Guislaine Vincent, Guislaine Morland

Writer and Jungian Analyst
Food writer, Independent / self-published author, Memoirist, Poet, Travel writer
Available for:
Live readings and performances, Mentoring

Guislaine Vincent has two lives — one as a Jungian analyst with a bi-lingual French/English private practice in Central London. And one lived waiting for the magic of sentence and the secret alchemy of literature to happen. Her Jungian material is now archived at the Wellcome Collection.

Guislaine writes, sculpts and draws. She has published articles, short stories and fiction in national newspapers and magazines (Literary Review, The Observer Magazine, The Saturday Times Review, Harpers&Queen) and has published two books The Food of Love, A StoryCookbook (Chatto & Windus, chosen by Carmen Callil) and No Name, To Be A Witch Is Not A Willed Thing.

<<COMING OUT IN JANUARY 2026>>

Life & Fable (published by Leaf by Leaf, an imprint of Cinnamon Press).

A line of pain runs through generations of families… until one generation stops to question the ancestral forces behind the door.

In Life & Fable Guislaine Vincent explores archetypal patterns in the ancestral background of her family’s storytelling, peeling away the layers to discover a self in myth and fable. As the narrative unfolds, it’s the implacable presence of childhood that recurs, not only in events, but in how events reveal the self.

Mektoub, my father would say: it is written.

From a great grandfather found in the deserts of Syria and named after the monastery that takes him in to the pain of losing a child; from a childhood of 14 schools across multiple countries to training as a Jungian Psychoanalyst, this is a life story that asks deep questions about who we are and how we peel back reality to find the truth in fables.

A story of resilience and the epiphany of how powerful it is to have a name.

‘In this gorgeous memoir, Guislaine Vincent gives us a life that is evocative of love lost and found again and again, as she shows that one of the secrets to living a life is, in Flaubert’s words, “L’acte d’observation est une tendresse”

—Peter Watson, author and veteran journalist.” 

 

[Above text provided by Leaf By Leaf]