Anna's first book, type-written when she was 12, was called 'Wuthering Claudia'. It was written for and featured her classmates at Chiswick Community School. Now, several decades on, she continues to write about what interests her - and hopes will interest others. Her latest book, 'Sounds and...
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Anna's first book, type-written when she was 12, was called 'Wuthering Claudia'. It was written for and featured her classmates at Chiswick Community School. Now, several decades on, she continues to write about what interests her - and hopes will interest others. Her latest book, 'Sounds and Sweet Airs: the Forgotten Women of Classical Music' tells the fascinating and inspiring stories of eight female composers. It's a book that's been in her mind for years, and it's truly exciting to see it come to life. Writing 'Sounds' has brought together a number of Anna's long-standing activities and passions - music, obviously; writing, even more obviously; thinking about women's lives in the past (which was the impetus for her book on Bess Throckmorton, wife to Sir Walter Ralegh); thinking about the material conditions necessary for the creation of 'great art' (which was one of the ideas behind her biography of John Milton).Alongside her work as a biographer, Anna teaches English Literature and Creative Writing to undergraduates and postgraduates; contributes to the Oxford Student Texts series for Oxford University Press; and makes regular lecture and media appearances.Anna's blog (www.shadowofthecourtesan.wordpress.com) reveals that research, writing and teaching are not her only passions: she loves cycling (sometimes a long, long way); good food and really good wine; and wandering around dirty, beautiful cities. Oh, and long-distance trains.
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