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 been a great week for women writers and prizes. The Wellcome Prize shortlist was announced on Monday, including four books (of six) by women. Congratulations Miriam Towes, Alice Roberts, Sarah Moss and Marion Coutts. On Tuesday, the twenty-strong Bailey’s Prize longlist was announced. Chair of this year’s judges, Shami Chakrabarti discussed the need for the prize in The Guardian and Buzzfeed created a guide to the longlisted books. The OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature has five women (of nine) on the longlist. Congratulations Tanya Shirley, Monique Roffey, Tiphanie Yanique, Elizabeth Nunez and Olive Senior. The PEN/Faulkner award has three women on a shortlist of five. Congratulations Emily St. John Mandel, Jennifer Clement and Jenny Offill. The Stella Prize, the Australian prize for female writers announced its shortlist this week too. Congratulations to Maxine Beneba Clarke, Emily Bitton, Ellen Van Neervan, Sophie Lagune, Jean London and Christine Keneally. Marina Warner won the Holberg Prize 2015. And women won four of the six categories at the National Book Critics Circle Award. Congratulations Marilynne Robinson, Roz Chast, Ellen Willis and Claudia Rankine.
It’s Mother’s Day in the UK today. Jo Hogan writes ‘Surprised by a Jumper: On Being Motherless on Mother’s Day‘ on her blog; Scottish Book Trust list ten books that celebrate pioneering women; Emma Healey wrote, ‘From Offshore to Oranges: a literary tribute to Mother’s Day‘ in the Guardian; Emylia Hall wrote, ‘The Mother of All Years‘ on her blog; Windmill Books published an extract of Charlotte Gordon’s forthcoming book, Romantic Outlaws: The Extraordinary Lives of Mary Wollstonecraft and Her Daughter Mary Shelley on their website, and Kate Hamer wrote, ‘Literary matriarchs and their daughters, from Little Women to Carrie‘ in the Independent
Two in-depth Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie interviews have been published this week, one in Vogue and the other on Olisa.tv: part one and part two.
The woman with the most publicity this week is Caitlin Moran. She’s interviewed on Buzzfeed and on the British Comedy Guide with her sister Caroline Moran; Pilot Viruet wrote, ‘Caitlin Moran’s UK Series ‘Raised by Wolves’ Is the Teen Sitcom America Needs‘ on Flavorwire; she’s profiled by Vanessa Thorpe in the Observer and her own Times Magazine column this week was ‘What it really means to be a mum‘ which you can listen to for free here.
And the latest on the Harper Lee story: on Wednesday, The Bookseller reported, ‘State investigators interview Harper Lee‘ and on Friday, Lee’s agent issued a statement, The Bookseller reported, ‘Nurnberg blasts ‘shameful’ Lee claims‘.
The best of the rest articles/essays:
- Rene Denfeld, ‘Writing the Truth About Criminals‘ on Read Her Like an Open Book
- Hannah Furness, ‘Joanna Trollope: “You cannot be great novelist until after 35”‘ in the Telegraph
- Lizzy Kremer, ‘On the Way to Where You are Going: A Writer’s Patience‘ on Publishing for Humans
- Anuradha Roy, ‘No Longer a Joke‘ in The Telegraph, India
- Kate Williams, ‘introduces you to The Storms of War‘ on One Book Lane
- Elinor Abbott, ‘Rooms I Have Lived In‘ on The Bohemyth
- Louise Walters, ‘One year on from publication and the things I’ve learned‘ on her blog
- Kimberly Chrisman-Campbell, ‘Cinderella: The Ultimate (Postwar) Makeover Story‘ in The Atlantic
- Alison Flood, ‘New Star Wars novel to feature first lesbian character‘ in The Guardian
- Pandora Blake, ‘Don’t ask if porn “empowers” women – instead, ask if your feminism does‘ in the New Statesman
- Felix Kent, ‘Our Hearts Were Young and Gay: On Weakness, Strength, and Friendship‘ in The Toast
- Lindsey Gates-Markel, ‘He Doesn’t Wanna Be Here‘ on The Rumpus
- Kelly Davio, ‘The Waiting Room: Sick Girl Walking‘ in The Butter
- Sara Bivigou, ‘The Bad Blood: My Life With Sickle Cell Anaemia‘ on Buzzfeed
- Mallory Ortberg, ‘Arthur Rimbaud, Dirtbag Laureate‘ in The Toast
- Sarah Seltzer, ‘Female Friendship Is Life’s Great, Thwarted Romance in Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan Novels‘ on Flavorwire
- Claire Fuller, ‘Big Loves: on Barbara Comyns’s Who Was Changed and Who Was Dead‘ on Memorious Mag
- Melissa Febos, ‘The Book of Hours‘ in StoryQuarterly
- Katharine Quarmby, ‘The taboo of sex and disability: How can we shift the negative images that still dominate society’s attitudes?‘ in the Independent
- Susie Day, ‘Short is sweet: why I love short stories‘ in The Guardian
- Lois Leveen, ‘Appropriating (F)Acts in Feminist Fiction II: Juliet’s Nurse‘ on For Books’ Sake
- Elisa Gabbert, ‘The Bravery of “Basic“‘ on Real Pants
- Anna Cabe, ‘Milking the Bull: On Heroines‘ in The Toast
- Rachel Basch, ‘At The Blue Dolphin: On Mothers and Sons‘ on The Millions
- Kate Graham, ‘The Life and Legacy of Anne Frank‘ in Stylist
- Mallory Ortberg, ‘Texts from Blanche DuBois‘ in The Toast
- Kaye Toal, ‘How Finding A Fat YA Heroine Changed My Life‘ on Buzzfeed
- Mallory Ortberg, ‘It’s 2050 And Feminism Has Finally Won‘ in The Toast
- Rebecca Altman, ‘American petro-topia‘ in Aeon
- Frida Berrigan, ‘Uncle Pentagon‘ in Guernica
- Helen Lewis, ‘The Digital Ducking Stool‘ in the New Statesman
- Jill Lepore, ‘Richer and Poorer‘ in The New Yorker
- Lori Day, ‘Aging while female is not your worst nightmare‘ on Feminist Current
- Patricia Scanlan, ‘Should you call time on a toxic friendship?‘ on Gransnet
- Kate Gale, ‘Reading American cities: Los Angeles in books‘ in The Guardian
- Julieanne Smolinski, ‘I Am Not My Internet Personality, and You Probably Aren’t Yours, Either.‘ in The Cut
- Melanie Finn, ‘Writers on Location: Tanzania‘ on Isabel Costello’s Literary Sofa
- Rose George, ‘A Very Naughty Little Girl‘ on Longreads
- Marcie Bianco, ‘This Feminist Children’s Book Is the Best Way Ever to Teach the ABCs‘ on MiC
- Liska Jacobs, ‘Our Best Work: On Man Ray’s Hollywood Album and Me‘ on The Millions
- Melanie Finn, ‘A Stitch in Time‘ on the Weidenfeld and Nicholson blog
- Olivia Marks, ‘When Did Not Wanting to “Lean In” Become So Taboo?‘ in Vice
- Molly Lambert, ‘Porntopia‘ on Grantland
- Francesca Wade, ‘Happily Ever After‘ in the Times Literary Supplement
- Anne Boyer, ‘Data’s Work is Never Done‘ in Guernica
- Sarah Butler, ‘“A wild blip in the country’s consciousness”: writing the 2011 riots‘ on the Picador Blog
- Alison Herman, ‘Why Tina Fey’s Racial Humor Is So Controversial‘ on Flavorwire
- Allecia Vermillion, ‘The Brief, Extraordinary Life of Cody Spafford‘ on Seattle Met
- Jennifer Gonnerman, ‘The Wrong Way‘ on Mother Jones
- Anna Maxted, ‘Older women are in the spotlight, but the battle for equality is not over‘ in the Telegraph
- Polly Samson, ‘My parents only got married because no one else would have me as a bridesmaid‘ in The Telegraph
- Ashley C. Ford, ‘I’m queer no matter who I’m with. I won’t define myself differently for your comfort‘ in The Guardian
- Chris Kraus, ‘on the Ambiguous Virtues of Art School‘ on Artspace
- Elisa Albert, ‘My friend breastfed my baby‘ in The Guardian
- Sarah McCarry, ‘On Kindness‘ in The Rejectionist
- Lynn Sloan, ‘A Page a Day‘ on Bloom
- Alice Driver, ‘My Own Trap‘ on Vela
- Holly Robinson, ‘Writing Commercial Fiction and Loving It‘ on Publishers Weekly
- Chimene Suleyman, ‘We cannot be outraged by UKIP if we are to support their rhetoric everywhere else‘ on Media Diversified
- Claire Fuller, ‘Things About Canada: Claire Fuller Remembers 1982 Montreal‘ on House of Anansi
The interviews:
- Jane Costello in the Liverpool Echo
- Helen Macdonald on Salon
- Roxane Gay, Germaine Greer, Rayya Elias and Elizabeth Gilbert at the All About Women Festival in The Guardian
- Jaime Loren on Beauty and Lace
- Kim Gordon on Faber Social and on Arts and Ideas
- Iona Grey on Helen Redfern’s blog (plus cake!)
- Susie Day in The Guardian
- Kate Schatz on Buzzfeed
- Toni Morrison in NEA Arts Magazine
- Virginia Boecker on Publishers Weekly KidsCast
- Laura Van Den Berg on The Millions
- Melanie Finn on Orion Books
- Jill Alexander Essbaum in the Wall Street Journal and on Electric Literature
- Sarah Menkedick on Longreads
- Emer O’Toole on Radio Gorgeous
- Rosie Garland on Northern Soul
- Holly Smale on We Love This Book (interviewed by her friend and former housemate Anna James)
- Miranda July in the Irish Times
- Anne Tyler on BBC World Book Club
- Samantha Harvey in The Telegraph
- Clare Fuller on Annethology
- Marie Mutsuki Mockett on Electric Literature
- Sarah Chayes in The Guardian
If you want some fiction/poetry to read:
- ‘All You Have to Do‘ by Sarah Braunstein in The New Yorker which she discusses here
- ‘For Eliza (My Great Grandmother)‘ by Katrina Naomi on Proletarian Poetry
- An extract from The Day We Disappeared by Lucy Robinson
- ‘A Birthmother’s Catechism‘ by Carrie Etter on Seren Books’ blog
- Five Short Stories by Lydia Davis in Five Dials
- ‘House Proud‘ by Amelia Gray in The White Review
- ‘Pomegranate‘ by Karissa Chen on Guernica
- ‘Children’s Stories Made Horrific: The Little Mermaid‘ by Mallory Ortberg in The Toast
- ‘Frost and Fire‘ by Claire Fuller on her blog
- ‘Aunt Mirrie and the Child‘ by Kate Clanchy on BBC Radio 4
- ‘Phantoms Over Paris‘ by Ali Smith in Five Dials
- A new introduction to Living Dolls: The Return of Sexism by Natasha Walter on Virago
The lists:
- Best Books to Read this March in Red
- The Best Feminist Books For Younger Readers on Bookriot
- Nine books you must read to understand women’s issues in India on Scroll.in
- The Little Free Black Woman’s Library Book List – Volume 1 on The Free Black Woman’s Library
- 20 Wonderfully Miserable Memoirs: A Reading List for the School of Hard Knocks on Entertainment Weekly
- 9 Amazing Female Graphic Novelists, Illustrators And Cartoonists You Should Read on the Huffington Post
- Inspiring Joan Didion Quotes in The Toast
- 50 Great Books About 50 Inspiring Women on Flavorwire
- Sarah Bannan’s Coming of Age Novels on Bookanista (includes an extract from her novel Weightless)
- Sarah Alderson’s Top 10 feminist icons in children’s and teen books in The Guardian
- 25 Essential Books About Death and Grief on Flavorwire
- 13 Things By Women You Can Read In One Sitting on Buzzfeed
- Kelly Sundberg’s Eight Flash Nonfiction Writers on Vela
- Five Fascinating Facts About Sylvia Plath on Interesting Literature
- 26 Contemporary Books That Should Be Taught In High School on Buzzfeed
- 74 Essential Books for Your Personal Library: A List Curated By Female Creatives on Open Culture
- 12 Sick Burns From People Who Didn’t Get The Jane Austen Hype on the Huffington Post