Georgia Pritchett may not be a household name, but her words have reached millions. The British screenwriter has shaped some of television’s sharpest comedies like Succession, Veep, and The Thick of It. Yet in her memoir ‘My Mess is a Bit of Life’, she turns the lens inward where Pritchett chronicles her journey through debilitating anxiety.
The book grew out of a therapist’s suggestion. Finding it difficult to talk about her worries, Pritchett began writing them down. The result is a collection of brief, almost fragmentary vignettes that span her childhood through to her career and motherhood. These pieces, at times whimsical and at times piercing, capture the absurdities of everyday life while exposing the undercurrent of fear that has followed her for decades.

Her childhood recollections carry the unmistakable stamp of a child’s imagination (she once believed sheep were clouds that had fallen from the sky). They also reveal how early anxiety took root. Shyness, insecurity, and an overwhelming sense of dread were constant companions. School days, awkward friendships, and even holidays with the family dog become material for her sharp, self-deprecating wit.
The memoir doesn’t shy away from the professional hurdles she faced either. Breaking into television as a young woman, Pritchett encountered the kind of casual misogyny that many women in creative industries will recognize. But even in recounting dismissive colleagues and toxic work environments, her humour cuts through, never allowing bitterness to overshadow resilience.
Pritchett writes with emotional candor. She presents herself as an ordinary person carrying the invisible burdens of life like miscarriages, the health struggles of her partner, and the challenges of raising two sons while wrestling with persistent anxiety.
Due to this, ‘My Mess is a Bit of Life’ resonates deeply as it tells us that the successful also have struggles. Pritchett is both an award-winning writer whose words command international acclaim, and also someone who finds supermarkets overwhelming and conversations exhausting.
Pritchett’s memoir is a reminder that anxiety doesn’t erase creativity, humour, or tenderness. It shows that even in the midst of self-doubt and dread, it is possible to build and to create. For anyone who has ever felt both fragile and determined, this is a book that will feel very familiar.
















