The Eights
The Eights: The captivating debut historical novel following the first women to study at Oxford University
An entertaining and moving imagining of four smart women dealing with the engrained misogyny of the time. I came to love and admire the four as if they were my sisters ― TRACY CHEVALIER
My book of the year. The writing is wonderful, the subject fascinating and the storylines utterly absorbing. I’m so sad I’ve finished it. I loved everything about this book. I ADORED it ― JILL MANSELL
I so enjoyed The Eights and became completely involved in the lives of the four pioneering heroines whose friendship is the beating heart of the book ― CLARE CHAMBERS, author of Small Pleasures
I loved this story of the first women admitted to Oxford University - and its gorgeously written characters. Rooted strongly in time and place, this novel transports you ― JENNIE GODFREY, author of The List of Suspicious Things
A story about women taking their place in a man’s world, The Eights beautifully captures the power of friendship and love in the wake of extraordinary loss. It was a pleasure to read ― PIP WILLIAMS, author of The Dictionary of Lost Words
A heartfelt, thoughtful and engaging book about the first women students to go to Oxford University - their friendships, their secrets, their ambitions and their opponents - in the tremulous, haunted years immediately after the First World War. Joanna Miller brings 1920s Oxford to life with a vivid immediacy and makes us care deeply about four young women who find themselves pioneers in a strange new world, trying to find a way forward in the aftermath of war. A thoroughly lovely debut that will win many hearts, with its celebration of friendship and the persistence of hope ― JOANNA QUINN, author of The Whalebone Theatre
The Eights has heart, soul, intelligence and wit, and packing it might well make a suitcase lighter ― Mick Herron, What We're Reading for Summer 2025
These women soon become friends through the page and make me fondly and nostalgically recall that feeling of pure hope, wonder and fear as one stands on the edge of adult life simply wondering. Hoping. And wondering some more. ― EMMA BARNETT
Engaging, warm and intelligent, this debut about the first women students at Oxford - their deep friendship, and all they must face - is a delight! ― LUCY ATKINS, author of Magpie Lane
I loved this book. A hugely entertaining and brilliant-written novel which gives us not one, not two but four incredible female characters to root for. Meticulously researched and impeccably crafted. An entirely delightful debut ― ANNA MAZZOLA, author of The Clockwork Girl
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