How to Be a Heroine

Samantha Ellis
3.71
4,508 ratings 853 reviews
While debating literature’s greatest heroines with her best friend, thirtysomething playwright Samantha Ellis has a revelation—her whole life, she's been trying to be Cathy Earnshaw of Wuthering Heights when she should have been trying to be Jane Eyre. With this discovery, she embarks on a retrospective look at the literary ladies—the characters and the writers—whom she has loved since childhood. From early obsessions with the March sisters to her later idolization of Sylvia Plath, Ellis evaluates how her heroines stack up today. And, just as she excavates the stories of her favorite characters, Ellis also shares a frank, often humorous account of her own life growing up in a tight-knit Iraqi Jewish community in London. Here a life-long reader explores how heroines shape all our lives.
Genres: NonfictionBooks About BooksMemoirFeminismBiographyEssaysAdultWomensBiography MemoirAutobiography
272 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
1011 (22%)
4 star
1724 (38%)
3 star
1330 (30%)
2 star
344 (8%)
1 star
99 (2%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Samantha Ellis

Lists with this book

Yes Please
Not That Kind of Girl: A Young Woman Tells You What She's "Learned"
#Girlboss
Non-Fiction for Women in their Twenties
350 books • 276 voters
Ex Libris: Confessions of a Common Reader
The Reading Promise: My Father and the Books We Shared
Tolstoy and the Purple Chair: My Year of Magical Reading
Bibliomemoirs
107 books • 25 voters
The Girl on the Train
Big Little Lies
All the Light We Cannot See
Hyperbole and a Half: Unfortunate Situations, Flawed Coping Mechanisms, Mayhem, and Other Things That Happened
Havoc at Prescott High
Homicide and Halo-Halo
'H' Alliteration In The Title
270 books • 14 voters