The Golden Notebook, novel by Doris Lessing, published in 1962.
The novel presents the crisis of a woman novelist, Anna Wulf, suffering from writer’s block. Immensely self-analytical, she seeks to probe her disorderly life by keeping four notebooks: a black one covering her early years in British colonial Africa; a red one about her years as a communist; a yellow one with the fictional story of her alter ego, Ella; and a blue one with her diary. Excerpts from these notebooks mingle with excerpts from an ostensibly fictional work, “Free Women,” which features a character named Anna Wulf. As the separate lines of plot development progress toward resolution, the novelist integrates her fragmented experiences and unifies the separate threads of her writing into a single golden notebook.