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Review: Single Journey Only

Now in her eighties but as vigorous as ever, Ursula Owen details her rich and satisfying career as a significant figure in the progressive politics of the late 20th century

December 17, 2019 16:56
Ursula Owen
1 min read

Single Journey Only by Ursula Owen (Salt, £12.99)

Pioneering feminist, co-founder of the Virago publishing house, stalwart of Index on Censorship, Labour Party cultural adviser, social worker — Ursula Owen has had a rich and satisfying career, becoming a significant figure in the progressive politics of the late 20th century. Now in her eighties but as vigorous as ever, she details it all in her fascinating memoir. But the book is much more than that: it is also an honest and insightful study of assimilation and mental illness.

The assimilation was that of her German Jewish family, prewar refugees from Nazism, the mental illness that of her mother. Both issues dominated her childhood and have continued to affect her throughout her life.

She was born Ursula Sachs in 1937 and spent the first 18 months of her life in Berlin, then Heidelberg with her grandparents, before she and her older brother joined their parents in England.