Alison Light is a writer and critic. She is an honorary professor in the Department of English at University College, London, Honorary Professorial Fellow at Edinburgh University and a Senior Research Fellow at Pembroke College, Oxford. A regular contributor to the London Review of Books, she is the author of the much-acclaimed Mrs Woolf and the Servants and Common People, which was shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize. She lives in Oxford.
The most powerful family history I have ever read * Penelope Lively, New York Times, on Common People * Remarkable, haunting, full of wisdom * The Times, on Common People * Mesmeric and deeply moving * Daily Telegraph, on Common People * Part detective story, part Dickensian saga, part labour history. A thrilling and unnerving read * Observer, on Common People * She writes with precision and tenderness about loss. A Radical Romance is an admirable tribute to a man, a period of rapid change in London, and an unusual marriage * Guardian * Beautifully crafted...It casts a light on the lightness of love and the profound depression of loss. A truly gifted writer * Hugh MacDonald, The Herald * A memoir of cauterising honesty. This is a book that deserves to be widely read * Spectator * Extremely interesting, moving, brilliantly written, as one would expect from Alison Light * Claire Tomalin * There are of course memoirs that do astonish and exceed our expectations of mere self-accounting: in recent years, Helen Macdonald's H Is for Hawk; Patti Smith's various autobiographical writings; Lorna Sage's Bad Blood; and Gillian Rose's Love's Work. Alison Light's A Radical Romance now joins this select bunch of books about the self that are not simply self-regarding but truly self-exploratory * Guardian *