Good American Writers
Bekah
bekah0176 at sbcglobal.net
Mon May 6 13:42:34 CDT 2013
And I'd like to add Cynthia Ozick (Foreign Bodies) and Jhumpa Lahiri (The Namesake).
Elaine Showalter's list of top women authors in the US:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2009/may/09/female-novelists-usa
Life is much easier for serious women authors in the UK where the likes of Atwood and Munro and Mantel and Hazard and Smith and Barker and Byatt and Rowling and Gordimer and Dineson and Bainbridge and Taylor and Lessing and Murdoch and Woolf and many others back to the days of Austen get noticed - get reviewed - get encouraged by publishers and critics. In the US it seems that most publishers want their authors to make mo' $$$ by whatever lowest common denominator will do it (chick-lit and crime books usually). And the critics tend to recognize the new male authors.
https://www.smalldemons.com/users/lists/smdmns_731362_2794/British_Female_Authors_of_the_20th_Century
Tambien:
http://www.thebookescape.com/Feminista.html (world-wide)
This is the site of a personal friend - a bit irritated by the dearth of women authors on that Random House list - sheesh!
http://whisperinggums.com/2011/04/08/nine-just-9-books-by-female-authors-at-the-top-of-a-20th-century-list/
Bekah
On May 6, 2013, at 2:19 AM, Matthew Cissell <macissell at yahoo.es> wrote:
> My problem with The Great American Novel is its defining article. Do the French obsess like this? And don't get me started with the adjective.
>
> All great books, those that have been mentioned. I know: Inclusio unius est exclusio alterius. sure. But let me throw out two names that haven't been mentioned.
>
> Faulkner, Kerouac and our TP all read Thomas Wolfe, maybe his novels are not Great (but the prose?) but they deserve study.
>
> And a couple for the gals. Again, perhaps not Great but certainly good: Kate Chopin and Charlotte Perkins Gilman.
>
> ciao
> mc
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