Founding Member & Writer
Amy Richardson was born and raised in small village in rural Warwickshire. After a childhood spent either with her nose in a book or prancing about in a dance studio, she decided to flee the countryside for life somewhere with a little bit more excitement. After reading for an English degree at Royal Holloway, University of London, she returned home with an even deeper love of literature and a new appreciation for the idyllic landscape she grew up in. After a brief stint trying her hand working for an online retailer, she felt the lure of academia once more, heading up north to the University of York, where she spent a happy but hard year earning an MA in Medieval Studies.
Amy specialises in feminist readings of medieval texts, highlighting female narratives and attempting to interpret what they may have meant to the women who owned or read them. She has recently moved to London where she works in a national art gallery and can’t quite believe that she gets paid to talk to people about art, let alone fall in love with new paintings almost every week. Although forever a country girl at heart, she’s not quite bored of big city life just yet and can be found spending her days off exploring the many hidden gems of London’s cultural landscape.
Amy is a founding member of The Attic on Eighth.
Adding to the community spirit of the holidays, founding The Attic on Eighth member Amy Richardson shares a Christmas Eve tradition (and recipe) that she started with her father.
Here, to cap off 2020, a few of The Attic’s editors and writers share some thoughts on reading slumps, and the titles that finally got us through it.
As we continue settling into the new normal, Attic member Amy Richardson shares the morning rituals that have held her through the constant changes of 2020.
From a September that doesn’t feel like any other, here’s what we’re reading this month at The Attic on Eighth.
Looking at the history of authors like Mahlon T Wing, George Eliot, George Sand, and Vernon Lee, Amy Richardson delves into the troubling attitudes behind the #ReclaimHerName initiative from the Women’s Prize for Fiction that strip writers of their intents.
As summer comes to its peak, we’re sharing the books that have made an impact on us this August.
As the world spins madly on, we continue to turn to our screens to connect over the shows and films that have been keeping us company through July 2020.
Coming to you from the middle of a global shutdown, The Attic on Eighth writers share what it is that they’ve been reading in April 2020.
From escapist novels to LGBTQA+ history to contemporary non-fiction, The Attic on Eighth writers and editors share what they’re reading this month.