When Sarah LeFanu was researching her 2003 biography of Rose Macaulay,
she kept a detailed journal of her research trips and her processes as a
biographer. She argued with herself over what to include, what to
pursue, and what to leave behind. Her immersion in her research led to
Rose intruding in her dreams, and fantastical imaginings of what Rose
would say or do, at each fork in the road. Dreaming of Rose is a
remarkable record of the art of biography, and the search for another
woman's life. Research trips to Varazze in Italy to look for Rose's
childhood, and to Trabzon in Turkey to find traces of Rose's most
fampous novel, The Towers of Trebizond, were remarkably intuitive
ventures that found treasures in unexpected places. Dreaming of Rose
is also a memoir of a woman juggling the demands of teaching, research
and writing while patching together a living. LeFanu's work on Rose was
squeezed in between many other commitments and responsibilities: she
wrote for the BBC and taught creative writing and English literature.
Suffused with the tensions and dramas of everyday life, and the
necessity for intellectual integrity, this is an important memoir of
women and writing.