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.
There’s an election in the UK this week. As you’d expect, there’s been a number of articles about it, policies and where the previous coalition has left us. Huffington Post have been running a ‘Beyond the Ballot’ series. Contributions include: Vivienne Westwood, ‘The Housing Crisis – Politicians Are Criminals‘ and Denise Robertson, ‘Today, There Are No Housing Lifelines for People Who Fall on Hard Times‘. Media Diversified also have a series called ‘Other Voices’. Contributions include, Maya Goodfellow ‘Why aren’t politicians talking about racial discrimination in the job market?‘ and ‘Letting migrants drown in the Mediterranean, is this what the Tories mean by ‘British values’?‘ and ‘The pro-Tory business letter: a reminder that politics shouldn’t be dominated by a privileged few‘
Elsewhere, Zoe Williams wrote ‘10 big misconceptions politicians have about women‘ in The Pool; Deborah Orr, ‘Scotland is sending a curveball down Westminster way – and it’s not just Labour that will get hit‘ in The Guardian; Gaby Hinsliff, ‘We floating voters may be unenthused but we’re definitely not unprincipled‘ in The Guardian; Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett wrote, ‘Why I’m thinking about spoiling my ballot‘ in the New Statesman; Laura Waddell, ‘Pink Vacuum Politics‘ on Libertine’ Suzanne Moore, ‘Parliament? Over the years I’ve met several powerful men there who have no idea of boundaries‘ in the New Statesman; Hannah Pool asks, ‘Why aren’t black women voting?‘ in The Pool; Suzanne Moore, ‘I’m sick of this estate agent election‘ in The Guardian
Saturday saw the death of crime writer, Ruth Rendell. The Guardian reported her death and ran a series of articles: Val McDermid wrote, ‘No one can equal Ruth Rendell’s range or accomplishment‘; Mark Lawson, ‘Ruth Rendell and PD James: giants of detective fiction‘; Stanley Reynolds wrote her obituary; here she is ‘In Quotes‘ and if you haven’t read anything by her, The Guardian also recommend ‘Five Key Works’ while The Telegraph have, ‘The best of Ruth Rendell: 10 to read, watch and listen to‘.
And then there was that beach body ready advertisement. Responses to which ranged from Gemma Correll, ‘Hilarious Illustrations Show You How to Get “Beach Body Ready”‘ in Stylist; Hadley Freeman, ‘What is a beach body anyway?‘ in The Guardian, and Tara Costello explained, ‘Why I Stripped to Make a Statement‘ on the Huffington Post.
Congratulations to Marion Coutts on winning the Wellcome Prize. Jenny Turner writes in The Guardian as to why Coutts is her hero. The shortlist for the Encore Award was announced and includes Harriet Lane, Amanda Coe, Rebecca Hunt and Deborah Kay Davies. And Gaby Wood was ‘…made Booker’s literary director‘ reports The Bookseller.
And the woman with the most publicity this week is Leesa Cross-Smith who’s the featured writer on Atticus Review. She’s interviewed and has two stories up, ‘My Lolita Experiment‘ and ‘Dandelion Light‘; another in Synaesthesia Magazine, ‘The Darl Inn‘, and her column on Real Pants this week is ‘Who Will Run the Frog Hospital? & Girlfriendships‘.
The best of the rest:
On or about books/writers/language:
- John Yau, ‘Language Is Not Colorless: The Amazing Writing of Sawako Nakayasu‘ on Hyperallergic
- Bim Adewunmi, ‘Crush of the week: Toni Morrison‘ in The Guardian
- MJ Carter, ‘We should thank a Devon shoemaker for freedom of the press’ in The Guardian
- Heather Cocks and Jessica Morgan, ‘“Who Is Cagney Without Lacey?”: The Fug Girls on Writing as a Duo‘ in The Toast
- Neil Gaiman, ‘Why I love Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell‘ in The Guardian
- Susanna Clarke ‘on the TV Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell: “My own characters were walking about!”‘ in The Guardian
- Masha Gessen, ‘“Paying Attention and Paying Respect Is All That Writers Can Do”‘ on Slate
- Ali Smith, ‘The Joy of Finding Myself Guest Director of Brighton Festival‘ on the Huffington Post
- Doreen St. Félix, ‘Toni Morrison‘ on The Oyster Review
- Lucy Worsley, ‘It doesn’t matter if The Tudors and Wolf Hall are historically inaccurate and a bit silly‘ in the Independent
- Sarah Hilary, ‘Writing a New Crime Series‘ on Headline
- EllaClaire, ‘Teenage opinion: why you should read classic books‘ in The Guardian
- Patrice Gopo, ‘Does Race Matter If Books, Like ‘Anne of Green Gables,’ Touch Your Heart?‘ in The New York Times
- Charlotte Gordon, ‘Why I Teach Mary Wollstonecraft‘ on the Huffington Post
- Louise O’Neill ‘on Lisbeth Salander‘ on We Love This Book
- Kirsty Logan, ‘Boats, Buddhism and the Boom‘ on Foyles
- Hillary Kelly, ‘Bring back the serialized novel‘ in the Washington Post
- Arifa Akbar, ‘How many more books will there be telling me how to be a Muslim?‘ in The Independent
- Lesley McDowell, ‘Do you have to be middle-class to be a writer?‘ on her blog
- Amelia Gray ‘on “Labyrinth”‘ on Real Pants
- Hannah Gersen, ‘The Value of Writing Programs: On Why I Don’t Have an M.F.A.‘ on The Millions
- Mo Moulton, ‘On Harriet Vane and Lord Peter Wimsey: An Essay with Personal Interruptions‘ in The Toast
- Charles Wolford, ‘Obsessive Love: Sex in Brontë and Faulkner‘ on Quadrapheme
- Allison Pohle, ‘The Last Days of Ladies’ Home Journal‘ on The Hairpin
- Hannah Furness, ‘Jane Austen’s real Mr Darcy unmasked by historian‘ in The Telegraph
- Alice Audley, ‘Zoella and the YouTuber books you need to buy‘ in The Telegraph
- Hanya Yanagihara, ‘How I Wrote My Novel: A Little Life‘ on Vulture
- Francine Prose, ‘I admire Charlie Hebdo’s courage. But it does not deserve a PEN award‘ in The Guardian
- Julia Copus, ‘A Self Among the Crowd‘ on Royal Literary Fund
- Elisa Gabbert, ‘The Art of the Paragraph‘ on The Smart Set
- Emma Teitel, ‘Why romance novelists are the rock stars of the literary world‘ on Macleans
- Laura Sook Duncombe, ‘Literary Ladies Cage Fight: Mommie Dearest‘ in The Butter
- Kirsty Logan, ‘Made-up worlds (and a worldie maid)‘ on Bookanista
- Melissa Moorer, ‘This Writer’s On Fire: Lisa Mecham‘ in The Butter
- Lizzy Kremer, ‘What Happens Next: Predicting the Future‘ on Publishing for Humans
- ‘Day and Night I Find Neither Rest Nor Peace’; Charlotte Brontë’s Beautiful Letters On Unrequited Love‘ in Stylist
- Katrina Otuonye, ‘On Deadlines, Failure, and Getting Started‘ on Litro
- Dr Jenny McAuley, ‘on “Vindication of the Writes of Woman” by Mary Wollstonecraft‘ on The History Vault
Personal essays/memoir:
- Alison Taylor, ‘I’ve become part of a new social phenomenon – the boyfriend proposal‘ in The Independent
- Stacey Duguid, ‘Marathon Shopper‘ in The Pool
- Jordana Narin, ‘No Labels, No Drama, Right?‘ in The New York Times
- Michelle García, ‘The War of Forgetting‘ in Guernica
- Allison P. Davis, ‘Boxing Helped Me Tap Into My Inner Rage‘ in The Cut
- Sonya Lea, ‘Shattered‘ in Guernica
- Alana Massey, ‘The Dickonomics of Tinder‘ on Medium
- Casie Brown, ‘The Boy Is Mine‘ on The Hairpin
- Leah Reich, ‘The Cruelest Month‘ on Medium
- Amanda Giracca, ‘The Art of Butchery‘ in Aeon
- Rebecca Harrington, ‘The Apple Watch Is Great for Starting Conversations About the Apple Watch‘ in The Cut
- Alix Johnson, ‘Telling Stories: Secrets, Lies, and Sexual Assault‘ in The Toast
- Vivian Underhill, ‘Steal This Book if You Need To‘ on The Fem
- Sali Hughes, ‘Not going out‘ in The Pool
- Erika Smith, ‘A Return to Babysitting‘ on The Billfold
- Amy Glynn, ‘Desire Lines‘ on Berfrois
- Caolan Madden, ‘I Was Somebody: My Weekend With Miranda July’s App‘ on Weird Sister
- Tracy Moore, ‘My Love Affair with Androgynous Clothes‘ on Jezebel
- Shanrah Wakefield, ‘The Best Time I Burned the Shit Out Of My Hand Whilst Waxing My Box For A Boy‘ on The Hairpin
- Lynsey White, ‘Old Maid‘ on her blog
- Heather Steadham, ‘Firepower‘ in The Butter
- Colleen Kinder, ‘Long Night’s Journey Into Spring‘ in VQR
- Louise Troh, ‘The Tragic Love Story Behind America’s First Ebola Victim‘ in Vanity Fair
Feminism:
- Hattie Crisell, ‘Why is going grey still such a big deal?‘ in The Pool
- Meghan Murphy, ‘On ‘corporate feminism’ and the appropriation of the women’s movement‘ on Feminist Current
- Caitlin Moran, ‘How to Build a Girl‘ in The Times
- Jennifer Purdie, ‘Mormon, Childless, And Constantly Condescended To‘ on Buzzfeed
- Alexandra Duncan, ‘How I Made A Career Out Of Showing People My Cervix‘ on Buzzfeed
- Ann Friedman, ‘Older Women Aren’t Enemies, They’re Envied‘ in The Cut
- Ann Glaviano, ‘Report from the Field: On (Not) Reporting Sexual Violence‘ on VIDA
- Amelia Gentleman, ‘Time, gentlemen: when will the last all-male clubs admit women?‘ in The Guardian
- Siobhan Fenton, ‘Why do British feminists care more about sexist adverts than abortion rights in Northern Ireland?‘ in The Independent
- H. Liang, ‘Advice to my former self: desperate working mother of two young children‘ on Shrink Grows Kids
- Alana Levinson, ‘Girl, Send Me a Frext‘ on Medium
- Julia Alsop, ‘Out of Our Hands‘ on Maisonneuve
- Jessica Roy, ‘A Modest Proposal: How to Close the Gender Wage Gap‘ in The Cut
- Tracey Moore, ‘What Do Men Want? Obedient Wives and Independent Daughters, Apparently‘ on Jezebel
- Mara Lee, ‘Kissing historically‘ on Media Diversified
- Joanne McAlpine, ‘Looking Back: Fragments From Women’s Shelters (1981 – 1996)‘ in The Toast
- Janet Reitman, ‘Abortion Rights at Risk: The GOP Opens a New Front in the War on Women‘ in Rolling Stone
- Jane Merrick, ‘Should wolf-whistling be reported to the Police? If you’re Poppy Smart, then yes‘ in The Independent
- Shani Gilchrist, ‘Why I Talk To My Sons About My Work‘ on Role Reboot
- Vaidehi Mujumdar, ‘The state still controls women’s bodies. Especially brown and black ones‘ in The Guardian
- Joni Edelman, ‘Being Thin Didn’t Make Me Happy, But Being ‘Fat’ Does‘ on Everyday Feminism
- Joan Smith, ‘Women who waive their anonymity are changing our perspective on rape‘ in The Guardian
Society and Politics:
- Megan Garber, ‘The History of ‘Thug’‘ in The Atlantic
- Meredith Talusan, ‘From A Symbol Of Athletic Power To A Symbol Of Gender Transition‘ on Buzzfeed
- Pilot Viruet, ‘Black Exhaustion‘ on Medium
- Shannon Keating, ‘Coming Out as Gay in Elementary School‘ on Buzzfeed
- Anna Della Subin, ‘In the Light of Ras Tafari‘ in The White Review
- Amie Ferris-Rotman, ‘The Earthquake-Wrecked Town That the Nepali Government Forgot‘ in The Atlantic
- Sharon Harrigan, ‘Foie Gras, the Vegetable‘ in VQR
- Amy Quan Barry, ‘Forty Years Ago Today‘ in the Huffington Post
- Leigh Cowart, ‘The Drug That’s Infecting Indiana‘ on Medium
- Dawn Foster, ‘Free Schools‘ in the London Review of Books
- Minal Hajratwala, ‘A Brief Guide to Gender in India‘ in Granta
- Julie Vuong, ‘What does it feel like to flee your country in an unsafe boat?‘ in The Pool
- Erika Hayasaki, ‘Living with Being Dead‘ on Medium
- Annie Waldman, ‘Scientific Expertise on Lethal Injection Falls Short‘ in Guernica
- Joan Walsh, ‘The hideous white hypocrisy behind the Baltimore “Hero Mom” hype: How clueless media applause excuses police brutality‘ on Salon
- Bella Qvist, ‘Freshly Filtered Favouritism: Why I Wouldn’t Want to Be a Barista at Pret‘ on the Huffington Post
- Maureen Rich Wallace, ‘My Son Belongs in Your Child’s Class‘ on Medium
- Myriam Francois-Cerrah, ‘To talk about race, we need to talk about the problem with “whiteness”‘ in the New Statesman
- Kamila Shamsie, ‘Murdered on the streets of Karachi: my friend who dared to believe in free speech‘ in The Guardian
- Diana Prichard, ‘Cultivating a New Immigrant Narrative‘ on Medium
- Kimberly Chrisman-Campbell, ‘The Day AIDS Hit the Fashion Industry‘ in The Atlantic
- Rafia Zakaria, ‘Drones — One white death can change everything‘ on Dawn
- Alex Morris, ‘How Exactly Do You Teach Femininity?‘ in The Cut
- Paris Lees, ‘Why the world needs to stop gawping, and support Bruce Jenner’s transition.’ in Cosmopolitan
- Laura Gottesdiener, ‘A Foreclosure Conveyor Belt‘ in Guernica
- Elif Shafak, ‘There is no us and them: remembering the lost Armenians‘ in the New Statesman
- Nancy Cook, ‘When Cities and Suburbs Work Together‘ in The Atlantic
- Morgan Meaker, ‘Gentrification in Brixton: who wins, who loses and who’s to blame?‘ in the New Statesman
- Helen Lewis, ‘The battle for better maternity care shows the limits of the Amazon warehouse approach to medicine‘ in the New Statesman
Music, Film and Television, Personalities:
- Tracey Thorn, ‘In music today, it’s all or nothing – rich at the top or languishing forlornly at the bottom‘ in the New Statesman
- Louisa Thomas, ‘The Boxer and the Batterer‘ on Grantland
- Sally Howe, ‘Pulp Nonfiction: Death (and Life) on Reality TV‘ on Blunderbuss
- Helen O’Hara, ‘Meryl Streep and Rose Byrne are prising open Hollywood for women‘ in The Pool
- Eleanor Margolis, ‘Calling Eurovision too gay for a “family show” is as perplexing as it is insidious‘ in the New Statesman
- Lauren Laverne, ‘Katie Hopkins and incendiary opinions are the new celebrity gossip‘ in The Pool
- Agata Pyzik, ‘In Praise of Vulgar Feminism: On Kim Gordon and Courtney Love‘ in n+1
The interviews:
- Sandra Newman on The Writes of Woman
- Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie in the Wall Street Journal
- Miriam Toews in The Guardian
- Mariel Hemingway in the LA Times
- Sarah Gerard on Literary Hub
- Aimee Bender on Literary Hub
- Elizabeth Alexander in the Washington Post
- Lucy K Shaw on Real Pants
- Rachel Holmes on Guernica
- Sarah Waters in the Huffington Post and Culture Whisper
- Meghan Daum on Slate
- Jandy Nelson in The Guardian
- Tracey Thorn in The Pool
- Alison Bechdel in TIME
- Michelle Tea on The Rumpus
- Valeria Luiselli on Literary Hub
- Sarah Lepiciger on Reading Agency
- Darcey Steinke on The Rumpus
- Jillian Tamaki on The Hairpin
- Laura Salters on Sky’s Book Corner
- Hilary Mantel on Fourth Estate
- Carla Berrocal on Broken Frontier
- Jodi Picoult and Samantha van Leer via Bustle
- Vivian Gornick on Publishers Weekly
- Anna North on One Book Lane
- Janice Galloway in the Falkirk Herald
- Liza Klaussman on The White Company
- Janet Champ on The Toast
- Annelise Finegan on Three Percent
- Kate Hamer on Thriller Books Journal
- Kim Gordon on The Quietus
- Cece Bell in The Guardian
If you want some fiction to read:
- ‘The Taste of Home‘ by Ola Awonubi on The Reading Life
- An extract from The Green Road by Anne Enright in The Irish Times
- ‘Love Isn’t Easy When You’re the National Anthem‘ by Aoko Matsuda (translated by Jeffrey Angles) in Guernica
- ‘Light‘ by Leslie Nneka Arimah in Granta (Winner of Commonwealth Writers Short Story for Africa)
- ‘Famished Eels‘ by Mary Rokonadravu in Granta (Winner of Commonwealth Writers Short Story for the Pacific)
- An extract from The Enchanted by Rene Denfeld on Orion Books
- ‘Redshift‘ by Erin Calabria in Atlas and Alice
- ‘Chamber in My Heart‘ by Sossity Chiricuzio in Atlas and Alice
- ‘The School of English‘ by Hilary Mantel in the London Review of Books
- An extract from The Gracekeepers by Kirsty Logan on Foyles
- An extract from The Last Summer of Us by Maggie Harcourt on We Love This Book
- An extract from Today I Am a Book by xTx on Literary Hub
- ‘Escape, Release, and Return‘ by Leslie Baum in Guernica
- An extract from Sphinx by Anne F. Garréta (translated by Emma Ramadan) on Electric Literature
- ‘A Satisfying End-of-Relationship Goods Exchange In Three Acts‘ by Maria Yagoda on The Hairpin
- ‘How to Clean a Dollhouse‘ by Betty Capot on Blunderbuss
- ‘A Sheltered Woman‘ by Yiyun Li (Winner of the Times’ Short Story Award)
- An extract from The Sound of a Sundial by Hana Andronikova (translated by David Short) on Body
- An extract from The Children’s Crusade by Ann Packer
- ‘How to Hook‘ by Jodi Angel in The Offing
- ‘The Fairy Sword‘ by Laura Madeline Wiseman on The Fem
- An extract from God Help the Child by Toni Morrison on Essence
- ‘Fortune‘ by Erin Lawless on Books With Bunny
- ‘Fincan‘ by Mia Hooper in The Toast
- ‘Normal‘ by Bree in Guernica
- An extract from A God in Ruins by Kate Atkinson on the Penguin Blog
If you want some poetry to read:
- Twenty-One Love Poems (The Floating Poem, Unnumbered) by Adrienne Rich on All Poetry
- ‘exodon paradoxus (bucktooth tetra)‘ by Dana Ranga (translated by Monika Cassel) in Guernica
- ‘Backdrop‘ by Andrea Gilham in Atlas and Alice
- Two Poems from Monetized by Alissa Quart on The Offing
- Three Pantoums by Lo Kwa Mei-en in The Offing
- ‘The Advantage of Sexual Cannibalism‘ by Antoinette Nena Villami on CactiFur
- Three Poems by Marika Prokosh on Lemon Hound
- ‘The Bookbinder‘ by Clare Best on Anthony Wilson’s blog
- ‘Whitewashed‘ by Natasha Head on The Tashtoo Parlour
- Two Poems by Sandra Simonds on Fanzine
- ‘Scientific‘ by Marisa Seigel on The Rumpus
- Two Poems by Sharon Olinka in Drunken Boat
- ‘Agression Diary‘ by Annemarie Austin
- ‘Errant Fathers, Stupid Women‘ by Marina Sofia in Think Pink
If you want some non-fiction to read:
- An extract from Headstrong: 52 Women Who Changed Science and the World by Rachel Swarmy on Literary Hub
- An extract from Naked at the Albert Hall by Tracey Thorn in The Pool
The lists:
- Books of the Week, May 1, 2015 on Publishers Weekly
- 14 Of The Most Buzzed-About Books Of 2015 on Buzzfeed
- 18 Brilliant Books You Won’t Want To Miss This Summer on the Huffington Post
- 18 Of May 2015’s Best Books To Either Read By Yourself Or Share With Your Mom This Month on Bustle
- 10 Reasons to Love Nella Larson on For Books’ Sake
- 21 Books Every Woman Should Read By 35, Because Reading Keeps You Young (Sort Of) on Bustle
- The June 2015 Indie Next List Preview on American Booksellers Association
- Anne Helen Petersen’s Ten Writers On Entertainment in Vela
- 5 Great Books To Read In May on Buzzfeed
- Best Books April Part Two on Quadrapheme
- Best New Fiction: May 2015 on Typographical Era
- Top 10 books about working life in The Guardian
- Life Lessons from To Kill a Mockingbird on Scottish Book Trust
- 11 Steamy Books for Teens on Scottish Book Trust
- Novelicious Picks…Psychological Thrillers on Novelicious
- Kirsty Logan’s Top Five Literary Circuses on We Love This Book
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Love Tracey Thorn so much, going to hear her in conversation next week in Belfast. Thanks for the links to the Sarah Waters interviews, hadn’t seen them this week. Great work as always.
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V.envious of you going to see Tracey Thorn. Report back! And thank you.
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I have loved her since I was 15. Tried to book her for our theatre but dates didn’t work out and I was gutted….
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Hope she’s fantastic and you get chance to speak to her x
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Fantastic roundup – that’s going to keep me busy for weeks! 🙂
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