Zoe Abigail Williams[2] (born 7 August 1973)[3] is a Welsh[4] columnist, journalist, and author.
Early life
Zoe Abigail Williams was born on 7 August 1973 in Hounslow, London. Williams was educated at the independent Godolphin and Latymer School for girls in London and read modern history at Lincoln College, Oxford.[5]
Her father, Mark Williams, was a forensic psychologist;[6] he worked at Wandsworth Prison in London.[7] Her mother was a set designer for the BBC.[8][failed verification] Her parents separated in 1976 and divorced 20 years later.[9]
Williams has an older sister[10] and half- and step-siblings from her father's marital and extramarital[10] relationships.
Williams said her father was a petty criminal because he committed insurance fraud.[6][11]
In May 2011, Williams wrote about fare dodging when in her 30s while travelling on London buses. She wrote: "I actually had a lot of affection for bendy buses, mainly because evading your fare was so easy that to pay was almost missing the point. We used to call it freebussing."[15][16]
Political
In 2014, Williams defended the social policy legacy of former Labour prime minister Tony Blair and denounced those calling him a war criminal.[17] Following the death of Fidel Castro, Williams condemned his rule in Cuba, while imploring her readers to ignore his policies.[18]
In August 2015, Williams endorsed Jeremy Corbyn's campaign in the Labour Party leadership election. She wrote in The Guardian: "The point is, Corbyn doesn't have to be right about everything; he doesn't have to be certain, and fully costed about everything; he doesn't even have to be responsive and listening to everything. This political moment is about breaking open the doors and letting the 21st century in."[19]
Feminism
Williams writes about her personal life from a feminist perspective, such as her marriages,[20] motherhood, and her abortion.[21][22]
She wrote Bring It On, Baby: How to have a dudelike pregnancy, a 2010 book of advice for mothers-to-be, which was republished in 2012 as What Not to Expect When You're Expecting.[14]
Awards
Williams was longlisted for the Orwell Prize in 2012,[23][24] and was named Columnist of the Year 2010 at the WorkWorld Media Awards.[25]
Broadcasting
Williams has appeared as a guest on television. Clive James praised her appearance in documentary Teenage Kicks: the Search for Sophistication: "The brilliant journalist Zoe Williams did a short piece to camera that was almost an aria."[26] She has presented a radio documentary, Inside the Academy School Revolution, which Miranda Sawyer found one-sided and "tame",[27] and hosted BBC Radio 4's What The Papers Say. She has been a panellist on the BBC's Any Questions[28] and Question Time.[29]
In February 2020, Williams was criticised online and in Nation.Cymru for her comments about the Welsh language. Her article on exercise criticised a particular Canadian fitness regime as "hard and existentially pointless", continuing: "all that energy spent, no distance covered: it's like eating cottage cheese or learning Welsh."[30][4] Williams had previously praised the language on Twitter for giving Welsh speakers "a more international outlook".[4][31]
In 2020, Kent Live reported criticism of Williams following an altercation that resulted in Williams being told to leave a Wetherspoons pub in Ramsgate, on the basis that she had broken the COVID-19 lockdown rules then in force.[32] Williams had written about the incident in The Guardian.[33]
Personal life
Williams lives in South London with her second husband, Will Higham, and his daughter from another marriage, as well as her son, Thurston,[34] and daughter, Harper,[35] who were fathered by her first husband before she married him.[36] Williams married the father, a geologist,[37] of her son and daughter[38] in 2013, after ten years together, and wrote about the wedding from a feminist perspective in her column for The Guardian.[39][40] In 2018, after a divorce, Williams married for the second time.[36]
Williams became a trustee of the Butler Trust[41]—which was established to recognise the achievements of prison service staff—in November 2013.[2]