Showing posts with label women writers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label women writers. Show all posts

Saturday, 9 February 2019

Why do men assume I'm writing bonkbusters?

Courtesy of Jezebel/Pictorial, by Angelica Alzona


You’re a women writer. A man you know finds out that you’re writing. The first thing out of his mouth is a jokey assumption that you’re writing something raunchy.

Why?! I’m not asking from feminist outrage, I’m just genuinely baffled.

I like men. I adore my Dad and my husband; I have two fabulous sons. Many of my dearest friends are men. I enjoy male banter: the mickey-taking, the quick-fire wit, the belly laughs.

Nor do I have an issue with people who ARE writing something raunchy. Good for you – I hope it’s brilliant and titivating. I’ve read all three Fifty Shades books. I’m not elitist or a prude.

But when I find out that someone I know is writing, I think all kinds of things. What genre are you writing? Are you good? Published? Self-published? What inner worlds are you pouring onto your pages?

It’s really never sex scenes that first spring to mind.

I get it – these men are joking, but why always the same joke?

Writing is an expression of your inner self. Your world view, your life experience – it all comes out into the light.

Is sex the only secret men can imagine me expressing?



I often wonder, did Jane Austen get this? 

I’m guessing that she did because, as English professor Barbara M Benedict has written, in Austen’s time: 'Novel reading for women was associated with inflaming sexual passions; with liberal, radical ideas; with uppityness; with the attempt to overturn the status quo'.

Imagine what they thought of women actually writing novels –  those inflaming minxes!

Women writers, I’d love to know – does this happen to you?

Wednesday, 13 December 2017

Unspeakable: Why Don't Women Write About Birth?

Image courtesy of The Birth Project Paintings

When it came to writing the birth scene in Unspeakable Things, it struck me how very rarely this is portrayed in literature. There’s the modern-day scene at the end of Birdsong and the birth in Tristram Shandy. (Please leave a comment if you can think of others!) Both my examples were written by men.

Why do so few women write a mother’s experience of birth?

We write unflinchingly about sex, violence and death, so why do we steer away from such an extraordinary process? (This article ponders the question).

Birth is a dramatic and pivotal experience, it changes everything forever – much more so than marriage, which is the focus of so many novels.

Even if you read widely and go to classes, the first time you give birth, much of it is unexpected. It is a rite of passage: you start as someone who doesn’t know the secret and end up someone who knows.

The birth of my first child astonished me. Afterwards, I went through every mother I knew in my head, and thought, My God, you did that! I never knew!

Is birth indescribable then? Surely not, with all the mothers in the world, and all the words?

Before writing Sarah’s experience in the novel, I searched for my diary entry about my first son’s birth. I found an account in Ben’s ‘Baby Diary’, but this is about having a new baby, rather than the birth itself:

He was bluish and covered in white stuff and I said, ‘Come to Mummy,’ and put my arms around him.

What I had been through was so overwhelmingly physical that I couldn’t feel anything emotional except relief.

Scribbled on the back of some bills, I found a fuller account of the birth. I have just read it again, shed a few sentimental tears and decided there are parts I am not going to share.

Ironically, I am self-censoring just as, all those years ago, I put a sanitised version in the Baby Diary.

Is it squeamishness that makes us withhold the truth, or a fear of revolting our audience? Many women, as well as men, are disgusted by the details. Is birth more intimate than sex, and more unmentionable?

For a time, women are obsessed with birth stories. I went into labour during an antenatal class, and was still in hospital when the next class was held there. I took my baby to show the expectant mothers, and as they gathered round, the midwife said, ‘Tell us your story.’

I had gone through the rite of passage and spoke to them from across the divide, but I couldn’t bring myself to tell them the whole truth about the pain, which they would all face in the weeks to come.

My diary describes it though:

The pain went on getting stronger and I gulped the gas and moaned with every out breath... I don’t know how long this went on… Since the pain got worse, time had slowed right down. I was beginning to dread the next contraction. Suddenly the quality of the contractions changed and I began to feel a great downwards pressure. It was an astonishing feeling and quite frightening… I cried out, ‘I can’t do this! I want someone else to do it for me!’ and Lily said to Jon, ‘Don’t worry, they get like this towards the second stage’.

When it came to writing Sarah’s birth story, I called upon two of my memories. One was of the extraordinary sensation, during transition, of labour changing direction – the body switching, turning and reforming in a different shape, like a Transformer becoming a robot. Another was the feeling of an unstoppable force, which I told people afterwards was ‘like a freight train bearing down inside.’

Most of the details of Sarah’s birth are dictated by her story: she wakes from a near-death experience to find herself in labour:

Her insides were heaving in chaos. Contractions! There were things she had to do. Now a freight train was bearing down inside her. It was nothing like the pains before; her insides were rotating and switching positions, like a transformation in a horror film, skin and muscle pushed beyond endurance. Pain was an unstoppable pressure, building towards a crescendo. Then Sarah knew where it was going and she opened her eyes and saw Jim’s face. She cried out to him, but all she heard was a guttural noise:

‘Agghrrrbshh!’

‘What?’ He turned to someone beside him, ‘What’s she saying?’ The force inside her was at bursting point but still powering downwards. She was an animal with only one impulse.

‘I gotta push!’

It’s Sarah’s story, the climax of her plot, but it owes something to my son’s unforgettable arrival – eight hours that changed my life. I hope it does something to make up for a mysterious absence in literature.

Have you read, written or in any way portrayed the experience of birth? Why do you think birth is so rare in books? I’d love to hear from you in the comments below.



Sunday, 12 January 2014

In Which I Have More Fun, read Gillian Flynn and Ponder Women Writers and the Dark Side of Life

Courtesy of rubiblogger.blogspot.com


A belated Happy New Year to anyone reading this! My resolution this year is one of my best ever and comprises only 3 words: 

Have More Fun! 


Last year was full of hard work, determination and effort as I dealt with:

1) My job being busy,
2) A new steely resolve to get my novel published
3) My husband’s depression and
4) Economising to cope with new financial constraints.

 It was all work and no play, and Sophie became a dull girl. This year is going to be different, with having fun a day-to-day priority. Because it’s me, the fun has to be diligently researched and sought out, with plenty of soul-searching to ascertain whether or not fun is being had at any given moment...



I began the year by booking tickets for a comedy cafe in a couple of weeks, and theatre tickets to see Warhorse in April (OK so that may involve tears rather than hilarity, but I do enjoy a good cry). We have rediscovered games we used to play but have stopped since our children grew up, and best of all, our dining room table now doubles as a table tennis table, with frequent games being played. Even the cat joins in when she can be bothered. I have made a point of having a chat and a laugh with colleagues over lunch whenever possible instead of slinking back to my desk, and have instigated trips out for coffee with people I love talking to but haven’t been making the time to see. On Friday Jon and I went to see a band a friend is in, and chatted and danced until late. Always diligent with my exercise, I have bought a dance exercise DVD to mix things up and add a bit of fun to that side of life (running in freezing, horizontal rain sometimes falls short of the ‘funometer’ minimum mark). I had a go yesterday and although I was hilariously unable to keep up with some of the quick-changing moves (I swear this is a brain reaction time issue rather than fitness!), it was - well, fun! It isn’t necessarily the activities chosen that matter, and not every outing is a success, but making fun a daily priority has changed my outlook for the better.

In the meantime, writing has been happening. I finished a short story over Christmas about an attractive, successful but insecure woman who meets a homeless girl. Both pregnant, they end up side by side in the maternity ward, but the homeless girl has a dream birth and a beautiful baby, whereas everything goes wrong for the heroine and her baby is not what she expected at all. I have sent it out to some magazines and competitions, so we’ll see. I am now reworking the beginning of my novel, Unspeakable Things, ready to send it out to more competitions and agents.


 I have also been reading Gillian Flynn – Gone Girl and then Dark Places. Both are incredibly compelling, with twists, turns and outcomes you just don’t see coming. This is clever thriller writing, playing with the reader’s tendency to try to second-guess the next step all along the way. Although we have to suspend our disbelief at times, particularly as the plot advances towards a conclusion in both stories, we forgive this as readers because the wondering, guessing and stunning revelations are so compelling and so enjoyable.

Flynn’s women characters are fascinating too, and I was interested to see her quoted in a Mslexia article by Celia Brayfield, Dark Matters, about expectations of women writers and the trend towards ‘sugar and spice’. Flynn wrote: ‘... the one thing that really frustrates me is that idea that women are innately good, innately nurturing. In literature, they can be dismissably bad – trampy, vampy, bitchy types – but there’s still a big pushback against the idea that women can be just pragmatically evil, bad and selfish.’


Celia Brayfield notes: ‘In modern popular fiction for women the all-things-nice injunction seems to be taken literally in many cases. Chocolate shops, cup-cake bakeries and shopping – preferably for shoes or in a vintage department store – are in vogue... They’re given covers decorated with bows and polka-dots in colours otherwise found on My Little Pony toys...’


As a writer fascinated by the dark side of life, I have often noticed people’s surprise when I tell them what I write about, but then I was never the sugar and spice type, even as a little girl, and felt for a long time that boys had more fun. I was relieved to discover, growing up, that life was a lot more complex and full of possibilities  than the ‘What are little girls made of?’ poem allowed. 



Do discover Mslexia for yourself if you are interested in women’s writing – it is a gold mine of information, encouragement and inspiration.