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.
This week’s been all about friendship. The Cut declared it Friends Forever Week and ran a series of articles including, ‘The Friend Who Showed Me the Life I Could Have Had‘ by Nell Freudenberger; Emily Gould wrote, ‘Envy Nearly Wrecked My Best Friendship‘; Carina Chocano, ‘9 Friends Who Made Me Who I Am‘; Heather Havrilesky, ‘The Friend I’ve Been Fighting With for 20 Years‘; ‘Clique-Stalking: Instagram’s Greatest Social Pleasure‘ by Maureen O’Connor, and ‘25 Famous Women on Female Friendship‘. While Megan O’Grady wrote ‘This Spring’s Literary Subject May Have You Calling Your Pals‘ in Vogue; Lauren Laverne says ‘It’s time to rehabilitate matchmaking‘ in The Pool, Sulagna Misra writes ‘How Captain America Helped Me Make Friends in the Real World‘ on Hello Giggles and Leesa Cross-Smith writes, ‘Broken Friendships & Knowing All Too Well‘ on Real Pants.
If you’re still to discover it, one of my favourite blogs Something Rhymed covers friendships between female writers and is run by two female writers who are also best friends, Emma Claire Sweeney and Emily Midorikawa. On the site this week, ‘Crying Tears of Laughter: Irenosen Okojie and Yvette Edwards‘.
And then there’s the Amy Schumer sketch with Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Patricia Arquette and Tina Fey celebrating Louis-Dreyfus’ ‘Last Fuckable Day’. If you haven’t seen it yet, you must watch it RIGHT NOW! And when you’ve done that you can read Eleanor Margolis, ‘This Inside Amy Schumer sketch about the media’s treatment of “older” women is perfect‘ in the New Statesman and/or Lynn Enright, ‘Hollywood actresses skewer sexism and ageism brilliantly‘ in The Pool.
Unfortunately, it’s also been about Twitter trolls: Soraya Chemaly wrote in Time, ‘Twitter’s Safety and Free Speech Tightrope‘; Fiona Martin wrote ‘Women are silenced online, just as in real life. It will take more than Twitter to change that‘ in The Guardian; Sali Hughes wrote, ‘Trolls triumph by shutting down women’s voices‘ in The Pool
Congratulations to Yiyun Li who became the first woman to win the Sunday Times short story award and to Emily Bitto who won The Stella Prize this week.
In this week’s Harper Lee news, ‘Reese Witherspoon set to record Harper Lee’s new novel‘ reports Alison Flood in The Guardian.
And the woman with the most publicity this week is Kate Bolick, author of Spinster: Making a Life of One’s Own, who writes ‘How Writers Can Grow by Pretending to Be Other People‘ in The Atlantic, and is interviewed on Slate, in Cosmopolitan and on Longreads. While Stephanie Gorton Murphy writes, ‘The Uneasy Woman: Meghan Daum, Kate Bolick, and the Legacy of Ida Tarbell‘ on The Millions.
The best of the rest:
On or about books/writers/language:
- Doireann Ní Ghríofa, ‘on writing Clasp and what became of Airt Uí Laoghaire’s horse‘ in The Irish Times
- Ali Smith, ‘on Public Libraries‘ in The Independent
- Anne Milano Appel, ‘Skirting the Juniper Brambles: A Translator Narrowly Misses Getting Trapped in the Copyright Thicket‘ on Publishing Perspectives
- Anne Boyd Rioux, ‘Creating the Literary World of the Future: A Response to VIDA’s Recommendations‘ on The Millions
- ‘“Can You Think About Rising?” A year after the firings of two top women editors, four journalism leaders discuss the challenges of editing while female‘ in Politico
- Sage Stossel, ‘Writers who are also mothers‘ in The Boston Globe
- Lindsay Merbaum, ‘Not a Real Writer: How Self-Doubt Holds Me Back‘ on Electric Literature
- Caitlin White, ‘J.K. Rowling’s New Robert Galbraith Novel Is Coming, and Her Announcement Proves Again Why She’s the Queen of Twitter‘ on Bustle
- Moira Redmond, ‘The Girl on the Train – and other express encounters in literature‘ in The Guardian
- Sarah Winman, ‘What it means to be a reader‘ on Waterstones’ blog
- Elizabeth Andre, ‘Now Writing Is for Extroverts Too‘ on The Rumpus
- Ann Patchett, ‘Owning a bookstore means you always get to tell people what to read‘ in The Washington Post
- Norah Vincent, ‘On the Subject of My Suicide‘ on Literary Hub
- Rosy Edwards, ‘Why You Should Never Read Your Reviews, and it’s Not the Reason You Think‘ on the Huffington Post
- James Parker, ‘Renata Adler: Troll or Treasure?‘ in The Atlantic
- Alice Stephens, ‘Behind in the Count‘ in the Washington Independent Review of Books
- Elif Shafak, ‘Books were my crazy, wise companions in a conservative world‘ in The Pool
- Leslie Wilson, ‘Writing Last Train from Kummersdorf – A Little Bit of My Soul‘ on The History Girls blog
- A Celebration of Reading, by Outside the Box: Women Writing Women on Jane Davis’ website
- Concepta Cassar, ‘Food For Thought: What Montaigne Can Teach Us About Ultraprocessed Foods‘ on Litro
- Robin Black, ‘What’s So Great About Young Writers?‘ in The New York Times
- Sulagna Misra, ‘The Everyday Matters of Superheroes, Part I: Civil War, Marvel Nine Nine, and Dwayne McDuffie‘ and ‘The Everyday Matters of Superheroes, Part II: Jane Austen, AUs, and Pacific Rim‘ in The Toast
- Amanda Holmes, ‘Reading Wuthering Heights with Juvenile Offenders‘ on Women Writers, Women’s Books
- Melissa Harrison, ‘How to get down to grips with writing a book? Take a walk on the wild side‘ in The Guardian
- Sunili, ‘Reading as Revolution: Why I’m still banging on about People of Colour and Literature‘ on Medium
- Kelly Jensen, ‘A Conversation About Girls’ Stories with Laurie Halse Anderson and Courtney Summers‘ on Bookriot
- Mallory Ortberg, ‘How To Tell If You Are In A Shirley Jackson Story‘ in The Toast
- Arifa Akbar, ‘A foreign language can make sex scenes read better‘ in The Independent
- Rene Denfeld, ‘Books Saved Me‘ on Waterstones’ blog
- Michelle Dean, ‘Race, wit and mansplaining: female authors debate at Los Angeles books festival‘ in The Guardian
- Genevieve Cogman, ‘Women in SF&F Month‘ on Fantasy Cafe
- Taylor Sperry, ‘Readers may binge, but they do not purge‘ on Melville House
- Jessamyn West, ‘Kind of a Big Deal: What it’s like to be a famous librarian‘ on Medium
- Kamila Shamsie, ‘How I Began to Read‘ on Yahoo News India
- Harriet Mallinson, ‘Is romantic fiction a dangerous passion?‘ in The Guardian
- Courtney Maum, ‘Why Being A Debut Author Isn’t Exactly A Dream Come True‘ on Buzzfeed
- Joanna Walsh, ‘Kathy Acker’s pioneering adventures in the internet’s erogenous zone‘ in The Guardian
- Danielle Lazarin, ‘Where Are the Female Lit Mag Editors? Here.‘ on The Review Review
- Caitlin Moran, ‘What Have They Done to My Library?‘ on Nosy Crow
- Emily Beber, ‘Passed over to a broken machine: on Claire Potter’s Mental Furniture‘ in 3AM: Magazine
- ‘Glamorous and Bold: The Story of the First Black Female Cartoonist‘ on Black Then
- Bronte siblings bicentenary plans announced on the BBC
- Alissa Wilkinson, ‘The Power of Confession‘ in Pacific Standard
- Jonathan Shia, ‘Alison Bechdel: The Bechdel Test “Has Been a Very Strange Turn in My Life”‘ on Vulture
- Kaitlyn Greenidge, ‘The Riotous Power of Toni Morrison‘ in VQR
- Melissa Moorer, ‘This Writer is on Fire: Cathy Linh Che‘ in The Butter
- Alyssa Cole, ‘History in Color: A Black American Romance Roundtable‘ in The Toast
- Paul Kerschen, ‘Sour, Salty, Bitter, Spicy, Sweet: On Can Xue and Five Spice Street‘ in Music & Literature
- Alexander Chee, ‘From Potter to Tartt To Ferrante: How We Came to Love the Multi-Volume Novel‘ on Literary Hub
- Rachel Joyce, ‘In my head, books are always competing with real life‘ in The Telegraph
- Anna James, ‘Slew of second novels set for this summer‘ in The Bookseller
- Alison Flood, ‘Report finds UK books world has marginalised and pigeonholed ethnic minorities‘ in The Guardian
Personal essays/memoir:
- Hayley Webster, ‘I love cemeteries and memorial gardens…I need to see the evidence someone existed‘ on her website
- Ashley C. Ford, ‘I Moved to New York on Crutches’ on Femsplain
- Jo Hogan, ‘Heartbeats and Heartbreak‘ on her blog
- Lisa Grunwald, ‘The Art of Being Apart‘ in the New York Times
- Anna Feintuck, ‘Making sense of the city‘ on Scottish Book Trust
- Edwidge Danticat, ‘Without Her‘ in The New York Times
- Cal Flyn, ‘How do you acknowledge a shameful heritage?‘ in The Pool
- Sadie Stein, ‘Shying‘ in The Paris Review
- Abby Kloppenberg, ‘Small Talk: Intimacy Doesn’t Require Two People, Does It?‘ on Medium
- Heidi Julavits, ‘Turning Clutter Into Joy‘ in The New York Times
- Robyn Wilder, ‘How motherhood messes with your identity‘ in The Pool
- Leah Reich, ‘The Princess Who Learned To Lock Her Heart Away‘ on Medium
- Madhurima Chakraborty, ‘By Any Other Name‘ on The Hairpin
- Nicole Soojung Callaghan, ‘First Steps: Searching for My Birth Family‘ in The Toast
- Anastasia Selby, ‘The Day Before Thanksgiving I Got an Abortion‘ on Weird Sister
- Bridget Foley, ‘“I am not supposed to be alone. I am one of a pair”‘ on Salon
- Kelly Davio, ‘The Waiting Room: There Was That One Time‘ in The Butter
- Alexandra Neuman, ‘Tampon‘ on The Fem
- Pia Ehrhardt, ‘Inpatient, Outpatient‘ in The Butter
- Jess Bergman, ‘Letters to Anita: On My Grandmother’s Legacy‘ in The Toast
- Dini Karasik, ‘A Country Called My Mother‘ in The Butter
- Claire Greaves, ‘How Am I? Honestly!‘ on the Huffington Post
- Laura Turner, ‘The Claustrophobia of Fear‘ on Medium
Feminism:
- Caitlin Moran, ‘on Getting Her Legs Out‘ on The Pool
- Maanvi Singh, ‘See Priya Cook: Gender Bias Pervades Textbooks Worldwide‘ on NPR
- Margaret Corvid, ‘Moving on from the “happy hooker”: why I love my job as a sex worker‘ in the New Statesman
- Adeline Ginn, ‘Why Do Fewer Women Vote?‘ on the Huffington Post
- Anonymous, ‘I had an abortion because of extreme morning sickness. Spare others that pain‘ in The Guardian
- Camille Beredjick, ‘When A Queer Woman Counts Calories‘ on Buzzfeed
- Jetta Rae, ‘The Incidental Activism Of My Going Outside‘ on Ravishly
- Nilanjana S Roy & Radhaben Garva, ‘Painting the Women’s Movement‘ in Granta
- Jane C. Hu, ‘Gal Science: What Is Female Brain?‘ in The Toast
- Jamie Lauren Keiles, ‘Acceptable Catcalls‘ on The Awl
- Suzanne Moore, ‘Wanting to be liked won’t earn you respect‘ in The Pool
- Imogen Fox, ‘Sideburns for women: get in the loop‘ in The Guardian
- June Carbone and Naomi Cahn, ‘The Marriage Calculus‘ in Aeon
- Polly Neate, ‘Domestic Abuse Can Deny Women Their Vote – Here’s How‘ on the Huffington Post
- Alexandra Heminsley, ‘Paula Radcliffe’s final marathon‘ in The Pool
Society and Politics:
- Bim Adewunmi, ‘An Article About Black Women Shouldn’t Have To Come With A Warning Label‘ on Buzzfeed
- Rachel Munroe, ‘Have You Ever Thought About Killing Someone?‘ on Medium
- Kim Brooks, ‘The Struggle To Reclaim Parenting‘ on Buzzfeed
- Sarah Stillman, ‘Where Are the Children?‘ in The New Yorker
- Amanda Ripley, ‘The Upwardly Mobile Barista‘ in The Atlantic
- Tyler Wetherall, ‘Female distillers prove women know their alcohol – and always have‘ in The Guardian
- Amy Merrick, ‘Designing for Disability‘ in The New Yorker
- Paula Cocozza, ‘Unlike Matilda Kahl, I enjoy making decisions on what to wear every morning‘ in The Guardian
- Beejoli Shah, ‘My Bindi Is Not Your Bindi‘ on The Frisky
- Zakia Uddin, ‘What It’s Like Speaking A Different Language From Your Parents‘ on Buzzfeed
- Elizabeth Minkel, ‘From Nate Silver to #Milifans: welcome to the age of political fandom‘ in the New Statesman
- Sophie Heawood, ‘How hard can it be to cancel a mobile phone or satellite TV contract?‘ in The Guardian
- Lo Kwai Mei-en, ‘Reports from the Field– Speak Test: The Silencing of the Racialized Body‘ on VIDA
- Chimene Suleyman, ‘From Boyle to May, Immigration, as it turns out, has done rather well on providing jobs‘ on Media Diversified
- Eleanor Margolis, ‘No more “gal pals”: why do we assume lesbians are confused, attention-seeking, or man-boycotting straight women?‘ in the New Statesman
- Kristina Kay Robinson, ‘What’s Old Is New Again‘ in Guernica
- Morgan Meaker, ‘How has Britain’s most deprived community fared under the coalition?‘ in the New Statesman
- Marcia Rigg, ‘I Am Tired of Reports and Recommendations – What We Need Is a Culture Change in Attitudes Towards Mental Health‘ on the Huffington Post
- Natalie Bennett, ‘It’s Time for the UK to Stand Up for Migrants‘ on the Huffington Post
- Natasha Devon, ‘I’m a size 14 to 16, and Jamelia doesn’t think I should be able to shop for clothes that fit me – is she ok?‘ in The Independent
- Caroline Criado Perez, ‘Why don’t you care who made your clothes?‘ in the New Statesman
- Rachel Shabi, ‘Britain must help stop the human tragedy in the Mediterranean‘ in the Evening Standard
- Jameela Jamil, ‘Thank God I’m Not Jamelia‘ on the Huffington Post
- Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett, ‘Hooray for the Milifans. They can change the world for the better‘ in The Guardian
- Lauren Smiley, ‘What Strippers Can Teach Uber‘ on Medium
- Angela Flournoy, ‘When Black Neighbourhoods Disappear‘ on Literary Hub
- Joanna Biggs, ‘Keep smiling if you want a job in 2015‘ in The Guardian
- Zoe Williams, ‘Demanding more: on where democracy lives in the 21st century‘ on the Penguin blog
- Deborah Orr, ‘Why the hysteria over Nicola Sturgeon?‘ in The Guardian
- Bryony Gordon, ‘Katie Hopkins is a monster of our own making‘ in The Telegraph
- Hannah Pool, ‘Jourdan Dunn draws attention to fashion’s problem with black hair‘ in The Pool
- Laurie Penny, ‘There may be nothing to vote for — but there’s plenty to vote against‘ in the New Statesman
- Zoe Williams, ‘Katie Hopkins calling migrants vermin recalls the darkest events of history‘ in The Guardian
- Jane Rawson, ‘Don’t Mention the War‘ in Overland
- Sarah Ditum, ‘What Katie Hopkins wrote was monstrous. But save your anger for the politicians who decided to let migrants drown‘ in the New Statesman
Music, Film and Television:
- Rawiya Kameir, ‘Your Fave Is Problematic, And That’s Okay For You, But They Still Need To Apologize‘ in Fader
- Tracy Ann Oberman, ‘Here’s to you, Anne Bancroft‘ in The Pool
- Jeanette Leach, ‘Say What You Can‘ on [post-rock]
- Lauren Barton, ‘Patti Smith: punk’s poet laureate heads back on the road for her sins‘ in The Guardian
The interviews:
- Toni Morrison in The Guardian and on NPR
- Nicky Beer on The Rumpus
- Kirsty Logan on the Penguin Blog
- Charlotte Gordon in the Wall Street Journal
- Sabaa Tahir on Publishers Weekly podcast
- Yumi Sakugawa on Okey Panky
- Heidi Julavits on Electric Literature and Lit Up
- Meredith Talusan in The Toast
- Emily Schultz in Vol. 1 Brooklyn
- Lora Mathis on The Fem
- Jillian Tamaki in The Guardian
- Laila Lalami on the Los Angeles Review of Books Podcast
- Monica Byrne on The Rumpus
- Jan Morris in The Guardian
- Paula Hawkins on The Daily Beast and in The Guardian
- Mary Costello on Electric Literature
- Attica Locke on Kirkus and NPR
- Renée Knight on The Gymkhana Club
- Liz Fenwick on One Book Lane
- Helen Skelton in The Guardian
- P.P. Wong in The Strait Times
- Elizabeth Alexander on Salon
- Iona Grey on Rebecca Mascull’s blog
- Claire Potter on Very Small Kitchen
- Liza Klaussman in The Pool
- Andrea Gillies on Novelicious
If you want some fiction to read:
- ‘The Penis Problem‘ by Suzanne Schafer on her website
- ‘Last Chapter on Hotel Stationery‘ by Ursula Villarreal-Moura in The Butter
- ‘The Rental Heart‘ by Kirsty Logan on Storychord
- ‘Last Night & Yesterday‘ by Joslyn Sklar in The Offing
- An extract from Adult Onset by Anne-Marie MacDonald on Literary Hub
- ‘Maps‘ by Kate Sparks on Whiskeypaper
- ‘The Beacon‘ by Claire Fuller on her blog
- ‘Bird Song‘ by Nadia Hassan on Rewriting Mary Sue
- ‘Far Beyond the Brilliant Sky: 9‘ by Rebecca Burns on The Word Runs Through It
- An extract from Amy Wild: Amazon Summer by Helen Skelton
- An extract from The Enchanted by Rene Denfeld on Orion Books
- The opening of Mental Furniture by Claire Potter on Very Small Kitchen
- ‘Letters to a Mostly Imagined Correspondent‘ by Katherine Riegal in The Offing
- The first five chapters of Villa America by Liza Klaussman
- ‘You Are a Sacred Space‘, by Yumi Sakugawa in Okey Panky
- ‘Inkubation‘ by Jacqui Pack on Litro
If you want some poetry to read:
- ‘Elegie of a Diaspora‘ by Ally Ang on Vagabond City
- Five poems by Elizabeth T. Gray Jr. in Drunken Boat
- ‘All My Creys‘ by Cynthia Arrieu-King in Drunken Boat
- ‘Pathology‘ by Kenzie Allen on Litragger
- Three Poems by MRB Chelko on Blunderbuss
- ‘Dorothy Parker Swipes Left‘ by Heather Alexander in The Toast
If you want some non-fiction to read:
- An extract from Angry in Piraeus by Maureen Freely in The New York Review of Books
- ‘Small Stories #11‘ by Madeline Witt on The Rumpus
- An extract from The Sixth Extinction by Elizabeth Kolbert
- An extract from Hammer Head by Nina MacLaughlin on Literary Hub
The lists:
- The Spinster Hall of Fame: Cut-out Dolls of Five Pioneering Women Writers on Literary Hub
- 11 Novels That Expectant Parents Should Read Instead of Parenting Books on Electric Literature
- LGBTQ* Poets You Should Know: Highlighting Women of Color on The Fem
- 11 Books To Give Your Future Daughter Throughout Her Life on Bustle
- 31 Contemporary Poets You Need To Read on Buzzfeed
Pingback: Old Maid | Lynsey White
Great list!! Thanks so much for the Weird Sister shout-out! ❤
LikeLike
Thank you!
LikeLiked by 1 person