Word in the publishing industry is that women these days make up the majority of book buyers. Which makes the ongoing white male (and often anti-feminist) dominance of prominent newspaper's book review sections and other hotbeds of the literary establishment a perennial thorn in feminist sides, particularly this feminist's side.
The primary reason for this gender imbalance is simple bias: women tend to write and read more fiction, which as a genre gets less space in print review sections. Meanwhile, male editors don't necessarily deem non-fiction books for women and about women's topics worthy of review -- unless they're stoking the flames of the mommy wars, that is.
There are notable exceptions to this trend, but they're mostly feminist already -- particularly magazines like Bitch, Bust and Venus Zine and online sites like Salon.com and the wonderfully-titled bookslut.com.
Still, it's rare to see a list of books where you don't have to count the number of X chromosomes represented.
So just in time for beach (or
air-conditioned coffee shop) season, here's RH Reality Check's own
summer book list -- a very small sampling of the amazing books out this
spring and summer by, for, and about women and gender. Happy reading!
Be a Literary Traveler! Photo by Shaletann
Beachy Sequels
For fun but not frivolous reading, dip into one of the new releases by two "chick-lit" writers who are at the top of their game. Though the pink cover category can pigeonhole authors, these two writers transcend the genre's conventions. Both of them maintain hilarious, impressively political and savvy blogs (Jen's and Alisa's), and they are both are returning this season with sequels to their most popular books.
Jennifer Weiner's "Certain Girls" picks up years after the conclusion of her previous hit "Good in Bed." Weiner is one of the reigning queens of books in pink packaging, and the Princeton grad has a lot to say about women's lives. Notoriously flawed heroine "Cannie" returns, now trading chapter with her rebellious 13-year-old daughter.
Alisa Valdez-Rodriguez's "Dirty Girls Social Club" introduced readers to a tight-knit group independent Latina women on the hunt for love, sex happiness and success. Five years after that novel's conclusion, "Dirty Girls on Top" (out in July) will find the ladies still struggling with the same issues in the next chapters of their lives.
Rock 'n' Roll Feminism
Two new books put a feminine and feminist perspective on the heavily male-dominated narrative of rock'n'roll literature.
Suze Rotolo is best known as
the girl on Bob Dylan's arm on the iconic cover of his album, The
Freewheelin Bob Dylan. A Freewheelin'
Time, Rotolo's
new memoir, breaks silence of decades she's kept when it comes to
that relationship with Dylan. But more importantly Rotolo offers a funny,
literary history filled with poetic snapshots of her early life in New
York as he daughter of communist Italian immigrants and a devoted activist
herself. She also describes the limited place for women in the turbulent,
exciting but still retrograde world of early 60s bohemia.
Girls Like Us: Carole King, Joni Mitchell, Carly Simon--And the Journey of a Generation by Sheila Weller picks up the same story in its next evolution, chronicling the stirring of "women's lib" as it relates to the music and lives of three female rock icons, connecting their journeys to their generations struggle with feminism and sexuality.
Family Affairs
These female novelists, darlings of the New York literary set, offer new takes on contemporary American family values.
"The Ten Year Nap," a new novel by Meg Wolitzer, examines the fall-out ten years after a certain set of overprivileged New York city matrons decide to give up their careers and devote themselves to hearth and home -- and contrasts these women with their feminist foremothers. Angst, betrayal, and wicked satire ensue.
The stunningly
talented, popular and enduring Jhumpa Lahiri, whose novel The Namesake
was one of the most celebrated in the past years, returns with a collection
of novellas, "Unaccustomed Earth," exploring her favorite themes:
parents and children, aging, immigration and identity.
Politicking
Everyone's favorite anticapitalist wordsmith Barbara Ehrenereich returns in July with a collection of her famously trenchant and acerbic social commentary about the forgotten working Americans and more. The book is called "This Land Is Their Land: Reports from a Divided Nation."
Salon.com's political blogger
Glenn Greenwald's new book, "Great American Hypocrites," tackles the way Republican operatives
and the media have used the cult of John Wayne masculinity and strength,
and gender posturing to smear worthy opponents over recent decades.
No-Nonsense Nonfiction
"Population, Nature, and What Women Want," by Robert Engelman, looks at the history of population and environmental issues as they intersect with women's reproductive autonomy, making the radical case that women's freedom is the best method for ensuring sustainability the natural world.
Amy Richards's "Opting In: Having A Child Without Losing Yourself" is a manifesto of reconciliation between feminism and motherhood -- rather than re-hashing the mommy wars, she reminds readers of the progress women have made in making motherhood and families more equitable and fair -- and the progress still to be made. Laura Barcella interview Richards for RH Reality check, which you can check out here.
Old Heroines
Finally, two novelists revisit quintessential literary ladies of yore. Justine Picardie's Daphne is a hotly-anticipated literary mystery featuring Daphne du Maurier, the author of gothic thriller Rebecca, and DuMaurier's foremothers and inspiration, the very writerly (and very gothic) Bronte family. Irina Reyn's What Happened to Anna K, due out in August, is a retelling of Tolstoy's classic Anna Karenina set among Russian-Jewish immigrants in Queens.
NARAL's Summer Reading List For You!























