Nearly a hundred years ago, Virginia Woolf called for every woman to have “money and a room of one’s own.” Inspired by Woolf, author Jo Hamya had always believed certain things about her future: that she would graduate college, find a stable job, perhaps a partner along the way, and soon enough purchase a comfortable home where she would live out her days. But as she started to notice that journalists and other artists she admired were living with their parents well into their 30s, she wondered whether this future was really possible for someone of her generation, after all. It was this line of thinking that inspired her novel, Three Rooms… a novel set in one year that follows a young woman as she struggles to live a meaningful life on her own terms, unsure if she’ll ever be able to afford to do so.
I recently spoke with Jo Hamya about her novel. This is our conversation.
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Three Rooms by Jo Hamya was published by Mariner Books.
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Marginalia was produced at KMUW Wichita.
- Mark Statzer and Torin Andersen - engineers
- Lu Anne Stephens - editor
- Haley Crowson - producer
- Beth Golay - host
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