My first book, The Passion Projects: Modernist Women, Intimate Archives, Unfinished Lives (Princeton UP, October 2019), was shortlisted for the Modernist Studies Association’s annual First Book Prize in 2020, and it has received reviews in Feminist Modernist Studies, LSE Review of Books, Modernism/modernity, The Modernist Review, and Women: A Cultural Review. In this study, I argue that the history of midcentury women's biographical practices constitutes a transatlantic counterhistory of modernist canon formation. Examining published "biographies" by Virginia Woolf, Gertrude Stein, Vera Brittain, and Una Troubridge alongside the biographical collections of Margaret Anderson, Alice B. Toklas, and Sylvia Beach and the "intimate archives" of Sylvia Townsend Warner, Djuna Barnes, and Hope Mirrlees, this project argues that these unconventional biographical practices--not just writing, but curating, collating, annotating, and archiving--should be considered acts of queer feminist literary criticism. You can read more about this book here and here; you can buy it here or from your favorite independent bookstore.