“…19 Not only is it clear that Milner read Woolf's writing, but, as I have argued elsewhere, in the 1930s both writers shared a deep preoccupation with the 'monsters' encroaching in both Europe and Britain. 20 In the trio of books that arise from her experiments with creativity in the 1930s and 40s -A Life of One's Own (1934), An Experiment in Leisure (1937), and On Not Being Able to Paint (1950) -Milner charts her 'forebodings about fascism' and offers an intriguing 'method' for creative living as a means of extricating the individual mind from the rising currents of fascism. 21 In these writings, Milner, like Woolf, stages an intervention in her society's reverence for the 'man of action', constructing a model of creative life as an alternative form of what she refers to as 'expressive' or 'contemplative' (rather than 'purposive') 'action'.…”