Woman Alive
Susan Ertz author Tom Gauld illustrator Graham Norton editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Manderley Press Ltd
Publishing:5th Mar '26
£19.99
This title is due to be published on 5th March, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Susan Ertz was a popular novelist of the interwar years, best known for her novel Madame Claire, which was chosen as one of the first ten Penguin Books paperbacks in 1935; she also wrote In the Cool of the Day - later adapted into a film of the same name in 1963 - starring Jane Fonda and Angela Lansbury.
However, one of her earlier titles - Woman Alive - is an important work in the canon of speculative fiction, until now largely forgotten among the works of her contemporaries such as George Orwell, H.G. Wells and Aldous Huxley.
Woman Alive is set in 1985 and is at once a satire and a commentary on the rising threat of nationalism in 1930s Britain. The novel is cinematic in structure, conjuring a world in which feminisim and pacifism are woven together to tell the story of Stella - an accidental survivor who became queen of England and the hope of humankind.
The relevance of this novel to 21st-century society is of course heightened post-Covid-19. But at its heart it is a love story, a romance of sorts and a page-turner extraordinaire.
"Between the lines of this pleasant and amusing fantasy there is to be read an impassioned and persuasive plea against war."
- New York Times, 1936
"Recommended particularly for women pacifists, this sketch of the world in 1985 is a bitter indictment of male stupidity."
- Time Magazine, 1936
ISBN: 9781068661365
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
New edition