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.
This week there’s been a lot written about rape and the culture which surrounds it due to a piece published in Rolling Stone magazine about a gang rape at The University of Virginia. Responses came from Margaret Talbot in The New Yorker, Emily Yoffe on Slate, Maya Dusenbery on Feministing, Rhiannon Cosslett of The Vagenda in Time, Salamishah Tillet in The Nation and Sarah Ditum in The New Statesman; Deb Rox wrote about working at a rape crisis program in ‘Truth Is a Fire I Couldn’t Hold‘ on The Butter; Lena Dunham wrote about her own experience of speaking out on Buzzfeed; Katie McDonough comment on Salon in a piece titled, ‘The right’s Lena Dunham delusion: Anger, misogyny and the dangers of business as usual‘, and Caitlin Moran wrote about the Ched Evans’ case in the UK. While from a story focus, Kathleen Founds wrote about Vonnegut and rape culture on Buzzfeed and Sarah Hughes wrote about ‘Rape on TV‘ in The Guardian.
It’s also been another week where #readwomen2014 has been highlighted. Creator Joanna Walsh reflected on the year in The Guardian; Lauren Aimee Curtis wrote about her year of reading women in Meanjin; Lorraine Meads wrote about creating the first Feminist Library in Nottingham on Dawn of the Unread; Rebecca Mascull wrote about her reading year on her blog, and @hashughes began a Women’s Writing Calendar – send her forthcoming events you’re involved in/are aware of so we can share in the goodness. Meanwhile, Nicola Sheppey at The Vagenda wrote ‘Why Women Need to Read Books By Men‘.
And the other big story was Vlogger Zoella’s novel. The fasting selling debut since records began was ghostwritten, it was revealed last Sunday. You can read the story in The Telegraph. Keren David wrote her thoughts about it on An Awfully Big Blog Adventure; Matt Haig defended her in The Guardian; thirteen-year-old Zoella fan Julia Brookes commented on Girl Online, and on Thursday, Siobhan Curham, the ghost writer involved, commented on her own blog.
The best of the rest articles/essays:
- Ursula K. Le Guin, ‘Knowing a Book By its Cover‘ on Book View Cafe Blog
- Francine Prose, ‘Courts Without Reporters‘ in the New York Review of Books
- Sadie Stein, ‘Hand in Glove‘ in The Paris Review
- Michelle Dean, ‘Wild and Into the Wild‘ on Slate
- Bethany Rose on Rebecca Solnit’s Men Explain Things to Me and Other Essays on For Books’ Sake
- Karrie Fransman, ‘Why We Should Be Taking Comics More Seriously‘ at TedxYouth@Manchester (video)
- Libby Copeland, ‘Oxytots‘ on Slate
- Rowan Coleman, ‘Dear Marian Keyes‘ on Novelicious
- Val McDermid, ‘Why I Write Mysteries and Thrillers‘ on Publishers Weekly
- Glynnis MacNicol, ‘I’m 40. I Don’t Want to Be a Mom. Now What?‘ on The Cut
- Valeria Luiselli, ‘Collected Poems‘ on New York in The New Yorker
- Sanjida O’Connell, ‘Science in Fiction‘ on Women Writers, Women’s Books
- Rachel Manija Brown and Sherwood Smith, ‘How our children’s book about a gay superhero avoided the straightwash‘ in The Guardian
- Jan Bindas-Tenney, ‘The Border Crisis in Leisureville‘ in Guernica
- Ruth Graham, ‘The Disappearance of Rosemary Tonks‘ on Poetry Foundation
- Jessie Burton, ‘The Miraculous Healing Power of a Doll’s House‘ in The Independent
- Viviana Hurtado, ‘Open Letter to the New York Times: Latino Children’s Authors and Illustrators Have Earned a Place on the Year-End List‘ Latinas for Latino Lit
- Emily Schultz, ‘How Ursula Le Guin’s “Very Far Away from Anywhere Else” Made Me Feel Less Alone‘ on Bustle
- Tiffany Midge, ‘Ghoul, Interrupted‘ on The Butter
- Roxane Gay on Megham Daum and personal essays in The New York Times
- Sheila Curry Oakes, ‘A Lifetime of Losing (And Finding) Myself in Literature‘ on Huffington Post
- Salena Godden on writing Springfield Road on For Books’ Sake
- Sophie Coulombeau, ‘I’m getting married: should I change my surname‘ in The Guardian
- Grace Dent on Lorna Sage’s Bad Blood on BBC Radio 4
- Marina Warner, ‘How Fairytales Grew Up‘ in The Guardian
- Carrie Frye, ‘The Gothic Life and Times of Horace Walpole‘ on Longreads
- Lucy McKeon, ‘The Meaning of Coincidence‘ on Guernica
- Lauren Laverne, ‘The best Christmas Present? An NHS with no funding issues‘ in The Observer
- Triple Canopy honours Lynne Tillman
The interviews:
- Elena Ferrante in The New York Times
- Valeria Luiselli on Electric Literature
- Lindsay Hunter in The Los Angeles Review of Books
- Raquel Cepeda on Amy Gigi Alexander’s blog
- Nell Zink in The Paris Review
- Elizabeth McCracken on Literary Mama
- Roxane Gay on the Nerdette Podcast
- Julia Wertz in The Paris Review
- Darcey Steinke on About
- Jan Morris in The New York Times
- Rebecca Solnit on Free Thinking on BBC Radio 3 (from 17.30)
- Mary Costello on Mr. B’s Emporium of Reading Delights blog
- Claudia Rankine in The Believer
- Lisa O’Donnell on Author Link
- Wendy Cope in The Guardian
- Marian Keyes – In the Bathroom, Part One on Sali Hughes Beauty
If you want some fiction or poetry to read:
- ‘The Sentimentality of William Tavener‘ by Willa Cather on Biblioklept
- ‘Savage Breast‘ by Elizabeth McKenzie in The New Yorker. McKenzie talks about the story here.
- An extract from Ridley Road by Jo Bloom on One Book Lane and a different extract on We Love This Book
- An extract from The Chimes by Anna Smaill on her website
- There’s a whole collection of chapbooks published by Sundress Publications free to read on their website
- ‘One-Hundred Percent Risk‘ by Cheryl Klein in Blunderbuss
- ‘Mother and Daughter‘ by Elisabeth Frost
- ‘Fragmented Instructions for Half-Formed Girls‘ by Claire Lombardo on Luna Luna
- ‘Through the Woods‘ by Abigail Mitchell on The Butter
- Academy Street by Mary Costello is BBC Radio 4’s Book at Bedtime
- ‘The Visit‘ by Kate Hamer on Wales Art Review
- ‘Crepuscular‘ by Leesa Cross-Smith on Wyvern Lit
Or some non-fiction:
- An extract from The Secret History of Wonder Woman by Jill Lepore on Bookanista
- An extract from Cinderland by Amy Jo Burns on The Butter
- ‘I miss my biggest heart‘, Emily Dickinson to Susan Huntingdon Gilbert on Letters of Note
And the lists:
- 19 Times Amy Poehler Gave Absolutely Sound Advice on Buzzfeed
- Amy Poehler’s Opinion on 26 Random Things on Buzzfeed
- 15 Powerful Books by Women to Give as Gifts on The Cut
- The Best Poetry Books of 2014 on Flavorwire
- 25 books You Might Have Missed in 2014 on Flavorwire
- Electric Literature’s 25 Best Novels of 2014
- Electric Literature’s 25 Best Story Collections of 2014
- For Books’ Sake’s Bookish Feminist Gift Guide
- 2015 Books We Can’t Wait to Read on Huffington Post
- 6 Things You Didn’t Know About Emily Dickinson’s Writing Process on Flavorwire
- YA Trilogies that Ended in 2014 (That You Should Read in 2015) on Huffington Post
- 2014’s 10 Best Debut Young Adult Novels on Bustle
- And The Millions added more contributions to their ‘A Year in Reading‘ overviews.