- Published: 8 April 2025
- ISBN: 9781802067262
- Imprint: Penguin Press
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 208
- RRP: $30.00
One Woman Show











- Published: 8 April 2025
- ISBN: 9781802067262
- Imprint: Penguin Press
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 208
- RRP: $30.00
Brilliant. Christine Coulson's tragicomedy of manners is an immense delight. Condensed into its witty format is the story of a life, a life like some I have known and others about which I have read. Coulson captures her character's gentle decline with the precision of Edith Wharton and evokes the eras she traverses with such clarity, even wisdom, describing a woman's changing (or unchanging) role in the world with an acuity that left this reader astonished time and again.
Andrew Solomon, author of Far From the Tree
Heartbreaking and funny . . . Coulson's language is perfection . . . I love the pages of voices, like voices in the galleries, and so many moments made me laugh. Truly masterful and patient and insane, in the best way
Leanne Shapton, author of Swimming Studies
Strange, biting, tender, and heartbreaking in turns. AND all at once . . . I read it in one fell swoop. It is brilliant
Maira Kalman, author of Women Holding Things
A delight! This novel's formal audacity is an impressive feat of imagination. One Woman Show is a moving story of privilege, womanhood, and the sweep of the twentieth century told through a single American life. I loved this book
Rumaan Alam, author of Leave the World Behind
Funny, clever and unexpectedly profound - I couldn't put it down
Helena Attlee, author of The Land Where Lemons Grow
A funny and clever take on the interchangeability of women and works of arts as possessions
Philip Hook, author of Breakfast at Sotheby's
Arch and wholly original, this is a pocket rocket of a novel. The economy with which Coulson manages to capture a life with equal amounts of both vigour and heartbreak is a stunning achievement. An irrepressible and timeless reflection on art, self and female objectification.
Wiz Wharton
A wonderfully clever concept, and a book that lends itself to being read in a single sitting, during which you’ll feel the corners of your lips curl upwards again and again . . . Coulson’s wry, often humorous, occasionally poignant commentary are moments of transgression and longing that show there’s more to our neoclassical heroine than her fine finish
Chloe Ashby, The Spectator
Short, clever . . . it is remarkable how much information she can convey about Kitty’s life . . . solely using wall labels
Ann Levin, Independent
Beautiful, beautiful book . . . the cover is absolutely gorgeous, it would make a delicious Christmas gift
Art Juice Podcast
Coulson tells us Kitty Whitaker’s story stylishly and succinctly through label-length entries
Harper's Bazaar
Compulsive and spry
Hephzibah Anderson, the Observer
Coulson’s formally inventive, witty novel uses gallery captions to capture Kitty’s journey through the 20th century. At once terse and expansive, this is a literary experiment that intrigues
Francesca Peacock, the Mail on Sunday
A highly original and imaginative work that captivates and intrigues . . . so brief that it can be read straight through in an hour, but that is not to say it is slight . . . Coulson’s unusual command of language rewards multiple readings
The Irish Times
Wildly original…[A] tiny but powerful novel… It’s sometimes snarky, sometimes sad, with enough poignant moments to make me wish it could go on and on. … You can sit down and read it in less time than it takes to drive to the art museum, but you’ll be thinking about it for far longer. If you appreciate truly original structure and storytelling, put this modern masterwork on your reading list.
NPR
the writing is clever, witty and deftly – and at times poignantly–executed, and that more than earns One Woman Show its coveted red dot (aka sales sticker) from us’
Marie Claire Best Books of 2023
Unconventional… non-narrative paragraphs somehow add up to create mounting tension, with wry social commentary, feminist barbs and psychological insight bursting through the lacquered surface
The Lady
Thrilling… filled with twists in Kitty’s story that compel and captivate… the experimental format carries an enjoyable tale impressively… each wall label is under seventy-five words, and suffused with the language of museums… this style refines eloquently Coulson’s expansive ideas about womanhood and history
Laura Baliman, TLS