NP, a request for female authors (with a M&D mention at the end)

Keith Davis kbob42 at gmail.com
Wed Jan 3 22:21:13 CST 2018


Make it stop! Now there are 78 books added to my must read list...


Www.innergroovemusic.com

> On Jan 3, 2018, at 11:18 PM, Drake Smith <drake.smith3 at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Short yet potent pre-18th C reading:
> 
> Fantomina by Eliza Haywood
> 
> Oronooko: or the Royal Slave by Aphra Behn
> 
>> On Wed, Jan 3, 2018 at 5:06 PM, Smoke Teff <smoketeff at gmail.com> wrote:
>> Renata Adler’s fiction may be as brilliant and heroic as Joan Didion’s non-
>> 
>> If you like David Markson read RA. 
>> 
>>> On Jan 3, 2018, at 12:59 PM, Mark Kohut <mark.kohut at gmail.com> wrote:
>>> 
>>> One of my unimportant "hobbies' is watching--comes from my erstwhile profession---how writers "move" in the cultural ether. Or how I think I see them move...
>>> (with Google analytics now one can actually get some loose stats if wanted)
>>> 
>>> Watching Ms Le Guin get canonized (sic) in Amer Lit history has been very rewarding....from L of A thru so much attention, quoting, being alluded to---that
>>> great story of the suffering of children for example.....
>>> 
>>> 
>>>> On Wed, Jan 3, 2018 at 12:27 PM, Joseph Tracy <brook7 at sover.net> wrote:
>>>> Glad someone put Ursula Le Guin
>>>> I think Louise Erdrich belongs on my list too
>>>> 
>>>> > On Jan 1, 2018, at 6:43 PM, Joseph Tracy <brook7 at sover.net> wrote:
>>>> >
>>>> > Barbara Kingsolver   ( I think Lacuna a great under-rated masterpiece, but all her work is excellent)
>>>> > Zora Neale Hurston
>>>> > Arundhati Roy
>>>> > Mararet Atwood
>>>> > Isak Dineson gets little mention these days but truly a master short story teller along with memoir-Out of Africa
>>>> > Mary McCarthy
>>>> > I think Rebecca Solnit well worth reading, moving from radical environmentalism to some aggressively funny and spot-on feminism.  Men Explain Things to Me.  The term mansplaining came out of her writing.
>>>> > I also think Naomi Klein’s Shock Doctrine  is one of the most powerful pieces of  non-fiction I have ever read. The book takes up top down economics, deep state machinations and an expose of  the dark underbelly of Milton Friedman’s theories. This is a book several men have tried to write and failed.
>>>> >
>>>> >> On Jan 1, 2018, at 1:34 AM, philip goode <phigoode at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>> >>
>>>> >> Hello,
>>>> >>
>>>> >> Easily I can say the majority of my personal library is written by men and I'd like to even up the male/female ratio, this seems like a sensible place to turn for suggestions.  I'm open to any non-fiction (philosophy, history, (auto)biographies, feminism (theory/lectures), etc.) or any fiction (classics, horror, sci-fi/adventure/fantasy, etc.) as well as kids books or anything else you think is worth sharing.
>>>> >>
>>>> >> Damme, I've also been sitting a few pages into Chapter 40 of M&D for a long time and hope to take this current group read as the opportunity to jump back in and finish it finally.
>>>> >>
>>>> >> Thanks everyone, Happy New Year!
>>>> >>
>>>> >> "Suggest you, Sir, even in Play, that this giggling Rout of poxy half-wits, embody us? Embody us?  America but some Fairy Emanation, without substance, that hath pass'd, by Miracle, into them?--Damme, I think not, --Hell were a better Destiny."
>>>> >>
>>>> >>      Virus-free. www.avg.com
>>>> >
>>>> > -
>>>> > Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?list
>>>> 
>>>> -
>>>> Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?listpynchon-l
>>> 
> 
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