Pre-order | Woman Alive

£19.99

STOP PRESS! Pre-orders are now open for this title!

Please note, all pre-orders of this book will be posted as soon as stock arrives in our office - we estimate early 2026.

If you are buying other titles at the same time and would like these straight away, it’s best to order those separately, otherwise they will all be processed together in early 2026 to save on postage costs for you and for us.

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Manderley Press is delighted to announce the publication of Woman Alive - a curious science fiction novel from 1936 by Anglo-American writer Susan Ertz. The book is set in London in a dystopian future where only one woman is left alive after all others in the world are wiped out in a pandemic caused by a poisonous gas.

This brand new edition is introduced by the acclaimed comedian, broadcaster, actor and writer Graham Norton, who has described the work of Susan Ertz as “glorious”; meanwhile, the new cover has been commissioned by the renowned cartoonist and illustrator Tom Gauld, whose work combines a love of books and science.

“Between the lines of this pleasant and amusing fantasy there is to be read an impassioned and persuasive plea against war.”
- New York Times, 1936

“Recommended particularly for women pacifists, this sketch of the world in 1985 is a bitter indictment of male stupidity.”
- Time Magazine, 1936

Susan Ertz was a popular novelist of the interwar years, best known for her novel Madame Claire, which was chosen as one of the first ten Penguin Books paperbacks in 1935; she also wrote In the Cool of the Day – later adapted into a film of the same name in 1963 – starring Jane Fonda and Angela Lansbury.

However, one of her earlier titles – Woman Alive – is an important work in the canon of speculative fiction, until now largely forgotten among the works of her contemporaries such as George Orwell, H.G. Wells and Aldous Huxley.

Woman Alive is set in 1985 and is at once a satire and a commentary on the rising threat of nationalism in 1930s Britain. The novel is cinematic in structure, conjuring a world in which feminisim and pacifism are woven together to tell the story of Stella – an accidental survivor who became queen of England and the hope of humankind.

The relevance of this novel to 21st-century society is of course heightened post-Covid-19. But at its heart it is a love story, a romance of sorts and a page-turner extraordinaire. Stella is resolute in her fight to determine her own fertility and in her contempt for men, but in the end she chooses a partner and saves the world.

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Each book ordered through the website will be wrapped in tissue paper and secured with a silk ribbon, free of charge - and will also include an exclusive bookmark designed to complement the cover design.

STOP PRESS! Pre-orders are now open for this title!

Please note, all pre-orders of this book will be posted as soon as stock arrives in our office - we estimate early 2026.

If you are buying other titles at the same time and would like these straight away, it’s best to order those separately, otherwise they will all be processed together in early 2026 to save on postage costs for you and for us.

*

Manderley Press is delighted to announce the publication of Woman Alive - a curious science fiction novel from 1936 by Anglo-American writer Susan Ertz. The book is set in London in a dystopian future where only one woman is left alive after all others in the world are wiped out in a pandemic caused by a poisonous gas.

This brand new edition is introduced by the acclaimed comedian, broadcaster, actor and writer Graham Norton, who has described the work of Susan Ertz as “glorious”; meanwhile, the new cover has been commissioned by the renowned cartoonist and illustrator Tom Gauld, whose work combines a love of books and science.

“Between the lines of this pleasant and amusing fantasy there is to be read an impassioned and persuasive plea against war.”
- New York Times, 1936

“Recommended particularly for women pacifists, this sketch of the world in 1985 is a bitter indictment of male stupidity.”
- Time Magazine, 1936

Susan Ertz was a popular novelist of the interwar years, best known for her novel Madame Claire, which was chosen as one of the first ten Penguin Books paperbacks in 1935; she also wrote In the Cool of the Day – later adapted into a film of the same name in 1963 – starring Jane Fonda and Angela Lansbury.

However, one of her earlier titles – Woman Alive – is an important work in the canon of speculative fiction, until now largely forgotten among the works of her contemporaries such as George Orwell, H.G. Wells and Aldous Huxley.

Woman Alive is set in 1985 and is at once a satire and a commentary on the rising threat of nationalism in 1930s Britain. The novel is cinematic in structure, conjuring a world in which feminisim and pacifism are woven together to tell the story of Stella – an accidental survivor who became queen of England and the hope of humankind.

The relevance of this novel to 21st-century society is of course heightened post-Covid-19. But at its heart it is a love story, a romance of sorts and a page-turner extraordinaire. Stella is resolute in her fight to determine her own fertility and in her contempt for men, but in the end she chooses a partner and saves the world.

*

Each book ordered through the website will be wrapped in tissue paper and secured with a silk ribbon, free of charge - and will also include an exclusive bookmark designed to complement the cover design.

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Washington Square
Mary Shelley in Bath
The Fly on the Wheel

Susan Ertz (1887–1985) was an Anglo-American novelist known for blending romance, social satire and philosophical reflection. Born in Surrey to American parents, she spent much of her childhood in the USA before settling in Britain. Her breakthrough came with Madame Claire (1923). Among her most notable works is Woman Alive (1936), a speculative novel about the last woman surviving a global plague, praised for its originality and feminist undertones. Over a long career, Ertz explored women’s independence and moral dilemmas, leaving behind a body of fiction that is both popular and thought-provoking.

Graham Norton began his broadcasting career as comedian and panellist on the BBC Radio Four show Loose Ends in the early 1990s. He has hosted various radio and TV shows, including the multi-BAFTA-winning The Graham Norton Show. Norton has written two memoirs, So Me and The Life and Loves of a He Devil. In 2016, he published his debut novel, Holding, followed by the bestselling A Keeper which tells of a New York-based academic returning to her Irish hometown after the death of her mother. Norton’s third novel, Home Stretch, is a moving exploration of guilt and the search for a place to belong. He discovered Susan Ertz’s novel Madame Claire at a church fete in West Cork, and was instantly smitten with her work.

Tom Gauld was born in Aberdeen and studied at Edinburgh College of Art and The Royal College of Art. He is a cartoonist and illustrator with weekly comic strips in The Guardian and New Scientist. His comics have been published in the New York Times and on the cover of the New Yorker. He is the author of Goliath, You’re All Just Jealous of My Jetpack, Mooncop, Baking with Kafka (winner of an Eisner Award), Department of Mind-Blowing Theories, Revenge of the Librarians and Physics for Cats. He lives with his family in London.