The extraordinary and dramatic biography of the first modern feminist, who spent her entire life fighting for the principle of equality
Rachel Holmes is the author of The Secret Life of Dr James Barry and The Hottentot Venus: The Life and Death of Saartjie Baartman. She is co-editor, with Lisa Appignanesi and Susie Orbach, of Fifty Shades of Feminism and co-commissioning editor, with Josie Rourke and Chris Haydon, of Sixty-Six Books: Twenty-First Century Writers Speak to the King James Bible. She lives in Gloucestershire.
Superb ... The story of this remarkable life is so well told, with
a rare combination of pace, verve and scholarship, that the reader
is soon a daily visitor to the Marx household, with its soot,
smoke, books, babies, dinner on the table via the pawnshop, three
languages spoken in any combination, and the tiny Eleanor ... I
doubt the reader will close this brilliant biography unmoved by
this extraordinary woman’s life and untroubled by the inevitable
questions it raises about global capitalism now
*Jeanette Winterson, Daily Telegraph*
Thanks to Holmes’ fresh and vital style – not to mention her
endearing partisanship – Eleanor Marx: A Life reads less like a
biography than a 19th century novel. Its close might indeed be
modelled on Flaubert’s Madame Bovary, translated into English for
the first time by Eleanor Marx in 1886 ... The life of one of
Britain’s most celebrated intellectuals and activists of the late
19th century came abruptly to an end, to be all but forgotten.
Thankfully, however, Holmes has given back to us an unforgettable
Eleanor Marx
*Lisa Jardine, Financial Times*
A passionate and convincing rehabilitation that gives her credit
for helping to establish “the eight-hour day"
*Nicholas Shakespeare, Daily Telegraph Biographies of the
Year*
I got to the end of Rachel Holmes’s Eleanor Marx and wanted to
start all over again ... At the centre of it all, the irrepressible
daughter of Karl and Jenny Marx, the loving sister, passionate
lover, actress, political organiser, fiery speaker, translator and
intellect. A giant whose character in all its complexity steps off
the page to inspire another generation
*Susie Orbach*
Gripping ... Most lives would be overshadowed by such a
melodramatic end. But Marx’s life was so much more than a murder
mystery, as Rachel Holmes’s gripping and vividly told biography
demonstrates ... Sympathy for her subject is infectious ... Reading
about this generous and far-seeing woman, it is hard not to wish
that she had changed the world. How much better would the 20th
century have been if it has been Eleanor’s views on the freedom of
women that were adopted instead of her father’s communist
doctrines
*Sunday Times*
Gripping ... The story of Eleanor Marx is shot through with the
melodrama of the great Victorian novels – a tale of secrets,
infidelities, lost letters and legacies, depression, deception and
ultimate tragedy
*Daily Mail*
Rachel Holmes has produced a dazzling account of a woman and her
family, an age and a movement, that grips from the first page to
the last
*Gillian Slovo*
Eleanor Marx is both a challenging and a stimulating subject for a
biographer. In this widely researched and passionately written
book, Rachel Holmes has found an original way of presenting her.
She balances Eleanor's political career, centred in the Reading
Room of the British Museum among her Victorian Bloomsbury group
colleagues, with her sobriquet, the emotional figure of “Tussy”,
whose love for Edward Aveling ends in tragedy. It is as if the
biographer is conducting string and wind instruments in an
orchestra. The result, surprising at first, becomes profoundly
satisfying
*Michael Holroyd*
What makes her a biographer’s dream is the style and passion with
which she leaped over the barriers of convention ... How Aveling’s
betrayals eventually destroyed Tussy provides a heart-rending
finale to this enthralling biography. By then, I’d bet that every
reader will be as unashamedly in love with Tussy as Rachel Holmes
clearly is
*Francis Wheen, Mail on Sunday*
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