I'm a feminist. And a reader. That said, I am also sexist as all hell.
I did a quick count of the books I finished last year, and discovered only 8 out of 35 were written by women. Half convinced it must be a statistical outlier (because I had been researching Sherlock Holmes, and I'm a feminist, damnit!), I looked over my lists from earlier years. The number for the year before that was 12/52. And the year before that 13/57. It seems I'm consistently reading only 20% women. Some years more (say, if I'm re-reading Harry Potter), some years much less (there is one dismal one where only 7 out of 55 were women).
At least, so far,
this year (having finished only one book), I've read 100% women: the wonderfully named
The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making, to boot. That said, on my "currently reading" list, which at the moment contains 75 books, only 18 are written by women. Hovering around 20% again. And according to
Librarything, only about 20% of the books I own were written by women.
This is not a surprise, really. I am perfectly aware that I have grown up in a culture in which we are subtly (and sometimes not-so-subtly) taught that men's opinions are worth more than women's: men's thoughts can be deep and universal, whereas women's tend towards limited and superficial. Men write art; women write "chick lit" (
I have discussed this at length in relation to Jane Austen). Intellectually, I find it appalling, of course; but that is not always enough to counteract 30 years of socialisation and ingrained prejudice. The trick is to be aware of it and keep it in mind when making choices. This is the purpose of the
#readwomen campaign, which I am hereby joining.
I have decided that I will read at least 25 books by women this year. Here are some good books by female writers (I have limited myself severely when it comes to non-fiction), if you want to join me:
Hannah Arendt,
Eichmann in Jerusalem (non-fiction)
Margaret Atwood,
The Handmaid's TaleJane Austen,
Pride and PrejudiceJane Austen,
PersuasionJane Austen,
Northanger AbbeyDjuna Barness,
NightwoodAphra Behn,
Oroonoko Aphra Behn,
The Rover (play)
Karen Blixen (Isak Dinesen),
Seven Gothic Tales (short stories)
Charlotte Brontë,
Jane EyreOctavia Butler,
Lilith's BroodA. S. Byatt,
The Children's BookA. S. Byatt,
PossessionAngela Carter,
The Magic ToyshopAngela Carter,
The Bloody ChamberKate Chopin,
The AwakeningAgatha Christie,
The Murder of Roger AckroydAgatha Christie,
Murder on the Orient ExpressAgatha Christie,
And Then There Were NoneAgatha Christie,
By the Pricking of My ThumbsCaryl Churchill,
Cloud 9 (play)
Susanna Clarke,
Jonathan Strange and Mr NorrellSimone De Beauvoir,
Le Sang des autres (
The Blood of Others)
Simone De Beauvoir,
Le Deuxième Sexe (
The Second Sex) (non-fiction)
Helen DeWitt,
The Last SamuraiEmily Dickinson,
Poems (poetry)
Emma Donoghue,
Kissing the Witch (short stories)
George Eliot,
Daniel DerondaGeorge Eliot,
Silas MarnerJudith Flanders,
The Invention of Murder: How the Victorians Revelled in Death and Detection and Created Modern Crime (non-fiction)
Elizabeth Gaskell,
North and South Charlotte Perkins Gillman,
The Yellow Wallpaper and other stories (short stories)
Mavis Doriel Hay,
The Santa Klaus Murder Selma Lagerlöf,
Nils Holgerssons underbara resa genom Sverige (
The Wonderful Adventures of Nils)
Harper Lee,
To Kill a MockingbirdUrsula Le Guin,
The Earthsea QuartetUrsula Le Guin,
The DispossessedUrsula Le Guin,
The Left Hand of DarknessDoris Lessing,
The Golden NotebookDoris Lessing,
The Good TerroristDoris Lessing,
ShikastaKatherine Mansfield,
The Garden Party and Other Stories (short stories)
Hilary Mantel,
Wolf HallHilary Mantel,
Bring up the BodiesHilary Mantel,
The Assassination of Margaret Thatcher Erin Morgenstern,
Night CircusToni Morrison,
The Bluest EyeIris Murdoch,
The Black PrinceIrish Murdoch,
The Book and the BrotherhoodAnaïs Nin,
Under a Glass Bell (short stories)
Arika Okrent,
In the Land of Invented Languages (non-fiction)
Baroness Orczy,
The Scarlet PimpernelSylvia Plath,
The Bell JarAnn Radcliffe,
The ItalianJean Rhys,
Wide Sargasso SeaChristina Rossetti,
Goblin Market and Other Poems (poetry)
J. K. Rowling,
Harry Potter and the Philosopher's StoneJ. K. Rowling,
Harry Potter and the Chamber of SecretsJ. K. Rowling,
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of AzkabanJ. K. Rowling,
Harry Potter and the Goblet of FireJ. K. Rowling,
Harry Potter and the Order of the PhoenixJ. K. Rowling,
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood PrinceJ. K. Rowling,
Harry Potter and the Deathly HallowsSuzanna Arundhati Roy,
The God of Small ThingsMary Shelley,
FrankensteinSei Shonagon,
The Pillow BookLionel Shriver,
We Need to Talk About KevinRebecca Solnit,
Men Explain Things to Me (non-fiction)
Susan Sontag,
The Volcano LoverZadie Smith,
White TeethMuriel Spark,
The Prime of Miss Jean BrodieGertrude Stein,
The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas (non-fiction)
Josephine Tey,
The Daughter of TimeJames Tiptree, Jr.
10,000 Light-Years from HomeSigrid Undset,
Kristin LavransdatterCatherynne M. Valente,
The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own MakingSarah Waters,
FingersmithJeanette Winterson,
LighthousekeepingJeanette Winterson,
Oranges Are Not the Only FruitVirginia Woolf,
Mrs DallowayVirginia Woolf,
Orlando: A BiographyVirginia Woolf,
Jacob's RoomVirginia Woolf,
The YearsVirginia Woolf,
The WavesVirginia Woolf,
A Room of One's Own and The Three GuineasFrances Yates,
The Rosicrucian Enlightenment (non-fiction)
Today is Virginia Woolf's birthday. May I suggest you start with
Mrs Dalloway?
And please use the comments section to point out all the great ones I forgot about/never heard of.
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