|
AMANDA FOREMAN
Foreman, 34, rose to fame five years ago when she published
her first biography, Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, and
posed nude for Tatler magazine as part of the publicity campaign.
In 1998 Georgiana won the Whitbread Biography Award and sales
have since topped 750,000. Her second bok, Our American Cousins,
a study of the British volunteers who fought in the American
Civil War, will be published next year.
Photographs by Jens Umbach
Foreman wrote Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire on a card
table in the sitting-room of a shared house in Fulham, west
London. "I couldn't write in my bedroom, " she
says. "It was too small. There was always a competition
between Georgiana and listening to The Bill or whatever was
on television." Five years after the book's publication.
foreman is considered a glamorous television historian. It
is no wonder, then, that she now has her own study - although
not in England. She works in a Dickensian-looking brownstone
house in Manhattan, New York, where she lives with her British-born
husband, who is a banker. Lined with bookshelves, her study
is a dark rom, facing a light well.
Foreman writes to the sound of "Helena noise" -
the chatter of her 12-month-old daughter - from the bedroom
above, which in summer is added to by the whirr of a fan. "The
air conditioner doesn't work", she says. She considers
her study more than just an office - "it's a comfort
zone." It is decorated with a leather armchair, photographs
of her husband and her daughter, and a large poster of Foreman
at a book reading. She insists it is not a private space, "but
no one is allowed to touch anything on the desk. I feel very
strongly about that."
Next to her computer is a blue Pilot pen - every chapter
is carefully planned out and it only seems to work is she
uses this pen. "I know it's a delaying tactic, because
if I lose that particular blue Pilot pen I can't start writing,
and really if I could et over that one and use any pen things
would be much faster." She works from 9.30am until 7pm,
when her husband comes home, with a break at lunchtime for
an egg salad sandwich with capers and anchovies at her desk. "I'm
pregnant again, and obsessed with that type of sandwich.
If lumps fall you pick them out of the keyboard".
Writing "is like a day job. I feel guilty about that.
Before, I would get up at 6am and sometimes write until 12
at night. But I didn't have a life then. Georgiana was a
passion and a surrogate. Now I have a passion without it
being a surrogate.
Back to: Interviews & News
|