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 awards time again this week. Congratulations to Helen Macdonald who won the Samuel Johnson Prize with her stunning memoir H is for Hawk. There’s an article about it and an interview, both in The Guardian. You can also listen to interviews with all the shortlisted writers on BBC Radio 4.
While in France, Lydie Salvayre won the Prix Goncourt with Pas Pleurer.
The Green Carnation shortlist was announced this week and there are four women on the shortlist of six – congratulations to Kerry Hudson, Kirsty Logan, Anneliese Mackintosh and Laurie Penny. Prior to the announcement, Antonia Honeywell wrote her thoughts on the longlist.
The National Book Awards (UK) shortlists were also announced this week. Lots of books by women worth a read on there too.
And the Saltaire Society shortlisted a self-published book for their First Book Award, The Last Pair of Ears by Mary F. McDonough. The first self-published book to be shortlisted for a Scottish Prize.
That might make you think about Paul Kingsnorth’s novel The Wake which was the first crowd funded novel to be longlisted for The Man Booker Prize earlier this year. Well, Unbound, Kingsnorth’s publishers have announced a Women in Print campaign to try to increase the number of female authors published.
This week has also seen The Bookseller’s report on diversity in publishing – still not good enough, is the overriding conclusion.
It wouldn’t be an average week these days without a Lena Dunham story. Accused by a right-wing journalist of sexually molesting her younger sister following a confessional passage in her book, discussion ensued from Emily Gould, Katie McDonough, Mary Elizabeth Williams and Carolyn Edgar on Salon; Sarah Seltzer on Flavorwire; Emma Gannon on The Debrief; Grace Dent in The Independent. To cheer you up after that, here are 37 Funny and Inspired Thoughts from her book tour on Buzzfeed.
In more cheering news about prominent females, Mallory Ortberg, founder of The Toast, had her book Texts for Jane Eyre published in America this week. In the Los Angeles Review of Books, Sarah Mesle wrote a stunning essay/review about the book’s feminist credentials. She’s interviewed on Entertainment Weekly, The Huffington Post and The Guardian. And you can read an extract, 7 Brutal Literary Breakup Texts on Buzzfeed.
And the Amy Poehler stories are still going. The woman herself answers the Proust Questionnaire in Vanity Fair. Here’s 5 Unexpected Things Marie Claire learned from Poehler’s book. Jessica Valenti has (mis?) read the book and declared ‘bitchiness’ the secret to Poehler’s success in The Guardian. Also in The Guardian, Hadley Freeman told us ‘Why Amy Poehler is the Ultimate Role Model for British Women‘.
The best of the rest articles/essays:
- Jeanette Winterson on the books that changed her life in The Telegraph
- Meg Wolitzer, ‘Why are teenage girls drawn to books about mental instability?‘ in The Guardian
- ‘Finish that Book!‘, Juliet Lapidos in The Atlantic
- Tracey Thorn on going through phases in the New Statesman
- Dreda Say Mitchell, ‘Heroes to Die For‘ on Grab This Book
- Kate Mayfield on shrouds on her blog
- Erica Wagner on Rebecca Solnit and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie in the Financial Times
- Sarah Galo on the Jennifer Egan edited ‘The Best American Short Stories 2014’ in The Guardian
- ‘Writers on the Titling Process‘ in The Millions
- ‘The Unfashionable Genius‘ on Marilynne Robinson in Commonweal Magazine
- Lynn Shepherd, ‘Pushing Pamela: Book Hype, 18th Century Style‘ in The Spectator
- ‘Women Rise in Sci Fi (Again)‘ by Rose Eveleth in The Atlantic
- Isabel Wolff on ‘The Forgotten Women of the War in the East‘ on Women Writers, Women’s Books
- Ruth Margalit on rereading The Giving Tree in The New Yorker
- Anakana Schofield, ‘Sorry, Mrs O’Duffy‘ on the lack of pensions for women in the Irish armed forces on the London Review of Books blog
- Louisa Treger on The Page 69 Test blog, talking about how Virginia Woolf led her to Dorothy Richardson on Blog Her and discussing how it feels to be between her fictional and real worlds on Women Writers, Women’s Books
- Jenny Diski, ‘Some things are best met with silence’ on her blog
- Frances Ambler, ‘Punk Debunked‘ on the plagiarism claims against Vivienne Westwood
- Isabel Costello, ‘My First Year as an Agented Writer‘ on her blog
- Catherine Ostler on Agatha Christie’s disappearance in The Independent
- Darcey Steinke’s tribute to a former teacher in The Roanoke Times
- Adèle Geras on ‘finding your voices‘ on The Great British Bookshop
- Sally Gardner, ‘Dyslexia and Me‘ in The Guardian
- Sonal Champsee, ‘How I Started the Margaret Atwood Revolution‘ in Hippocampus
- ‘What to Read When You’re Not Expecting‘ on The Millions
- ‘What Would Jessica Fletcher Tweet?‘ on PopMatters
- Lionel Shriver, ‘I was poor but I was happy‘ in The Guardian
The interviews:
- Sarah Waters interviewed by Rachel Cooke about the play she’s written in The Guardian
- Lindsay Hunter on Electric Literature
- Jane Rawson on Annabel Smith’s blog
- Roxane Gay on Phillips Exeter Academy website
- Anne Fine on Gender-Biased Books on BBC Radio 4
- Amy Mason on Bristol 24/7 and Scottish Book Trust
- Kate Zambreno on Catherine Mavrikakis’ A Cannibal and Melancholy Mourning in The Believer
- Rose Chast on her inspiration at The New Yorker festival
- Jenny Offill on Book Forum
- Averill Curdy in AGNI online
- Laurie Penny on Flavorwire
- Jill Meyers and Callie Collins on running A Strange Object independent press on Bustle
- Caitlin Moran on Talking Writing
- Jo Mazelis on the Seren Books blog
- Mindy Kaling on ‘Writing the Michael Scott Character as a Woman’ at The New Yorker festival
- Zoe Pilger in Flux
- Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie at the Washington Ideas Forum on The Atlantic (you might need to scroll through the videos)
- Mary Costello on The Works, RTÉ
- Margaret Atwood on Mr B’s Emporium blog
- Anne Lamott on Salon
- Christina James’ editor (who’s also her husband) on Strange Alliances
- Eliza Griswold in Guernica
- Rebecca Levene on Fantasy Faction
- Lynn Kanter on the PhD in Creative Writing Blog
- Lydia Millet interviewed by Jonathan Lethem in BOMB
- Annabel Smith on Seraglio
- Sali Hughes on Get the Gloss
- Anne Rice in The Independent
In translation:
- Jenny Erpenbeck (tr. Susan Bernofsky) ‘Homesick for Sadness’ on the fall of the Berlin Wall in The Paris Review
- Julie Winters Carpenter interviewed about translating Japanese poetry on the Asymptote Blog
If you want some fiction/poetry to read:
- Juliet Jacques, ‘Surveillance City‘ on Queen Mob’s Tea House
- Gillian Flynn, ‘Trouble at Osage Lake High‘ from Drivel: Deliciously Bad Writing By Your Favorite Authors on Buzzfeed
- An extract from Mary Costello’s Academy Street on Canongate Books
- ‘Stand Still‘ by Shelly Oria on Guernica
- Joanna Ruocco, ‘Gallup Poll’ and ‘The Face of Things’ in Threadcount
- An extract from Miranda Dickinson’s I’ll Take New York on Tishylou’s World
- Bethan Roberts’ ‘Like Rabbits‘ in The White Review
- ‘Luz‘ by Laura Bylenok
- ‘Plots from the Sopranos Re-Interpreted by Lydia Davis‘ (Not really, in case that wasn’t obvious) on Hobart
- Antonya Nelson, ‘Primum Non Noncere‘ in The New Yorker, which she discusses here.
- The first chapter of Amanda Coe’s Getting Colder on Virago’s site
The lists:
- My 5 favourite books to reread on Lonesome Reader
- 33 Books You Should Read Now, Based on Your Favourite Films on Buzzfeed
- 13 Successful First Novels by Female Writers on Popsugar
- 5 Stunning Debut Novels to Add to Your To-Read Pile in the Huffington Post
- 9 Cli-Fi Books for Teens on Scottish Book Trust
- The Best Debut Novels of 2014 according to Hannah Beckerman in the Huffington Post
- 10 Forgotten Children’s Books (8-11) on the Scottish Book Trust site
- Best Queer Characters in Fiction on For Books’ Sake
- The 8 Best Under the Radar Books to Read this Fall in Vogue
- 12 New Books all Twentysomething Women Will Be Obsessed with This Fall in Cosmopolitan
- 5 YA Books That Will Keep You on the Edge of Your Seat on Huffington Post
- 13 Best Books to Read in November in Good Housekeeping
- 6 Things We Learned from J.K. Rowling’s new Harry Potter stories on Mental Floss
- 10 Amazing Female Novelists Under 50 on Buzzfeed
- Five Challenging Memoirs by Remarkable Women Writers by Alice Jolly (who’s publishing her own memoir through Unbound – see top of the post) on For Books’ Sake
And the 13 (I tried to keep it to 10 but it’s been a very good week) best things I’ve seen this week:
- Meaghan O’Connell’s ‘A Birth Story‘ on Longreads
- The new Read Women bookmarks designed by Joanna Walsh, creator of #ReadWomen2014
- 100 Days of African Reads on Sister Killjoy’s Facebook page (runs from 10th October 2014 to 8th January 2015)
- Andrea Levy, ‘How I learned to stop hating my heritage‘ in The Guardian
- Ekphora, ‘A Liberating Rupture‘ on her blog
- ‘An Illustrated Guide to Writing People of Color‘ by MariNaomi on Buzzfeed
- ‘The War Is Over (If You Want It)‘ Rebecca Solnit on Tom Dispatch
- Olivia Lang’s profile of Hilary Mantel in Elle
- ‘Notes on the Exotic‘, Andrea Lee in The New Yorker
- Ann Patchett’s correction to the New York Times
- Lucy Ribchester’s Pinterest board for The Hourglass Factory
- Sarah Butler’s ‘Remaining Values Should Probably Be Left Alone‘ on her blog
- The book trailer (it’s more of a mini-film than a book trailer) for Tiffany Murray’s Sugar Hall