Rachel Cusk (born 8 Feb 1967) is a UK-based Canadian-born novelist and writer. Read full biography of Rachel Cusk →
I remain fascinated by where you go as a woman once you are a mother, and if you ever come back.
Every time I write a book, I've probably taken five years off my life.
Feminism remains something that needs to be explained to people.
I absolutely don't dislike children - I would choose their company over adult company any time.
I don't really believe in stories, only in the people who tell them.
It is living, not thinking, as a feminist that has become the challenge.
The British have always made terrible parents.
What compromises women - babies, domesticity, mediocrity - compromises writing even more.
To be optimistic about something that is absolutely unknown to you is unfounded.
What other grown-up gets told how to do their job so often as a writer?
Writing is a discipline: it's almost all about holding back.
As writers go, I have a skin of average thickness. I am pleased by a good review, disappointed by a bad. None of it penetrates far enough to... →
The anorexic body is held in the grip of will alone; its meaning is far from stable. What it says - 'Notice me, feed me, mother me' - is not... →