinson embraced the “solitude” of her bedroom. She “pretended to lock the door” and noted that freedom was within. Conan Doyle had a very special writing set up made by a well known luggage manufacturer while Maya Angelou wrote in a hotel room.

This is a book that is perfect for bibliophiles. It would make a lovely gift.

Many thanks to NetGalley and Quarto publishing for this title. All opinions are my own.

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