Skip to main content

Member Reviews

As a passionate reader, like others, I have curiosity about the places where authors create their works. Both the cover and title of this book made me want to read it. I am glad that I did.

Following the introduction, this title is broken down into five chapters that reflect the different spaces of writers. For example, chapter one is titled “The Preserved Writer’s Room” while chapter four is called “Temporary Spaces.”

Don’t skip the introduction as it gives the reader a chance to know the author. She has a lot of interesting things to say.

Having read Mrs. Dalloway three times, I was delighted to see that the first place that Da Cunha Lewin visited was Monk’s House where Virginia Woolf wrote. I enjoyed going on from there.

This book has both text and photos to pique the reader’s interest. I think that it can be read in any order. Wherever one dips in, the mix of the author’s thoughts and the descriptions make for good reading.

Anyone who is a reader that is curious about authors and their spaces will want to give this one a look.

Many thanks to NetGalley and Elliott & Thompson for this title. All thoughts are my own.

Was this review helpful?

Katie de Cunha Lewin's The Writer's Room is a series of interconnected essays musing on the art of writing that debates whether the place of creation or the discipline and opportunity are more important to the craft.

Each chapter explores a different type of space and blends travel writing, memoir and historical research to explore the different facets of the art of writing and balancing of the needs of daily life. As Lewin is located in the United Kingdom, this is where most of the focus lies, but there are inclusions of some notable American writers living both in the United States and abroad. Frequent reference and discussion of Virginia Woolf and her book A Room of One's Own is a frequent through line.

Much thought and great ideas for expanded the conversation of the creation of art and the human desire to 'see' a space where something notable or beloved was created or the performative nature of writing versus the actual drive, discipline and economic conditions needed.

Recommended reading to those interested in writing, literature or discussions of process.

Was this review helpful?

Talk about an enchanting topic for a book! When poring over books, I often wonder where and how an author writes. Katie da Cunha Lewin delves into this with vim and vigour and gives many examples gleaned from her research and explorations. What's not to love about insight into an author's writing habitat? Many write at specific desks in their homes or at libraries, some on transport, others in cafes or the outdoors. I can envision the Brontë sisters at their dining table, Charlotte Perkins Gilman who was relegated to the nursery and Agatha Christie wherever there was a steady table and typewriter. Not only is the where described, but also delectable tidbits such as Jane Austen's little writing desk, John Keats' life mask, Virginia Woolf's desk behind glass, and Emily Dickinson's writings on edges of letters and recipes. The "typewriter century" was a turning point, too, as is the current digital age. Additionally, the author details her writing space along with the objects she surrounds herself with.

People like myself who adore reading books about books and writing will find plenty to enjoy here. The stories really make the authors' lives pop. Those which intrigued me most were the authors of the Classics up to and including Agatha Christie but there are also modern representations. I'd love to read more about personal effects of such writers!

Was this review helpful?

I enjoyed this thoughtful, insightful, somewhat philosophical book. As a writer, but also avid reader, I love to to read books about authors and the lives of other writers and their creative process.

Was this review helpful?

During the pandemic I embarked on a series of on line courses to learn how to become an author in readiness for retirement in the summer of 2024. I learnt a lot about the skills of being a writer of the many genres of writing. Although I am still to finish all the courses I have studied enough to realise what is required to be an effective writer. My love of reading has been enhanced by this experience and my appreciation of the talents of writers continues to grow. This book is a well researched piece of work exploring many aspects of the mechanics of writing of a variety of authors. A quick read that I derived a lot of enjoyment from. Thanks to the publisher and NetGalley for the chance to ARC this book.

Was this review helpful?

An essay superfluously stretched out to a whole book. By the time I got to chapter four, I was getting the same ideas and analysis over and over again, just with a minutely different angle.

Was this review helpful?

I found it difficult to connect with this despite being an occasional writer myself I found it rather a laborious read. I did enjoy reading about famous author’s writing dens, especially that of Virginia Wolf. Some of the author tips and tricks were helpful too but on the whole it did not grab my attention.

Thank you Net Galley for the arc.

Was this review helpful?

Unfortunately this book was not for me. There was some interesting information about famous writers and the places they wrote, but there was a little too much about the author’s own preferences; as I don’t know the author, nor felt a connection with her, it did not hold my interest. Thank you for the copy and I hope it does well with other readers.

Was this review helpful?

This was a really interesting book and I enjoyed the tips the author gave throughout. It was easy to understand and I finished it in only a couple of hours. I will be recommdending this book to any interesting in writing and to read something quick. Great read!

Was this review helpful?

I’ve just finished reading The Writer’s Room by @Katie Da Cunha Lewin, published by @elliottandthompson and out in September. It’s a work of non-fiction and looks at the writing rooms of different authors through the ages and also asks the question of what makes a writing space - does it need to be a particular room, or can it exist in any space indoors or out? I loved the examination of how different writers worked and what they had with them and of their particular writing style in order to produce their books. This has also inspired me to read other books mentioned throughout the text too - Hemingway has been pulled off the shelf to be started shortly!

Was this review helpful?

Why are we fascinated with where writer’s write? I often daydream about an author sitting in a beautiful room filled with books and looking out at a garden filled with flowers and leading into a wonderful landscape beyond. I have visited a great many writer’s rooms and each is so different in a very personal way.
This book has allowed me to reflect on the fact that each writer has their own individual place to write, not always a room even and often far away from my imagined space. It looks at individual authors and where they write but it also seems a deeply personal reflection on the author’s own writing experience.
I loved the balance between the authors and the writers she is writing about. A very reflective book.

Was this review helpful?

Many thanks to Elliot & Thompson and NetGalley for the ARC! The Writer’s Room is being released on September 11 2025.

As someone who loves reading books about books and writers, I thought this book would be for me. And it didn’t disappoint! In The Writer’s Room, Katie da Cunha Lewin reflects on the mythology surrounding the spaces authors write in, how they are preserved as museums, how they are portrayed in media, and how they impacted the authors. Da Cunha Lewin explores far more than just rooms belonging to single authors–she discusses shared rooms, cafés, and rooms that no longer exist. She touches on Virginia Woolf, the Brontë sisters, James Baldwin, and more.

This book is incredibly well-researched and features some excellent analysis of films. However, there is also an aspect of memoir that I really enjoyed. Da Cunha Lewin talks about her experiences and journey to claiming the title of writer for herself. Even with the discussions of some of my absolute favorite authors’ writing spaces, these personal parts were what I liked best. It kept things engaging for the reader and ensured that the book didn’t get too bogged down in the more historical and academic aspects. And I especially loved the descriptions of her visits to various writers’ museum houses! That was a lot of fun.

Overall, The Writer’s Room is a great mix of history, analysis, and memoir. If you’re interested in the writer and their space as concepts, this is the book for you!

Was this review helpful?

A thoughtful well-researched book about the creative process and some of the mythology around the act of writing which as an artist and reader I found interesting and relatable. Of course in the 5 chapters there’s not room to include everyone who ever wrote but the Author chooses writers who bring different aspects to the process and who have a diversity of voice and opinion. There are conversations about what a writer looks like, where they work, how their writing is funded and the impact of these elements on the outcome and modern written word. I found this book thought provoking and reflective and enjoyed the writing style.

Was this review helpful?

I am a prime audience for a book like this. I am a fan of Olivia Laing and other similar authors who made their careers on light cultural analysis musings, I love unusual/literary travelogues (think A Flat Place, Haunted States: An American Gothic Guidebook, Ghostland: In Search of a Haunted Country, A Tomb with a View or From Here to Eternity), and I literally research the history of bibliotourism for a living. Maybe my standards a bit too high, but this book left me with mixed feelings.

I really enjoyed the premise - focusing on writer's rooms as both tourist attractions and cultural spaces. I really liked the first couple of chapters which focused on specific empirical case studies and provided a good mix of light analysis and fascinating anecdotal detail of the writing spaces of Dickens, Woolf, Freud and others. I also appreciated the attention the author paid to power imbalances in her discussions of who gets to have a dedicated writing space or a 'writer's room'.

I found the writing style, the repetitiveness of case studies and the balance between breadth and depth less compelling. Every chapter reads like a journalistic essay, and almost every paragraph comes across as a conclusion. I wonder if the material could have been organised in a more coherent way to tell a more engaging story. I was also not very impressed of how narrowly focused the book was - the author mentioned several British case studies, and a couple of American ones (eg James Baldwin). As the book does not really provide much depth on the case studies the author chose to include (eg Woolf or the Brontës), the material came across as repetitive and the non-fiction narrative ran out of steam before the halfway point. Even if the author has limited linguistic expertise, they could have broadened their idea of Anglophone literature (and writers who get or don't get to have 'writer's rooms') to cover examples from beyond the UK and the USA (Canada? India? Jamaica? Singapore? Australia?). The author was clearly happy to use virtual tours and online research, so the limitation here is not defined by accessibility, but by an active choice to cover X and not Y or Z. As a result, the book has a very white (and, despite the author's examination of the power dynamics in question, quite a middle class) focus with a couple of Black American case studies to mix it up. I am not even mentioning that in the age when other languages are more accessible than ever, more effort could have been put to at least give an overview of 'writer's rooms' in non-Anglophone cultures, or, worst comes to worst, a bit more of an exploration of non-European writers' rooms in the UK, if the author really wanted to keep the UK/USA focus. Why did we need Keates and not Sosemi? The book could have also explored the phenomenon of 'writer's rooms' museums from before the 19th century - the concept was neither invented nor popularised in that time period.

Worst of all, most of the time I did not feel like I was learning anything particularly new from this book, and that sort of defeats the purpose of reading a non-fiction book.

Nevertheless, the book gave me some food for thought. What happens to writers' rooms when a writer fades into obscurity, or at least becomes less popular? Or, the other way round, what about people whose posthumous fame takes a couple of decades to develop (we truly are living through a Derek Jarman Renaissance, for example). The book really inspired the questions, rather than provided the answers, though.

Was this review helpful?

This book is a reflective and somewhat philosophical look at the spaces we might call a "writer's room," a phrase which has a lot of cultural weight to it but which can actually mean lots of things -- or not exist, as such, at all.
It touches lightly on several specific rooms or homes belonging to a number of both American and European authors, and considers what we hope to see or imagine by visiting them as literary tourists. It also discusses what the creative process can mean in different settings or circumstances. I found it relatively interesting, but I'm approaching it from the standpoint of an eager literary tourist and a reader--not so much a writer. I'd say it would be even more congenial reading for people who have devoted significant energy and time to creating.

Was this review helpful?

In this the author takes a look at writers houses and their writing rooms within those houses, but she also looks at various spaces, aware that not all writers have the luxury of 'A room of ones I'm it is packed full of information, but at the same time very personal, and she frequently related back to get own writing. The bit talking about AI writing is interesting in light of the whole controversy surrounding The Salt Path, as she says she believes people will reject AI writing, seeking instead more authentic writing; (I mean, I would hope so), but even then we can't guarantee authenticity. We want what we read to have been worked at. I loved some of the info about writers homes as museums, I haven't visited nearly as many as I would like.

I would say this would be really appreciated by a writer, or someone who would like to be a writer. There is an awful lot to enjoy for the reader as well.

*Many thanks to Netgally and the publishers for a copy in exchange for an honest opinion.*

Was this review helpful?

4.5 stars

I do love books about books and authors and writing.

This is a mixture of things. It looks at specific authors and their writing rooms and writing paraphernalia and whatnot, but it's also a deeply personal exploration of Katie's own experience, which was a nice balance.

I know a lot of people don't understand the need to see something that once belonged to a celebrity. And I do understand what they mean in a way, I'm not one for fawning over celebrities. But if you pit me in Charles Dickens' study and allow me to touch the paper, his desk, his pens, anything he has touched, then I'm afraid you'll see a different side of me. And I can't quite explain why but I think people who admire books and have favourite authors will understand.

In a way, it's less about the writer's space and more about them as a person, how they write, where, when, why, with a backdrop of location. It's not a how-do, it doesn't give advice on how to set up your own space.

I'd have liked some more photos, but I'm aware I had a digital ARC and so that may change before publication.

It got me thinking about the spaces I write in. I do have an office of sorts, which is basically a desk I bought in lockdown shoved to the wall in the spare bedroom. That's where I should write. But I also write on the sofa, at the dining table, in bed, in the notebook I've shoved in my handbag when I'm out. And sometimes I write in my head. Part of me wishes I had more discipline, because when I used to work a "proper" job, I went to my desk, logged on at 8am and worked there until whatever time the day finished. But now, I probably only work in the office once week, but I do admit I certainly get more done at the desk, but it feels more official and, at times, more pressurised to create something.

I do want to go on a tour of writer's workspaces now.

It's a very information heavy book, which I liked. It showed the amount of research Katie must have had to do in order to give this book such gravitas.

Was this review helpful?

This book surprised me in the best way that is possible.

The book is divided into five chapters of different types of writer’s room. I liked the categorizations. It made me feel excited for each chapter.

Before I started to read the book I was expecting it to be a sort of an academical writing. However, the author reflects on the writer’s rooms with her own experiences and understandings of life. Besides the categorizations, the book does not really follow a strict writing but follows the mind of the author. This by no means it is all over the place. The book made me feel like I was talking to my friend. Maybe it is because I too am fascinated by the lives and workplaces of authors (and also had a portrait of Lord Byron next to my desk when I was a teenager like the author), that I could relate to the author a lot. However, at the end, I think it is not just about my own interests but it also has to do with the writing capabilities of the author that manages to portray their interests in the most lovable way that is possible. You just get excited to hear the thoughts of the author.

The only thing I would wish would be more pictures but I liked the book regardless.

I am sure I will be buying paperback copy of this book and add it to my collection. I think it needs to be in every literature lover’s collection.

Thanks to Netgalley, Elliott & Thompson, and Katie da Cunha Lewin for this advanced reader copy.

Was this review helpful?

Thank you, NetGalley, for the opportunity to read an ARC of this book. All opinions are my own.

I was excited to read about what some of my favourite writers' rooms were like. The author did such a fantastic job of bringing them to light. The way the various rooms were described, I could see them in my mind's eye—a beautiful threading of the author’s writing experience with other writers. After years of writing in a variety of spaces and during interruptions, I now have a dedicated space to call my own. I used to think that I wasn't a real writer until I did. This book was a balm for that notion.

The bibliography is a great resource list to learn more. What a great gift for the writers in your life!

Was this review helpful?

Thoroughly researched and thoughtful, this book delves into the spaces that our favorite authors wrote in and the connection between the writers desk and the story being written. I think it would be an interesting and compelling book for other writers and literary fiction lovers.

Was this review helpful?