
Wednesday's Children
by Robin Hyde
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Wednesday's Children returns to print in this beautifully designed edition, celebrating the enduring work of Robin Hyde.
Set in 1930s New Zealand, the novel follows Wednesday Gilfillan, an independent woman who rejects societal expectations in favour of a life defined by artistic and emotional freedom. On an isolated island, she creates a home for her remarkable children and other characters drawn into her life by circumstance. The novel explores her journey through love, loss and survival, focusing on her defiance against the constraints imposed on women-particularly female artists-in a patriarchal society. In vivid prose, Hyde critiques middle-class respectability and delves into the personal costs of living an unconventional life.
With striking cover art by Star Gossage and a new preface and afterword by Genevieve Scanlan, this fresh edition revives a poignant narrative that remains deeply relevant to contemporary readers.
About the Author
Robin Hyde, born Iris Wilkinson in Cape Town in 1906, was raised in Wellington, New Zealand. A journalist from the age of 17, she published her first poetry collection in 1929. Between 1935 and 1938, she wrote five novels, including Wednesday's Children (1937) and Nor the Years Condemn (1938). Hyde/Wilkinson left New Zealand in 1938, visiting Hong Kong and China before travelling to England, where she died in 1939.