Sarah Harkness worked in corporate finance for twenty years, latterly as a partner at Arthur Andersen. She spent three years as Pro-Chancellor of the University of Sheffield and now chairs the audit committee of Orthopaedic Research UK. She holds an Honorary Doctorate from Sheffield University and an Honorary Fellowship at Mansfield College. Her first book was a biography of Victorian artist and writer Nelly Erichsen. In October 2021 she was awarded an MA with Distinction in Biography at the University of Buckingham, studying under Professor Jane Ridley. Her 40,000 word dissertation covered five crucial years in the career of Alexander Macmillan. In 2021 she won the Tony Lothian Prize, awarded by The Biographers’ Club for the best proposal for an uncommissioned biography. Sarah is married with three adult children and lives in the Cotswolds.
Harkness is the best kind of biographer: meticulous, insightful and a great storyteller. This tale of two lives in all their messy reality is so much more enjoyable than any dry or self-promoting publishing history, while at the same time its rich historical, social and intellectual context makes this essential reading for anyone interested in the Victorians -- Ophelia Field, author of <i>The Kit-Cat Club </i>and <i>The Favourite</i> This is a tremendous read. The story of the Macmillan brothers will captivate anyone with an interest in books and publishing. So well-researched and incredibly readable. Sure to be a book of the year -- S. G. MacLean, author of <i>The Winter List</i> Through meticulous and exuberant detail, this chronicle of two men’s determination to bring literature to the masses blows apart the stereotype of a prim Victorian era. It proves yet again that nothing is inevitable in history – and even the great publishing empires like Macmillan needed adventurers to cut a swathe through established ideas of what people should read. They transformed the canon of English literature through their bold editorial decisions – and this book is an important reminder that stories and ideas flourish in the public imagination because of the combined work of publishers, editors and booksellers cherishing and exploiting the original works of great authors -- Sir Chris Bryant MP Revealing and sympathetic . . . in Harkness‘s persuasive and fluent telling, the Macmillans were at the heart of Victorian intellectual concerns * New Statesman *