In the media is a fortnightly round-up of features written by, about or containing female writers that have appeared during the previous fortnight 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 as traditional media are likely and the categories used are a guide, not definitives.

8th March 2016: The Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction announces its 2016 longlist, comprised of 20 books that celebrate the best of fiction written by women
The Bailey’s Women’s Prize for Fiction longlist was announced this fortnight. While former winner, Lionel Shriver declared ‘Women’s literary prizes are ‘problematic’‘.
And the Wellcome Book Prize announced their shortlist with four (out of six) female writers on it, as did the YA Book Prize with eight women writers on its ten book shortlist.
Elena Ferrante is hot news in the literary world once again after Corriere della Sera published an article in which Marco Santagata claimed to know her identity. Rachel Donadio wrote, ‘Who Is Elena Ferrante? An Educated Guess Causes a Stir‘ in The New York Times; Jonathan Sturgeon said, ‘We Already Know the Identity of Elena Ferrante‘ on Flavorwire; Lincoln Michel asked, ‘Why Do We Care Who the “Real” Elena Ferrante Is?‘ on Electric Literature; Stassa Edwards asked, ‘What’s Really Behind Our Obsession Over Unmasking Elena Ferrante?‘ on Jezebel; John Dugdale wrote, ‘Will Elena Ferrante outlast Louisa May Alcott’s secret alter ego?‘ in The Guardian, and Jessica Roy declared, ‘Leave Elena Ferrante Alone‘ in The Cut.
Anita Brookner died. Rebecca Hawkes wrote her obituary while Linda Grant wrote, ‘Why Anita Brookner’s funny, sharp novels got under your skin‘ both in The Telegraph.
The best of the rest:
On or about books/writers/language:
- Kevin McKenna, ‘Jackie Kay: Scotland’s poet of the people‘ in The Observer
- Elissa Washuta, ‘They Just Dig: On Writing, Coal Mining and Fear‘ on Literary Hub
- Louise Beech, ‘On Life Writing‘ on Women Writers, Women’s Books
- Rachel Kessler, ‘When the Apocalypse Is Your Religion‘ on Literary Hub
- Michelle Dean, ‘Why You Should Watch the New Nora Ephron Documentary‘ on Literary Hub
- Laura June, ‘Charlotte Brontë and her Best Friend’s Broken Promise‘ on Jezebel
- Meaghan O’Connell, ‘The Patronizing Questions We Ask Women Who Write‘ in The Cut
- Sara Nović, ‘What it’s like to be a deaf novelist‘ in The Guardian
- M Lynx Qualey, ‘In the Race for Literary Prizes, Is Gender Parity Possible?‘ in The National
- Fiona Noble, ‘YA and children’s books deserve to be judged separately‘ in The Bookseller
- Mimi Wong, ‘Slut Lit & Dismantling “The Fallen Woman”‘ on The Offing
- Boris Kachka, ‘A First-Time Novelist’s 7-Figure Midlife Breakthrough‘ on Vulture
- Claire Armistead, ‘Happiness to mindfulness, via wellbeing: how publishing trends grow‘ in The Guardian
- Jerome Charyn, ‘A Loaded Gun: The Real Emily Dickinson‘ on Longreads
- Belinda McKeon, ‘Dipping the Pen Nib Into Tragedy‘ on Catapult
- Emily Foster, ‘The Monster in the Mirror: On Horror, Disability, and Loving Both at Once‘ on Tor.Com
- Ilana Masad, ‘The First Unappreciated Woman Writer‘ on Broadly
- Sarah Blake, ‘Men Explain Submissions to Me‘ on The Rumpus
- Rosalie Knecht, ‘This Writer: On Social Work and Fiction‘ on Literary Hub
- Doris Grumbach, ‘A Life in Letters: From the New Republic to Iowa to Knopf‘ on Literary Hub
- Elizabeth Zaleski, ‘Other Writers’ Mothers: Some Reflections on Representing Family‘ on Vida
- Tracy Chevalier, ‘Past President of the Laura Ingalls Wilder Club‘ on Literary Hub
- Sara Nović ‘Sign of the Times‘ in Guernica
- Maddie Crum ‘Unhappily Ever After: How Women Became Seen Not Heard in Our Favourite Fairy Tales‘ on the Huffington Post
- Corrine Duyvis, ‘Fiction, like life, tells disabled people their lives have less value‘ in The Guardian
- Lisa McInerney, ‘Write what you know? Know what you write? I’d rather wing it, thanks‘ in The Irish Times
- Julia Pierpoint, ‘Topography of a novel: on how she wrote Among the Ten Thousand Things‘ in The Guardian
- Valerie Grove, ‘Margaret Forster: A northern lass in NW5‘ in The New Statesman
- Margaret Drabble, ‘My Hero: Elena Ferrante‘ in The Guardian
- Deborah Smith, ‘Only wilful disregard can hide the need to publish more women‘ in The Guardian
- Elisa Gabbert, ‘Can Ideas Withstand Shifts in Language?‘ in Guernica
- Pico Iyer, ‘On Annie Dillard‘ on Literary Hub
- Katy Derbyshire, ‘Translated fiction by women must stop being a minority in a minority‘ in The Guardian
- Summer Brennan, ‘The Things We Do to Promote the Books We Write‘ on Literary Hub
- Karen Swallow Prior, ‘Jane Eyre and the Invention of the Self‘ on The Atlantic
- Caroline Criado Perez, ‘“Publishing is a women’s world”: Gender inequality in the writing industry‘ on Scottish Pen
- Christina Wodtke, ‘It’s Not Easy Being She‘ on Medium
- Anne Boyd Rioux, ‘Constance Fenimore Woolson: The Forgotten Author Who Inspired Henry James‘ on The Daily Beast
Personal essays/memoir:
- Julienne Grey, ‘What We Remember: One Small Act Replaces the Rest‘ on Electric Literature
- Jess E. Jellsma, ‘Frigid‘ on The Rumpus
- Alison Motluk, ‘A Journey to the Medical Netherworld‘ On Hazlitt
- Kathleen Hale, ‘Surviving the Love Bomb‘ on Hazlitt
- Janice Lee, ‘I Can’t Go On / I’ll Go On‘ on Berfrois
- Kaitlyn Greenidge, ‘I Found My Father’s Eulogy In Junk Food‘ on Buzzfeed
- Alana Massey, ‘First the Breakup. Then the Screenshots.‘ in The Cut
- Anakana Schofield, ‘Bold, Open-Minded and Entrepreneurial‘ on the LRB Blog
- Chelsea G. Summers, ‘The Half Dad‘ on Catapult
- Sarah Menkedick, ‘One Afternoon in Texas‘ on Vela
- Arial Gore, ‘Blood-Red Bougainvillea‘ on The Rumpus
- Ann Patchett, ‘That Family Party Everyone Hated? It Was Mine.‘ in The New York Times
- Jessica Silvester, ‘On an Italian Island, How He Met My Mother‘ in The New York Times
- Jasmine Sanders, ‘Mama‘ on Catapult
- Michelle Levitt, ‘Buckle and Sway‘ on Catapult
- Sarah Menkedick, ‘Everyday Geography‘ on Vela
- Naomi Gordon-Loeb, ‘Even Lumberjacks Deserve Lotion: Gender in the Locker Room‘ on The Toast
Feminism:
- Helen Walmsley-Johnson, ‘How we think about women and shame‘ in The New Statesman
- Sarah Ditum, ‘A Woman’s Body Is Not a Disgrace‘ in The New Statesman
- Marie Phillips, ‘What would the world look like if men took the pill?‘ in The Pool
- Caitlin Moran,“You were not born scared and self-loathing” in Stylist
- Em LaFave Olson, ‘Why I’m Returning to My Maiden Name‘ on Medium
- Caitlin Moran, ‘I’m sticking my neck out‘ on Adelaide Now
- Rachel Pashley, ‘We’ve placed motherhood on such a high pedestal we’ve forgotten the huge pros of being a child-free woman‘ in The Independent
- Fiammata Rocco, ‘Fiction at its Finest‘ in The Bookseller
- Emer O’Toole, ‘Three ways for feminists to cope with the abuse we face‘ in The Irish Times
Society and Politics:
- Eternity Martis, ‘What It Was Like to Grow Up Fat‘ on Vice
- Olga Khazan, ‘Lean In to Crying at Work‘ in The Cut
- Katy Derbyshire, ‘Berlin, It’s Not Sex All the Time‘ on Literary Hub
- Alena Gradon, ‘Distant Brains‘ in Guernica
- Rukmini Callimachi, ‘To Maintain Supply of Sex Slaves, ISIS Pushes Birth Control‘ in The New York Times
- Chimamanda Adichie. ‘Why can’t he just be like everyone else?‘ on The Scoop
- Erin Allday, ‘Last Men Standing‘ in the San Francisco Chronicle
- Suki Kim, ‘Mr. Rubio’s Neighbourhood‘ in New Republic
- Amena Ziard, ‘There’s More to Saudi Arabia than the Ban on Women Driving‘ on Media Diversified
Film, Television, Music, Art, Fashion and Sport:
- Elizabeth Day, ‘Happy Valley: female solidarity is stronger than male exploitation‘ on The Pool
- Sara Baume, ‘How to Understand America, One Pattern at a Time‘ on Literary Hub
- Sonia Saraiya, ‘“The Bachelor” is still for white people: A sour fairy tale, fed to millions, that keeps prizing whiteness above all‘ on Salon
- Rosalind Jana, ‘Mark My Words: The Subversive History of Women Using Thread as Ink‘ on Broadly
- Emma Dabiri, ‘Why Zoe Saldana was the wrong black woman to play Nina Simone‘ in The Telegraph
The interviews:
- L.S. Hilton on The Debrief and The Pool
- Deborah Levy in The Guardian
- Cynthia Cruz in Maenad Magazine
- Gillian Slovo in The Independent
- Helen Macdonald in The Washington Post
- Lauren Groff on Longreads
- Rachel Kushner, Rivka Galchen (& Hari Kunzru) on Electric Literature
- Dana Spiotta on Electric Literature
- Morgan Jerkins on BlacQurl
- Joanna Walsh in The Gloss
- Sunny Singh in The TES
- Carol Lovekin on The Writes of Woman
- Sarayu Srivatsa on The Writes of Woman
- Antonia Honeywell on The Writes of Woman
- Sarah Howe in Neue Journal
- Danielle Dutton in The LA Times, in Bomb Magazine and 3am Magazine
- Melissa Broder in Elle
- Anna Moschovakis on Flavorwire
- Jessa Crispin on The Rumpus
- Samantha Hunt on Literary Hub
- Annie Proulx in The New Yorker
- Malorie Blackman in The Bookseller
- Victoria Aveyard in The Guardian
- Mary Oliver on Oprah
- Brooke Magnanti in The Guardian
- Meghan Daum on The Rumpus
- Cressida Cowell, Laura Dockrill (and Philip Ardagh) in The Guardian
- Melissa Harrison in The Herald
- Anne Boyd Rioux on History in the Margins
- Ottessa Moshfegh on Penguin
- Helen Oyeyemi on Broadly
- Annie Dillard on Literary Hub
- Joanna Cannon in Standard Issue
- L.A. Weatherly in The Guardian
- Anjali Joseph on The Asian Writer
- Cassandra Clare in The Guardian
The regular columnists:
- Laurie Penny in The New Statesman
- Lucy Mangan in Stylist
- Roxane Gay in The Guardian US
- Yasmin Alibhai-Brown in The Independent
- Caitlin Moran in The Times
- Lauren Laverne in The Pool
- Ella Risbridger in The Pool
- Sali Hughes in The Pool
- Bim Adewunmi in The Guardian
- Sophie Heawood in The Guardian
- Eva Wiseman in The Observer
- Tracey Thorn in The New Statesman
- Chimene Suleyman and Maya Goodfellow on Media Diversified
- Josie Pickens on Ebony
- Bridget Christie in The Guardian
- Lizzy Kremer on Publishing for Humans
- Juno Dawson in Glamour
- Kashana Cauley on Catapult