
Three Rooms
A piercing howl of a novel about one young womanâs endless quest for an apartment of her own and the aspirations and challenges faced by the millennial generation as it finds its footing in the world, from a shockingly talented debut author
âA woman must have money and a room of her own.â So said Virginia Woolf in her classic A Room of Oneâs Own, but in this scrupulously observed, gorgeously wrought, debut novel, Jo Hamya pushes that adage powerfully into the twenty-first century, to a generation of people living in rented rooms. What a woman needs now is an apartment of her own, the ultimate mark of financial stability, unattainable for many.
Set over the course of one year, Three Rooms follows a young woman as she moves from a rented room at Oxford, where sheâs working as a research assistant; to a strangerâs sofa, all she can afford as a copyediting temp at a society magazine; to her childhood home, where sheâs been forced to return, jobless, even a room of her own out of reach. As politics shift to nationalism, the streets fill with protestors, and news drip-feeds into her phone, she struggles to live a meaningful life on her own terms, unsure if sheâll ever be able to afford to do so.
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A piercing howl of a novel about one young womanâs endless quest for an apartment of her own and the aspirations and challenges faced by the millennial generation as it finds its footing in the world, from a shockingly talented debut author
âA woman must have money and a room of her own.â So said Virginia Woolf in her classic A Room of Oneâs Own, but in this scrupulously observed, gorgeously wrought, debut novel, Jo Hamya pushes that adage powerfully into the twenty-first century, to a generation of people living in rented rooms. What a woman needs now is an apartment of her own, the ultimate mark of financial stability, unattainable for many.
Set over the course of one year, Three Rooms follows a young woman as she moves from a rented room at Oxford, where sheâs working as a research assistant; to a strangerâs sofa, all she can afford as a copyediting temp at a society magazine; to her childhood home, where sheâs been forced to return, jobless, even a room of her own out of reach. As politics shift to nationalism, the streets fill with protestors, and news drip-feeds into her phone, she struggles to live a meaningful life on her own terms, unsure if sheâll ever be able to afford to do so.












