Katie da Cunha Lewin is a writer based in London, currently lecturing in 20th and 21st-century literature at Coventry University. She holds a PhD in contemporary literature and is the co-editor of Don DeLillo: Contemporary Critical Perspectives. Her writing has appeared in the Times Literary Supplement, The White Review, Irish Times, Los Angeles Review of Books, among other places. She loves exploring issues of writing and the writer in the 21st century.
'A reverie - part pilgrimage, part personal reflection - on the places where writers find the right words. Katie da Cunha Lewin takes us on an intriguing journey through time and technology to reveal the public and private worlds of writers, past and present.' Clare Hunter, author of Threads of Life ‘Hand in hand with the question 'what do writers do all day?' is '...and where do they do it?'. Katie da Cunha Lewin's book is an intimate delight and radical demystifier, making the conditions, rituals, and set-ups required for writing to happen individual, multiple, and political.' Jen Calleja, author of Fair: The Life-Art of Translation ‘The Writer’s Room taps into our deep obsession with the spaces associated with creating great works of literature, in the most delightful way. If you have ever felt preoccupied with visiting, snooping and uncovering the desks, shelves and habits of the greats, as well and creating your own, this book was made for you.’ Penny Wincer, author of Home Matters ‘Katie Da Cunha Lewin’s brilliant book The Writer’s Room is like a matryoshka: each room visited is also a visit to a life, to a work, to a genius’s subjectivity and its many obsessions. Da Cunha Lewin successfully attempts to unravel that exact mix of solitude and companionship, protection and exposure, silence and conversation that writing requires. A book of rare skill and complexity for all those who love literature and wonder about it.’ Guadalupe Nettel, author of Still Born