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3.26.2005

Valerie Taylor’s The Girls in 3B led me into a series of books being put out by The Feminist Press entitled Femme Fatales: Women Write Pulp. I enjoyed Taylor’s novel about three young women, one of whom is lesbian, who are struggling to make it on their own in Chicago. Motivated by The Girls, I bought more books in the series and so had the pleasure of reading Dorothy B. Hughes’s work for the first time. Hughes started out her career as a poet before going on to write mysteries in a hard-edged, noir style. The Feminist Press has released two of her novels, both of which are fast reads because they are impossible to put down: The Blackbirder and In a Lonely Place. Feeding into the most striking difference between the two books is an essential similarity: both are written in the third-person limited point of view. But in The Blackbirder, the perspective is limited to a young woman with ties to the French Resistance who is now on the run, and in In A Lonely Place, the perspective is with a male serial killer. Both characters are trying their best to survive, which, in the case of the serial killer, means not getting caught. The blind spots that get in their way speak volumes about the limits of masculine and feminine roles. In the interest of not spoiling plots, I will say no more about the books except that I generally don't like novels about serial killers. I don't like descriptions of violence, especially when, having been processed into entertainment, the descriptions have no real meaning. Hughes, however, doesn't write about the violent acts themselves but focuses on the consciousness that makes the violence possible.


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Quick Guide to Recently Read Entries
"Chesler on Palin"
with Phyllis Chesler's Women's Inhumanity to Women

"A Scrooge Plan Growing in July"
with Charles Dickens,
Dubravka Ugresic
and Anne Elizabeth Moore

Frankenstein
by Mary Shelley

Kiss Me with the Mouth of Your Country
by Amy King

A Free Life
by Ha Jin

"The Invisible Lesbian"
an article by Sarah Schulman

Shakespeare's Kitchen
by Lore Segal

Illusions of Security: Global Surveillance and Democracy in the Post-9/11 World
by Maureen Webb

In the Recently Read Archives
Savushun
by Simin Daneshvar

PP/FF: An Anthology
edited by Peter Conners

¡Workers of the Word, Unite and Fight!
by Mark Nowak

The Truant Lover
by Juliet Patterson

Wild Dogs
by Helen Humphreys

Hangings
by Nina Shope

Vale of Tears
by Paulette Poujol Oriol

The Ministry of Pain
by Dubravka Ugresic

Cassandra at the Wedding
by Dorothy Baker

Good Women
by Jane Stevenson

An@rchitexts: Voices from the Global Digital Resistance
edited by Joanne Richardson

Beyond the Pale
by Elana Dykewomon

Baghdad Burning: Girl Blog from Iraq
by Riverbend

Don't Let Me Be Lonely
by Claudia Rankine

Naphtalene
by Alia Mamdouh

Small g
by Patricia Highsmith

The Braided Tongue
by Roshni Rustomji

The Visitor
by Maeve Brennan

The Blue Books
by Nicole Brossard

Femme Fatales: Women Write Pulp,
a series by the Feminist Press

Nelly Reifler at Parenthetical Note
and Rush Rankin in Chelsea

© 2005-2008, Caroline Wilkinson