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.
Friday night saw the winner of this year’s The Green Carnation Prize revealed. Congratulations to Anneliese Mackintosh whose book Any Other Mouth came top of a very strong shortlist. You can read about the decision on The Green Carnation Prize blog. Anneliese’s reaction is on her blog. It’s interesting to see Mackintosh’s book described as a fiction, memoir, short story hybrid, particularly as there’s been a focus on women writing memoirs this week.
Susanna Rustin is in The Guardian talking about ‘Why women are the masters of the memoir‘; Ceridwen Dovey writes ‘The Pencil and the Damage Done: The perverse attraction of autobiographical fiction‘ in The monthly; Lydia Kiesling writes ‘Meghan Daum won’t apologise: How she forged a new generation of confessional writing‘ on Salon, while Hannah Gersen writes on Meghan Daum, ‘Her Well-Spent Adulthood‘ on The Millions.
If you want to read some memoir essays, Lucinda Rosenfeld has ‘The Battle Hynm of the Papier-Mâché Mother‘ in The New Yorker; Sunny Singh writes, ‘To Become a Woman and a Writer, One Must Cast Aside Modesty‘ on her blog; Soniah Kamal writes, ‘Girls from Good Families‘ on The Butter; there’s an excerpt from Viv Albertine’s Clothes Clothes Clothes Music Music Music Boys Boys Boys on Vulture, while Sam Baker lists her pick of the best biographies and memoirs of 2014 in Harpers Bazaar.
Sadly, this week saw the death of crime writer, PD James. Ruth Rendall talked about their 40-year friendship in The Guardian. Linda Semple took a different angle on Slate looking at James’ homophobia.
The Scottish Book Trust chose Book Week Scotland to celebrate libraries. Many writers penned love letters to their chosen libraries, you can read letters from A.L Kennedy and Jacqueline Wilson in The Guardian and Alison Irvine, Anne Donovan, Francesca Simon, Helen Grant, Joanne Harris, Kate Tough, Lari Don, Lesley McDowell, Lin Anderson, Maggie Craig, Shari Low and Zoe Venditozzi on the Scottish Book Trust site. Rosie Garland also wrote about her passion for libraries to celebrate The Feminist Library on their blog.
And finally, The Guardian reported on a Goodreads survey in which they discovered that readers prefer authors of their own sex. Before anyone tells me we don’t need #readwomen2014 or this blog anymore, wait until this year’s VIDA statistics are published.
The best of the rest essays/articles:
- Tatyana Movshevich, ‘I Am From Dzerzhink‘ in Litro
- Anya A.H. Jamieson, ‘Black Blessings: Toni Cade Bambara and Octavia E. Butler‘ on The Feminist Wire
- Sam Baker, ‘What happens to your wardrobe when you leave life on the front rows‘ in The Telegraph
- Alex Engebretson, ‘Marilynne Robinson’s Singular Vision‘ on The Millions
- Daniel E. Pritchard, ‘To Revive the Lyric: Hoa Nguyen‘ in The Critical Flame
- Charlotte Seager, ‘When characters are difficult to get on with‘ in The Guardian
- Robin Stevens, ‘Murder Most Unladylike and diversity in children’s fiction‘ on Author Allsorts
- Josephine Livingstone, ‘Leslie Feinberg’s Stone Butch Blues Isn’t Just for Queers’ on Slate
- Alicia Lutes on Doctor Who hiring it’s first female writer in six years on Nerdist
- Roxane Gay, ‘Only Words‘ on Michael Brown on The Butter
- Edwidge Danticat, ‘Enough Is Enough‘ also on Michael Brown in The New Yorker
- Stephanie Young, ‘Waterline, Part 1‘ on Drunken Boat
- Eleanor Updale, ‘Helping Miss Worthington‘ on The History Girls
- Sadie Stein, ‘Head Cases‘ on migraines in The Paris Review
- Sabrina Khan, ‘The Importance of Diversity in YA Fiction‘ on Women Writers, Women’s books
- Tuula Karjalainen, ‘Tove Jansson’s Moominland: What was the inspiration for Finland’s most famous family?‘ in The Independent
- Beluah Maud Devaney, ‘Little Women’s Unfortunate Brothers‘ in The Guardian
- Beverly Lyon Clark, ‘Why Louisa May Alcott’s Morality Still Resonates with Readers‘ on Huffington Post
- Claire Fuller, ‘And the winner is…‘ on her blog
- Rachel Holmes, ‘How Eleanor Marx Changed the World‘ on the New Statesman
- Valeria Costa-Kostritsky, ‘Letter from: the heart of Chechnya‘ in The Calvert Journal
- Rachel Donadio, ‘Italy’s Great, Mysterious Storyteller‘ (Guess who that is…) in The New York Review of Books
- Rivka Galchen, ‘What Kind of Funny Is He?‘ on Kafka in the LRB
- Kate Mayfield, ‘My Terrifying Thanksgiving‘ on her blog
- Mary Lécuyer, ‘The Puzzle of Puzzles/And that we call Being‘ in The Stockholm Review
- Marcia Lynx Qualey, ‘Small World: Impac prize’s version of global literature is distinctly parochial‘ in The Guardian
- Lily Dunn, ‘Writing Motherhood‘ on Mslexia
- Antonia Honeywell, ‘Three Months till Publication‘ on her blog
- Hilary Mantel on judging the Hilary Mantel Prize in The Guardian (Yes, it’s real.)
- Felicia R. Lee on Claudia Rankine in The New York Times
Photo by Dan Hansson
The interviews:
- Deborah Levy on Short Story Masterclass
- Tessa Hadley on Short Story Masterclass
- Sandra Ozzolo Ferri and Sandro Ferri, the husband and wife team who founded Europa Editions and discovered Elena Ferrante on Publishers Weekly
- Tena Štivičić on the National Theatre’s Soundcloud
- Fiona McCrae, Publisher of Graywolf Press on their blog via Guernica
- Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie via Brittle Paper
- Jacqueline Woodson in The Guardian
- Jane Smiley on The Millions
- Shelly Oria in The Paris Review
- J.C. Todd on Bloom
- Sarah Koenig talking about Serial on Slate
- Ali Smith in The New York Times
- Ava Chin on Bloom
- Megan Amran on Flavorwire
- Jodi Picoult in The Telegraph
- Marilynne Robinson on the New Statesman
- Joanne Harris in The Herald
- Celese Ng on The Writes of Woman (yes, I linked to my own blog)
- Catherine Hall on The Writes of Woman (and again)
If you want some fiction/poetry to read:
- ‘The Untelling‘ by Claire Fuller on Bookanista
- ‘Canada‘ by Katherine Stansfield in The Guardian
- Claudia Rankine reads from Citizen on Lemon Hound
- ‘Engineer‘ by Helen Mort in the TLS
- Contemporary Irish Women Poets on Poethead (links to several poems)
- ‘Leaving Her‘ by Deborah Pintonelli on Literary Orphans
- Two Sentence Thanksgiving Stories on Salon (45 of them!)
- An extract from ‘The Crooked House‘ by Christobel Kent on The Crime Vault
- ‘The Price’ and other poems by Jane Clarke on Poethead
Or some non-fiction:
- Claire-Louise Bennett reading from her essay ‘I Am Love‘ at the launch of Gorse Journal No. 2
The lists:
- The 10 Best Books of 2014 in Time Out New York
- The 15 Best Non-fiction Books by Black Authors in 2014 on The Root
- 10 Obscure Non-Fiction Books by Your Favorite Fiction Writers on Flavorwire
- 5 Must-Read Poetry Collections by Women on Ravishly
- 10 Reasons to Love Marilynne Robinson on For Books’ Sake
- 9 PD James Quotes Every Writer Needs to Read on Buzzfeed
- Five African Novels to Read Before You Die on The Conversation
And the best pieces I’ve read this week:
- Amina Gautier, ‘On Male Verbal Privilege‘ on Read Her Like an Open Book
- Shannon Barber, ‘We Deserve It‘ in Nailed (reposted following the Michael Brown decision this week)
- Eva Stalker on ‘The TBR20 Project: Taking a Break from Too Many Books‘ on her blog
- Isabel Rogers, ‘In my beginning is my end‘ – Friday QuickFic on her blog
- Lynsey White, on ageing and writing on her blog. White has blogged every day of NaNoWriMo and written almost 75,000 words on her WIP. All of the blogs are worth reading.
- Gaby Wood on Fairytales in The Telegraph (starts with Neil Gaiman but covers many others too)