
"In countries where women were not even allowed to read or write, let alone publish, obviously, you simply couldn’t possibly publish as a woman, it was an illegal act. “I think there’s still a sense that men’s writing is universal, and women’s writing is for women," Kate Mosse, co-founder of the Women’s Prize for Fiction, said.

Other works include Marie of the Cabin Club by Ann Petry (Arnolda Petri), who became the first African American woman to sell over 1 million copies. The ' Reclaim Her Name' collection, in collaboration with Bailey's, features books such as Middlemarch, written by Mary Ann Evans under the pen name George Eliot, with the initiative looking "to honour their achievements and give them the credit they deserve."Įvans' novel, published in eight parts in 1871-72, has never been released under her real name but has been voted the best British novel of all time. Now, the Women’s Prize for Fiction has just marked its 25th anniversary by publishing 25 literary works by female authors with their real names on the cover for the very first time. Throughout the course of history, many female writers have used male pseudonyms or gender-ambiguous pen names for their work to be published or taken seriously, including iconic writers like the Brontë Sisters and Louisa May Alcott.
