Tamarin Norwood

Represented by Anna Webber
Tamarin Norwood
© Gavin Wallace

Tamarin Norwood is a writer and academic with a background in fine art. She has written on drawing, metaphor, memorial and grief, and has an interest in ritual and rural history. Norwood was awarded a Clarendon scholarship for her DPhil at the University of Oxford (2019), holds research fellowships at the universities of Loughborough and Bath, and is a researcher at the University of Oxford Centre for Life-Writing. In 2021 she won The Lancet Wakley Essay Prize for her essay SOMETHING GOOD ENOUGH, and in the same year her drawing memoir THE MOURNING LINES was published by Ma Bibliothèque. She lives and works in rural Northamptonshire. Her memoir THE SONG OF THE WHOLE WIDE WORLD was published by Indigo Press on the 8th February 2024.

Books by Tamarin Norwood