'This fascinating study makes an important contribution to scholarly understanding of women’s diaries and Irish women’s literary history in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. It is meticulously researched and the extensive archival material is sensitively and skilfully interpreted to provide rare insights regarding women’s lives and writing. This engaging book also has wider significance for studies of female authorship and agency, manuscript culture and uses of the diary form, as part of a wider conversation regarding life writing in the period.'Amy Culley, Associate Professor in English, University of Lincoln