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. I’m using the term ‘media’ to include social media, so links to blog posts as well as traditional media are likely and the categories used are a guide, not definitives.
The Bailey’s Women’s Prize for Fiction shortlist was revealed this week. Sarah Shaffi of The Bookseller reports, ‘Experience tells on Baileys Women’s Prize shortlist‘ while Anna James of We Love This Book introduces us to each of the books and invites us to read along in this video.
Other big news was London Book Fair. For readers, this means announcements about new acquisitions from significant writers. Alison Flood in the Guardian reports, ‘Age shall not weary them: Diana Athill, 97, and Edna O’Brien, 84, are stars of London book fair‘ and ‘London book fair excited by Erica Jong’s new novel‘. The Quietus reports on Viv Albertine’s new book and the cover for Patti Smith’s sequel to Just Kids was released this week, see it in The Pool. If you want a glimpse into what goes on at the fair, Antonia Honeywell wrote on her blog about the panel she was part of, ‘Promoting Debut Authors – London Book Fair 14th April 2015‘.
The woman with the most publicity this week is Evangeline Jennings who’s interviewed on The Indie View, Col’s Criminal Library, Quirky Fiction, Omnimystery News and in character as one of the narrators of her short stories, Helen Wheels on Reflections of Reality.
In this week’s Harper Lee news, ‘PRH reveals Harper Lee title page‘ reports Publishers Weekly.
And in this week’s Elena Ferrante news, if you haven’t read anything by her, she’s this week’s Bedtime Bookclub in The Pool where you can read the first five chapters of My Brilliant Friend. Also in The Pool, Viv Groskop asks, ‘Is being a bestseller all in a name?‘ and Cristina Marconi writes, ‘Elena Ferrante versus Italy‘ on Little Atoms.
The best of the rest:
On or about books/writers/language:
- Elif Batuman, ‘Reading Racist Literature‘ in The New Yorker
- Alice Jolly, ‘My little girl has three mothers‘ in the Daily Mail
- Sophie Gilbert, ‘Why Women Aren’t Having Children‘ in The Atlantic
- Sarah Laskow, ‘The Nun’s Story‘ in Lapham’s Quarterly
- Allison Pearson, ‘Sandwich Woman‘ in The Telegraph
- ‘Stella prize 2015: the shortlisted authors on the stories behind their books‘ in The Guardian
- Amy McDaniel, ‘Frenzied, Zesty, Voracious: A Writing Exchange Between Caracas and Sarajevo‘ on Real Pants
- Jennifer Moses, ‘Literary Louisiana‘ in The New York Times
- Meg Wolitzer, ‘Literary Idol: on Mary McCarthy‘ in The LA Times
- Tracy K. Smith, ‘What Memoir Can Do That Poetry Can’t‘ on Lit Hub
- 2015 Pen Literary Awards Shortlists
- Nick Laird, ‘A New Way of Writing About Race’ (on Claudia Rankine’s Citizen) in the New York Review of Books
- Gina Fattore, ‘How Will I Live? Fame, Money, Day Jobs, and Fiction Writing‘ on The Millions
- Radhika Jones, ‘Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie‘ in Time’s 100 Most Influential People
- Mallory Ortberg, ‘Things I’ve Learned About Heterosexual Female Desire From Decades Of Reading‘ in The Toast
- Lily Meyer, ‘Literary Enemies: Ann Patchett v. Zadie Smith‘ on Ploughshares
- Anna Wiener, ‘Millennials, Meet Renata Adler‘ in New Republic
- Mallory Ortberg, ‘A Day In The Life Of A Fictional Female Reporter‘ in The Toast
- Christina Lauren, ‘Romance Novels Are Primed To Make An Impact On Society, So Stop Calling Them “Trashy,” OK?‘ on Bustle
- Mia You, ‘Recreate That Thing!‘ (on Gertrude Stein) on Jacket2
- Sally O’Reilly, ‘The Mindful Writer‘ on Bookanista
- Victoria Patterson, ‘Minding Other People’s Business: On Dawn Powell‘ in The Los Angeles Review of Books
- Sarah Hughes, ‘Feeding the Hunger – female writers are storming the male citadels of sci-fi‘ in The Guardian
- Eleanor Arnason, ‘Me and Science Fiction: What Are We, Chopped Liver?‘ on Strange Horizons
- Julie Enszer, ‘“Who You Are”: On Anne Carson’s Short Talks and Reprint Editions‘ on The Rumpus
- Anita Singh, ‘Agatha Christie and the book cover most foul‘ in the Telegraph
- Rachel McIntyre, ‘Why it’s OK to discuss teacher-pupil relationships in teen books‘ in The Guardian
- Nicky Richmond, ‘Whose Small, Unpeopled Life Is It Anyway?‘ (on India Knight’s In Your Prime) on Not Entirely Legal
- Alena Graedon, ‘Print is dead. Long live print!‘ on W&N
- Elisa Gabbert, ‘Inside the Mind of Poetry‘ on The Smart Set
- Marisa Wikramanayake, ‘Focus on Australian Women Writers of Ethnic Heritage‘ on Australian Women Writers Challenge
- Rahimeh Andalibian, ‘In My Own Words: Up in the Rose Hotel‘ on Publishers Weekly
- Laura Sook Duncombe, ‘Literary Ladies Cage Fight: Battle Royale‘ in The Butter
- Amanda Hess, ‘My Haters, Myself: Mastering the art of the haterbrag‘ (on Jennifer Weiner) on Slate
- Sibéal Pounder, ‘My inspiration: on Jill Murphy’s The Worst Witch‘ in The Guardian
- Hermione Eyre, ‘on Viper Wine‘ on Waterstones’ blog
- N.K. Jemisin, ‘Not the affirmative action you meant, not the history you’re making‘ (on the Hugo Awards) on Epiphany 2.0
- Leesa Cross-Smith, ‘Outlander & Aye‘ on Real Pants
- Lucy Hounsom, ‘Becoming part of the pattern‘ on Waterstones’ Blog
- I.W. Gregorio, ‘One Asian Book is Quite Enough‘ on Diversity in YA
- Rachel Billington, ‘Why I followed my grandfather’s final footsteps at Gallipoli‘ in The Telegraph
- Jess Meacham, ‘An Appreciation of David Foster Wallace’s Conjunctions and Prepositions‘ on her blog
- Lucas Klein, ‘Sinophone Women Write Better‘ on Paper Republic
- Nabina Das, ‘Why don’t we have more women on literary award shortlists?‘ on Scroll.in
- Rachel Cooke, ‘Caught in the parent trap: the fierce social politics of not having children‘ in the New Statesman
- B, ‘A letter to … JK Rowling, whose words gave me a sense of home‘ in The Guardian
- Sarah Seltzer, ‘Why We Should All Be Spinsters: Writers Take on a New Feminine Mystique‘ on Slate
- Lynn Kanter, ‘30 Women Novelists You Should Know – #24 Emily Gray Tedrowe‘ on Start with a Story
Personal essays/memoir:
- Samantha Simmonds, ‘Gone in 60 Seconds: That’s All It Takes for My Children to Turn Me From Sane Mild-Mannered Woman to Screaming Harridan‘ on the Huffington Post
- Kaitlyn Wylde, ‘The Corpse of Wall Street‘ on The Rumpus
- Leah Reich, ‘Will You Know It When You Get There?‘ on Medium
- Sali Hughes, ‘Have you got Summer Affective Disorder?‘ in The Pool
- Lucy Mangan, ‘“Why Isn’t This Holiday Making Me Miss Home?”‘ in Stylist
- Sarah C. Baldwin, ‘Build-a-Bear‘ on The Rumpus
- Lauren Laverne, ‘In defence of not wanting to swim with dolphins‘ in The Pool
- Sali Hughes, ‘Madonna has been my life’s guiding light‘ in The Pool
- Tracy Wan, ‘The Best Time I Had Alopecia‘ on The Hairpin
- Annalise Mabe, ‘The Spies‘ in Proximity Magazine
- D.L. Mayfield, ‘When God and Your Mom Think You’re Awesome‘ in The Toast
- Bec Susan Gill, ‘The Diminishing Probability of Kanye West Falling in Love With Me‘ on Medium
- Wayétu Moore, ‘Love/Woman/Thirty‘ on The Rumpus
- Laura Bogart, ‘I can’t forgive my mother‘ on Salon
- Awitin Mo, ‘Out of Fracture‘ on her blog
- Tracy Thorn, ‘Back in front of the cameras this week – and posing doesn’t get any easier‘ in the New Statesman
- Terri Schweitzer, ‘Silent Confrontations in Klamath Basin‘ on Medium
Feminism:
- Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett, ‘Am I beach body ready? Advertisers, that’s none of your business‘ in The Guardian
- Roxane Gay, ‘How to Handle Street Harassment: Don’t “Hey, Baby” Me‘ in Glamour
- Bridie Jabour, ‘Hate selfie sticks, or just young women having fun?‘ in The Guardian
- Suzanne Virdee, ‘Why Girls Are in Danger of Becoming Second Class Citizens and Why We Need to Act Now‘ on the Huffington Post
- Rachel McGrath, ‘We Need to Talk About Sexual Harassment That Happens at Concerts and Music Festivals‘ on the Huffington Post
- Heather Havrilesky, ‘Ask Polly: Should I Have a Baby or Establish My Career First?‘ in The Cut
- Jessica Testa, ‘What Happens When We Treat Anonymous Stories Of Sexual Assault Like Gossip Items‘ on Buzzfeed
- Sarah Ditum, ‘Nice try, Maajid Nawaz, but you didn’t go to a lapdancing club because you’re a feminist‘ on Medium
- Rebecca Schiller, ‘Sheila Kitzinger was unafraid to confront female sexuality on a daily basis‘ in The Guardian
- Monica Mark, ‘Chibok kidnapping: stoicism as girls taken by Boko Haram are remembered‘ in The Guardian
- Malala Yousafzai, ‘Malala Letter to Chibok Girls‘ on Scribd
- Maggie Stiefvater, ‘The Anatomy of Rage‘ on her blog
- Samira Ahmed, ‘The girlification of TV characters’ hair‘ in The Pool
- Various, ‘Why Can’t We Accept That Some Women Don’t Want Kids?‘ Zócalo on KCRW
- Amy Gastelum, ‘Miscarriage or Murder?‘ in Guernica
- Chantelle Fiddy, ‘We Need To Talk About Sexual Harassment In Nightclubs‘ in Mixmag
- Lyndsay Kirkham, ‘…I’m No Angel…On Why We Can’t Let Fat People Be Happy‘ on Queen Mob’s Teahouse
- Syreeta McFadden, ‘The lack of female genitals on statues seems thoughtless until you see it repeated‘ in The Guardian
- Bidisha, ‘The exhibition and sale of Frida Kahlo’s love letters is a grubby violation‘ in The Guardian
- Huma Munshi, ‘George Galloway’s comments on forced marriage are a dangerous abuse of power‘ in The Guardian
- Sarah Ditum, ‘Why are we so desperate to find a genetic explanation for sex offenders?‘ in the New Statesman
- Ann Friedman, ‘Women Can’t End the Wage Gap on Their Own‘ in The Cut
- Jessica Valenti, ‘Male politicians always play up gender in their races. Hillary Clinton can, too‘ in The Guardian
- Hayley Webster, ‘I want to be a stay at home mum…but it feels impossible‘ on her website
- Sharline Chiang, ‘Could I Have Been Jailed For My Miscarriage?‘ on Buzzfeed
- Alison Taylor, ‘We are irretrievably married to ourselves, for richer or poorer‘ in The Independent
- Eva Wiseman, ‘The smiling face of “seaside sexism”‘ in The Observer
- Donna Ladd, ‘A female president would be cool, but I’m not sold on Hillary Clinton yet‘ in The Guardian
Society and Politics:
- Vanessa Mártir, ‘Color in AW(hite) Place‘ in Side B Magazine
- Nicole Pyler Fisk, ‘Walter Scott, A Black Man, Was Shot To Death — But My White Husband, Also Walter Scott, Is Safe And Sound‘ on Bustle
- Dhanya Nair, ‘An Open Letter to UK Politicians From an Immigrant Woman‘ on the Huffington Post
- Rebecca Atkinson, ‘How David Cameron has betrayed people with disabilities‘ in The Guardian
- Suzanne Moore, ‘Our art schools have become finishing schools for a wealthy few‘ in The Guardian
- Parisa Tabriz, ‘Pwnd: How a Google hacker would hack you‘ on Medium
- Nissa Rhee, ‘Back to War‘ in Guernica
- Jessica Probus, ‘Planning For A Future We Can Actually Imagine‘ on Buzzfeed
- Carolyn Asome, ‘The Style Uniform‘ in The Pool
- Rebecca Mead, ‘Hilary For President: No Joke‘ in The New Yorker
- Jade E. Davis, ‘Black Men Being Killed Is The New Girls Gone Wild‘ on Medium
- Luba Ostashevsky, ‘Sacrificial States‘ in Aeon
- Julie Chinitz, ‘Shiftiness: The Border In Eight Cases‘ on Lit Hub
- Dawn Foster, ‘“Every low-paid interviewee knows their hourly rate to the penny”‘ in The Guardian
- Suzanne Moore, ‘Extending right to buy is the Tories’ zombie Thatcherism at its worst‘ in The Guardian
- Sultanah Parvin, ‘The Straw Man Cometh‘ on Media Diversified
- Palwesha Yusaf ‘The Aid Industry: Can we really get by on doing good with good intentions only?‘ on Media Diversified
- Maya Goodfellow, ‘Letting migrants drown in the Mediterranean, is this what the Tories mean by ‘British values’?‘ on Media Diversified
- Deepa Bhasthi, ‘That Mallu Joke: Racism in India, and the Fear of the Outsider‘ in Kindle Magazine
- Caitlin Doughty, ‘The sacred task of caring for the dead should be a normal part of life‘ in The Guardian
- Theresa Brown, ‘Love, Death and Spaghetti‘ in The New York Times
- Sophie Heawood, ‘Why is David Cameron so afraid of single parents?‘ in The Guardian
- Susan Ferriss, ‘Virginia tops nation in sending students to cops, courts: Where does your state rank?‘ on Center for Public Integrity
- Brooke Lee Foster, ‘What is it like to be poor at an Ivy League school?‘ in the Boston Globe
Music, Film and Television:
- Chantal Braganza, ‘Happy Birthday, Selena Quintanilla-Pérez‘ on The Hairpin
- Angela Clarke, ‘How shouting spoilers at Wolf Hall shows the world has imploded‘ on The Wharf
- Caroline C, ‘Why Della in Raised By Wolves is the best female character on TV right now‘ on Beamly
- Lisa Peet, ‘Punk Rock Indeed: The Two Sides of Viv Albertine‘ on The Millions
- Anna March, ‘Dead girls, killer ratings: “Game of Thrones,” “True Detective” and TV’s epidemic of violence against women‘ on Salon
- Jaya Saxena, ‘The Bride Paradox Of “Four Weddings”‘ on Buzzfeed
- Julie Beck, ‘Dashboard Confessional, or When It Was Cool to Have Feelings‘ in The Atlantic
- Angela Watercutter, ‘Ex Machina Has a Serious Fembot Problem‘ on Wired
- Lili Loofbourow, ‘The Many Faces of Tatiana Maslany‘ in The New York Times
- Laura Goode, ‘The New Ladder: Anatomy of Indie Women’s Picture “Farah Goes Bang”‘ on Indiewire
The interviews:
- Bidisha on Asian Culture Vulture
- Gurkeyrith on The Fem
- Mona Eltahawy in The New York Times
- Attica Locke on Serpent’s Tail and in The Independent
- Lily King on Lit Hub
- Tishani Doshi & Karthika Naïr in Granta
- Monica McClure on the Huffington Post
- Jane Rawson on Australian Writers’ Centre
- Ladan Osman on Black Girl in Om
- K.A. Holt on the Huffington Post
- Alice Stevenson on Bookanista
- Sharma Shields on Okey-Panky
- Sarah Vaughan on Rebecca Mascull’s blog
- Poetry As Practice Contributors on The Quietus
- Rachel Billington in The Guardian
- Sofi Oksanen in The Guardian
- Kim Moore on Seren Books’ Blog
- Monica Byrne in The Guardian
- Valeria Luiselli on The Guardian Books’ Podcast
- Jenny Offill and Ali Smith on the RTÉ Book Show
- Sam Baker and Lauren Laverne in The Independent
- Toni Morrison in The Independent
- Sarah Helm on Slate
- Rachel Held Evans in The Atlantic
- Roxane Gay on ABC
- Jill Alexander Essbaum on The Rumpus
- Liza Klaussman in The Independent
If you want some fiction to read:
- ‘Morning, Noon & Night‘ by Claire-Louise Bennett in The White Review
- ‘Words Escape Me‘ by Claire-Louise Bennett in 3:AM Magazine
- An extract from Preface, or We As Two Separate Planets by Shushan Avagyan (translated by Deanna Cachoian-Schanz) in Words Without Borders
- ‘Wide Shot‘ by Anna Davtyan (translated by Nazareth Seferian) in Words Without Borders
- ‘I’m Not Going to Die‘ by Ani Asatryan (translated by Adrineh Der-Bogossian) in Words Without Borders
- ‘Before Sunrise‘ by Lilit Karapetyan (translated by Nairi Hakhverdi) in Words Without Borders
- ‘A Mansion with Many Rooms‘ by Kutti Revathi (translated by Lakshmi Holmström) in Words Without Borders
- ‘Revolution Nathan‘ by Dhamayanthi (translated by Lakshmi Holmström) in Words Without Borders
- ‘For Your Safety and Enjoyment‘ by Emily Schultz in The Butter
- An extract from Summertime by Vanessa Lafaye on Orion Books
- ‘The Reality Game‘ by Rachael Dunlop
- An excerpt of Viper Wine by Hermione Eyre on The Awl
- ‘The First Six Meters‘ by Vidya Panicker on The Fem
- ‘Theresa Enters‘ by Amy Silverberg in The Offing
- ‘Where Things Are Made‘ by Tera Joy Cole in Blunderbuss
- ‘Right Eye‘ by Isabel Costello on FlashFlood
- An extract from The Versions of Us by Laura Barnett on One Book Lane
- An extract from The Folded Clock: A Diary by Heidi Julavits on Lit Hub
- ‘Major Maybe‘ by Ann Beattie in The New Yorker. She talks about it here.
- ‘Making Babies‘ by Laurie Penny on Motherboard
- ‘House Heart‘ by Amelia Gray on Longreads
- An extract from Eve Out of Her Ruins by Ananda Devi (translated by Jeffrey Zuckerman) in The Offing
- An excerpt from A Portable Shelter by Kirsty Logan in The Butter
- ‘The Other Woman‘ by Cath Bore on FlashFlood
- ‘Clowns/Clown‘ by Mati Colarossi (translated by Arabella Bertola)
- ‘Killing Stones‘ by Ananda Devi on PEN American
If you want some poetry to read:
- ‘What Did Sriraman Say?‘ by Perundevi (translated by Padma Narayanan and Subashree Krishnaswamy) in Words Without Borders
- ‘Highway‘ by Malathi Maithri (translated by Lakshmi Holmström) in Words Without Borders
- ‘Three Dreams‘ by Sharmila Seyyid (translated by Lakshmi Holmström) in Words Without Borders
- ‘Fear‘ by Krishangini (translated by Padma Narayanan and Subashree Krishnaswamy) in Words Without Borders
- ‘Shunaka: Blood Count‘ by Karthika Nair in Granta
- ‘Gone to Pasture/To Speak‘ by Natalie Eilbert in The Offing
- ‘Compromised Field‘ by Shareen Mansfield on The Honeyed Quill
- ‘Humbles‘ by Frances Leviston on Poem Today
- ‘The Handshake‘ by Isabel Rogers on her blog
- ‘A Psalm for the Scaffolders‘ by Kim Moore on Seren Books’ Blog
If you want some non-fiction to read:
- An extract from Smoke Gets in Your Eyes & Other Lessons from the Crematorium by Caitlin Doherty on Canongate
- ‘Small Stories #10‘ by Madeline Witt on The Rumpus
- Extracts from From The Racial Imaginary: Writers on Race in the Life of The Mind in The Offing
- ‘Meet the Stanley Cup‘ by Molly Brooks on The Nib
- An extract from Headscarves and Hymens: Why the Middle East Needs a Sexual Revolution by Mona Eltahawy on Macmillan Audio
- An extract from Between You & Me: Confessions of a Comma Queen by Mary Norris on Lit Hub
- An extract from I’m Very Into You: Correspondence 1995–1996 by Kathy Acker and McKenzie Wark on Lit Hub
The lists:
- Books of the Week on Publishers Weekly
- Anna Freeman’s Stereotype-Busting Women In Historical Fiction on the Huffington Post
- 20 Fascinating Facts About J.K. Rowling You Probably Never Knew in Stylist
- 11 new British crime series on PanMacmillan
- 6 J.K. Rowling Quotes On Failure, Because Failing Well Is A Life Skill That Even The Most Successful Need on Bustle
- Women to Watch: 2015 Edition on BookPage
- Lorraine M. López’s Six Writers On Social Class on Vela
- Five Great Pieces of Advice from J.K. Rowling’s New Book Very Good Lives in Paste
- 5 Books Written by Queer and Trans Women That Set Me Free on Everyday Feminism
- 10 Women’s Books in Translation You Should Be Reading in Litro
Reblogged this on Cath Bore and commented:
My flash fiction “The Other Woman” is included in The Writes of Women’s In the Media round up this week:
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Great list as ever Naomi, I’ve been taking a wee blogging break, but back now and enjoying lining up some of your links for my Monday reading. Particularly interested in the excerpt from the Caitlin Doherty book. And of course, Tracey Thorn. I love Tracey Thorn.
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Thanks Cathy. Yes to both of those!
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Great reads! Thank you
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