In the media is a weekly round-up of features written by, about or containing female writers that have appeared during the previous week and I think are insightful, interesting and/or thought provoking. Linking to them is not necessarily a sign that I agree with everything that’s said but it’s definitely an indication that they’ve made me think. Also, just a note to make it clear that I’m using the term ‘media’ to include social media, so links to blog posts as well as traditional media are likely.
It’s been another grim week for news. There’s been some insightful commentary from a number of female writers on the big stories though:
Charlie Hebdo and terrorism was written about by Caitlin Moran in The Times; while in The Guardian, Natasha Lehrer wrote ‘The Threat to France’s Jews‘; Hadley Freeman covered the same issue alongside the UK’s antisemitism survey, and Suzanne Moore declared ‘Add faithophobia to my crimes: I have no respect for religions that have little respect for me‘. On Reimagining My Reality, Steph wrote ‘Charlie Hebdo, freedom of speech, and male privilege‘ whilst on Media Diversified, Cristine Edusi wrote, ‘Ongoing terrorism in Nigeria is not a novel, the use of children as human bombs is #WeAreAllNigeria‘.
The Stuart Kerner case was commented on by Janice Turner in The Times; Gaby Hinsliff in The Guardian, and Antonia Honeywell on her blog.
The lack of diversity in the Oscar nominees was written about by Roxane Gay in The Butter
And if that’s all made you thoroughly miserable/angry, here’s Sophie Heawood on Clooney’s Golden Globes speech and her daughter’s first day at nursery and Hadley Freeman on ‘How Amy Poehler and Tina Fey made the Golden Globes the first feminist awards ceremony‘ both in The Guardian.
Speaking of award winners, Hilary Mantel’s having another moment with the BBC television adaptation of Wolf Hall beginning this week. She’s in The Guardian, writing about the TV version; while John Mullan, also in The Guardian, profiles her ‘strange and brilliant fiction‘, while Kirstie McCrum tells us ‘What TV series like Wolf Hall can teach us about history‘ on Wales Online.
Joan Didion’s stint as a model for Celine has also been big news again this week. Adrienne LaFrance writes about fashion and loss in Didion’s work for The Atlantic; Molly Fischer tells us ‘Why Loving Joan Didion Is a Trap‘ on The Cut; Lynne Segal talks about ‘Invisible Women‘ in the LRB; Haley Mlotek declared ‘Free Joan Didion‘ in The Awl and Rachel Cooke says ‘That’s so smart‘ in The Observer, while Brainpickings revealed ‘Joan Didion’s Favorite Books of All Time, in a Handwritten Reading List‘.
The best of the rest articles/essays:
- Jeanette Winterson on the poetry of Carol Ann Duffy in The Guardian
- Elisabeth Donnelly, ‘How Margaret Atwood and Zadie Smith Use Technology: An Excerpt from Process: The Writing Lives of Great Authors‘ on Flavorwire
- Tracey Thorn, ‘Do we really want to watch P J Harvey drinking tea and plugging in studio leads?‘ in The New Statesman
- Susan Lanigan, ‘My Mental Health and Experience with Depression‘ on her blog
- Marilynne Robinson ‘On Edgar Allan Poe‘ in The New York Review of Books
- Emma Healey, ‘My hero: Dorothea Tanning‘ in The Guardian
- Katy Derbyshire, on Greta Kuckhoff and translating Mein Kampf on her blog
- Cheryl Strayed, ‘Why Are We Obsessed with the Great American Novel?‘ in The New York Times
- Sadie Stein, ‘The Interview or Those Moments When You Feel Like You’ve Mastered Adulthood‘ in The Paris Review
- Maggie Doherty, ‘Cool Confessions: On Lydia Davis‘ in n+1
- Luiza Sauma, ‘Paris in the Amazon, 1941‘ in The Butter
- Andrea Woodhouse, ‘When the Waves Overturned Grief‘ in Guernica
- Sarah Seltzer, ‘Anne Brontë: Giving the Forgotten Sister and Badass Feminist Author Her Due‘ on Flavorwire
- Kamila Shamsie sails to Antarctica in The Guardian
- Tiffany Stanley, ‘Jackie’s Goodbye‘ in National Journal
- Soraya Chemaly, ‘It’s a Man’s World, Now What?‘ on Role Reboot
- Joanna Chen, ‘What the Trees Reveal‘ in Guernica
- Tara Murtha, ‘I Didn’t Just Scream‘ in The Butter
- Melissa Harrison, ‘Acquainted with the night‘ on Tales of the City
- Nomi Eve and Stephanie Feldman, ‘Why We Write Jewish Historical Fiction‘ in Moment Magazine
- Robin Boylorn, ‘Now that white people have declared ‘bae’ over, black people can use it in peace‘ in The Guardian
- Lucy Ribchester, ‘Edwardian Fashion and The Hourglass Factory‘ on Books and the City
- Francine Prose, ‘They’re Watching You Read‘ in The New York Review of Books
- Rachel Hamada, ‘We Need New Stories, Part one and part two‘ on This Is Africa
- Alana Massey, ‘Being Winona in a World Made for Gwyneths‘ on Buzzfeed
- Wayétu Moore, ‘The Evolution of Bernice‘ in Guernica
- Sarah Emily Duff, ‘Not for all the tea‘ on Tangerine and Cinnamon
- Thea Traff, ‘Nadia Sablin’s “Aunties”‘ in The New Yorker
- Stacey Parker Le Melle, ‘Comfort Stations‘ on The Butter
- Hannah Pittard, ‘You’re (Not) My Favorite‘ on The Millions
- Karen Yossman, ‘Margaret Keane and Big Eyes: Why are we always so ready to believe women’s success is a lie?‘ on The New Statesman
- Elisa Gabbert, ‘On Styling Tricks‘ on Real Pants
- Rachel Kushner, ‘Diary: Bad Captains‘ in the LRB
- Emma Carroll, ‘My Family and Other Emigrants‘ on Girls Heart Books
- Lesley McDowell, ‘When the Midlist Is Where You Want to Be‘ on her blog
- Rebecca Whitney, ‘Domestic Noir Is Bigger Than Ever‘ in The Independent
- Maddie Crum, ‘Rejected Cover Designs for Edith Pearlman’s Honeydew‘ on Huffington Post
- Mark Perry, ‘Who’s Afraid of Alice Childress, Part 1‘ on Playmakers Repertory Company: From Page to Stage
- Vivian French, ‘My Inspiration‘ in The Guardian
- Ellie Gordon-Moershel, ‘How to Make a Recreational Women’s Ice Hockey Team‘ on The Butter
- Sarah Ditum, ‘Razors Pain You: What Dorothy Parker teaches us about our addiction to female suffering‘ in The New Statesman
- Leesa Cross-Smith, ‘Baseballese & Adorableness‘ on Real Pants
- Ashley C. Ford, ‘This Woman Wrote a Book with Almost No Male Characters and Women Love It‘ on Buzzfeed
- Stephen Burt, ‘Author, Feminist, Pioneer: The Unlikely Queen of Sci-Fi‘ on NPR
- Mandy Len Catron, ‘To Fall in Love With Anyone, Do This‘ in The New York Times
- Patricia Nicol, ‘The bad girls’ club‘ in The Sunday Times
- ‘New Faces of Fiction, 2015‘ in The Guardian
- Fiona McBennett, ‘Meet Irish Women Behind Publishing Powerhouses‘ in the Irish Independent
- Lizzy Kremer, ‘How do you like me now?‘ on Publishing for Humans
- Gayle Forman, ‘on why we need to talk about depression‘ in The Guardian
- Jason Weiss, ‘Silvina Ocampo‘ in Granta
- Elizabeth Drew, ‘Selma vs. History‘ in The New York Review of Books
- Anna Maria Hong, ‘On I, Let‘ on Drunken Boat
- Karen Yossman, ‘From Marilyn Monroe to Audrey Hepburn: why dead women make the ideal brand ambassadors‘ in the New Statesman
- Shelley Harris, ‘Bam! Pow! Scream!‘ in The Independent
- Chelsea Cain, ‘What Inspired Me to Write Thrillers‘ on Blinkbox
- Mo Daviau, ‘The Cardigan‘ on The Butter
- Elizabeth Svoboda, ‘The Power of Story‘ in Aeon
- Elizabeth Day, ‘I Was Sold into Sexual Slavery‘ in The Observer
- Emma Warren, ‘A Year in Oxleas Wood: December‘ on Caught by the River
- Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah, ‘A River Runs Through It‘ in The Believer
The interviews:
- Edith Pearlman in The New York Times
- Gill Hoffs on WordMothers
- Susan Howe on Poetry Foundation
- Lucy Wood in The Independent
- Eileen Miles in Vol.1 Brooklyn
- Sophia Toibin on Tales from the Reading Room
- Martine Bailey on Rebecca Mascull’s blog
- Lisa Williamson on Queer YA
- Paula Hawkins in Time, on Books and Reviews and on The Book Trail
- Judith Claire Mitchell on 4th Estate
- Roxane Gay on Salon
- Sharon Hogan (and Rob Delaney) in The Guardian
- Rebecca Bradley on Kelly Florentia’s blog
- Rene Denfeld on Sweatpants and Coffee
- Rachel Cusk in Vogue
- Shalini Boland in The Guardian
- Moira Young on Scottish Book Trust
- Alice Sebold on the Picador blog
- Keren David on We Love This Book
- Emily St. John Mandel on The Takeaway
- Tiphanie Yanique on Electric Literature
- Judith Butler in The New York Times
- Eva Dolan on BBC Radio 4’s Front Row
- Morgan McCarthy on The Right Stripes
- Pamela Paul on The Daily Beast
- Miranda July on NPR
- Emma Healey on Huffington Post
If you want some fiction/poetry to read:
- ‘The Storm‘ by Kate Chopin on Biblioklept
- ‘Dude Watchin’ with the Brontës‘ on Hark, a vagrant
- ‘The Hydraulic Theory of Families‘ by Elisa Casseri (tr. Mati Colarossi) on Parallel Texts
- ‘Seeder‘ by Rahawa Haile in The Butter
- ‘Waiting for Dark‘ by Mia Funk on Litro
- ‘Cities I’ve Never Lived In‘ by Sara Majka in Guernica
- ‘My Little Feminequist Pony‘ by Anne Thériault on Ravishly
- ‘South Korean Ferry Accident‘ by EJ Koh on Thought Catalog
- ‘Day 38‘ an extract from Wild by Cheryl Strayed on Bookanista
- ‘Fairy Poems‘ by Laura Madeline Wiseman on Empty Mirror
- Two poems by Minal Hajratwala in Granta
- ‘Indigo Gets Married‘ by Jami Attenberg in Guernica
- ‘Notes from the Island‘ by Akumbu Uche on Brittle Paper
- ‘For Sale‘ by Claire Fuller on her blog
- Two poems by Doireann Ní Ghríofa on And Other Poems
- Extracts from Black Rainbow by Rachel Kelly (partially read by Dominic West)
- ‘Goldilocks‘ by Angela Readman on Ink Sweat and Tears
- ‘The Quantum Theory of Suffering or Why I Look at the Moon‘ by Natalie Diaz on Guernica
- ‘Hopper’s Women‘ by Emily Carroll in Guernica
- Extract from The Versions of Us by Laura Barnett on One Book Lane
- Two poems by Heather Altfeld on Electric Literature
- ‘Colored Hats‘ by Gertrude Stein in The Guardian
- ‘Anna and Sigm‘ by Sharon Kivland in 3:am
The lists:
- 7 of Margaret Atwood’ Apocalypses, Ranked from Pretty Survivable to Totally Terrifying on Bustle
- Arab Women Writers Recommend Their Favorite Arab Women Writers on Arabic Literature (in English)
- 24 Things No One Tells You About Book Publishing, Curtis Sittenfeld on Buzzfeed
- First Fiction Spring 2015: Anticipated Debuts on Publishers Weekly
- The Best Marriage Plots in Novels on Huffington Post
- From Zadie Smith to Helen Oyeyemi and Emily Brontë, bestselling female authors who nailed their biggest hit novels under the age of 30 in Stylist
- Best Books to Read in 2015 in Harper’s Bazaar
- 2015 Fiction Preview, Part 1: 30 Books to Keep You Warm This Winter on Read Her Like an Open Book
- Ankara Press Debuts 6 African Romance Novels That Are Better Than Mills & Book on Brittle Paper
- 10 Books to Read This January in Red
- 6 Hot Romances Coming in January on Huffington Post
- Your 7-Day African Literary Make-Over on Brittle Paper
And the best things I’ve read this week:
- Mariya Karimjee, ‘Damage‘ (on FGM) on The Big Roundtable
- Daniel Dalton rewrites Harry Potter from Hermione’s point of view, ‘Hermione Granger and the Goddamn Patriarchy‘ (I know it was written by a man but I’m justifying it by 1. source text written by a woman; 2. feminism.)
- Beluah Maud Devaney, ‘How to Interview a Woman Writer‘ in The Toast
I love this Naomi, it’s something to look forward to every week. I know it must take you a lot of work so I just want to thank you; it’s great being able to link directly to some fascinating articles (although I’ve reached my limit of free articles in The New Yorker for this month!)
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That’s very kind of you, thank you. I’m glad people enjoy it – it keeps me going when I’m doing all the links! I’ve reached my NYer limit too – frustrating! I need to work out how to convert my magazine subscription to include digital too, seen as the print version stacks up while I read things online!
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I’m not quite sure how to pay to get unlimited access as it’s quoted in dollars, so presumably only for those in the US – otherwise I’d happily pay for it, as there are so many great articles.
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I agree!
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I really wish there was a “pin” option on this post so that I could just refer back to it for something to read. There is so much in here…Brilliant post!
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Thank you!
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I put a star by it, so I can refer back to it whenever I’m looking for something interesting to read and can’t be bothered getting into a book…I dread to think how long it takes you! But there are so many wonderful articles, many of which would pass me by.
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