Available Formats
Paperback
Published: 26th June 2025
Paperback
Published: 25th July 2024
Hardback
Published: 5th June 2024
Hardy Women: Mother, Sisters, Wives, Muses
By (Author) Paula Byrne
HarperCollins Publishers
William Collins
5th June 2024
1st February 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900
Gender studies: women and girls
823.8
Hardback
656
Width 159mm, Height 240mm, Spine 58mm
960g
'He understands only the women he invents the others not at all'
Thomas Hardy is one of the most beloved and most-read British authors. His influence on literature and the minds of his readers is singular. But how is it that the novelist who created some of the most memorable and modern female characters in literature had such troubled relationships with real women
In this highly innovative book, acclaimed biographer Paula Byrne re-examines Hardys life through the eyes of the women who made him mother, sisters, girlfriends, wives, muses. The story veers from shocking scenes such as his obsession with the sight of a woman hanged, to poignant vignettes of unfulfilled passion, to fascinating details of working womens lives in the nineteenth century.
Hardy Women is the story of how the magnificent fictional women he invented would not have been possible without the hardship and hardiness of the real ones who shaped his passions and his imagination. It is only through understanding and witnessing these hardy women that we can truly enter the heart of this great novelist and poet.
EARLY PRAISE FOR HARDY WOMEN
A fascinating re-examination of the life of Thomas Hardy through the eyes of the women who profoundly influenced him-his mother, his sisters, girlfriends, wives and muses. Drawing on access to some neverbefore-seen passages in Hardy's journals, she shows that it is through these hardy women that we can truly appreciate his much-loved works
The Bookseller, Editors Choice
PRAISE FOR THE ADVENTURES OF MISS BARBARA PYM
Picked as a Book to Look Forward to in 2021 by the Guardian, The Times and the Observer
A Radio 4 Book of the Week, April 2021
Engrossing The chapters are enticingly short, and I romped through them. Each adds a vital piece of the jigsaw, explaining the provenance of her fictional characters and building up our understanding of [her] state of mind Its a delight to meet her again in these pages
The Times
Light-hearted and lively Byrne is an excellent literary detective, tracing acquaintances directly into the novels. The author seems to have been as fun, clever and kind as her best creations
Lucy Atkins, Sunday Times
Illuminating Byrne sees what fun Pym was, how much she liked and was fascinated by people and has done us a great service in exploring this very unusual personality This, like its subjects best books, rewards reading and re-reading
Spectator
Both hilarious and heartbreaking Byrne is beautifully savvy about her subjects fiction as a manifesto for her genius, it is gloriously persuasive
Daily Telegraph
Byrnes book is outstanding Just like a Pym novel, this biography is warm, funny, unexpected and deeply moving
Financial Times
Excellent Byrnes book is the first to integrate its revelations into a cradle-to-grave biography
Guardian, Book of the Week
Outstanding meticulously researched, affectionate and fascinating in equal measure
Daily Express
Paula Byrne was born in Birkenhead and has a PhD from the University of Liverpool, where she is a Research Fellow in English Literature. Her first book, Jane Austen and the Theatre, was shortlisted for the Theatre Book Prize. Her second book, Perdita: The Life of Mary Robinson , the tale of the scandalous star of the 18th-century stage, literature and high-society, was a Richard and Judy bookclub pick. Her most recent book is Mad World: Evelyn Waugh and the Secrets of Brideshead. The story of Evelyn Waugh's friendship with the extraordinary aristocratic family who inspired Brideshead Revisited, it was a Sunday Times top ten bestseller. A regular contributor to the 'Times Literary Supplement', she lives in Warwickshire with her two young children and her husband, the critic and biographer Jonathan Bate.