Blogelstein!
stpancras
I'm Jean Hannah Edelstein, a writer, editor, and author, originally from New York, now a Londoner.

This is my personal blog, with things that I'm reading, writing, liking, and thinking about.

About me
Email me
Follow me on Twitter
View my journalism portfolio
Read my fiction and essays
Discuss copywriting projects
See what I'm currently reading
Read Himglish and Femalese
(the book I wrote)

“When I was starting to write—in the late fifties, early sixties—there was a kind of social tradition in which male novelists could operate. Hard drinkers, bad livers. Wives, wars, big fish, Africa, Paris, no second acts. A man who wrote novels had a role in the world, and he could play that role and do whatever he wanted behind it. A woman who wrote novels had no particular role. Women who wrote novels were quite often perceived as invalids. Carson McCullers, Jane Bowles. Flannery O’Connor, of course. Novels by women tended to be described, even by their publishers, as sensitive. I’m not sure this is so true anymore, but it certainly was at the time, and I didn’t much like it. I dealt with it the same way I deal with everything. I just tended my own garden, didn’t pay much attention, behaved—I suppose—deviously. I mean I didn’t actually let too many people know what I was doing.”

— Paris Review - The Art of Fiction No. 71, Joan Didion (via somethingchanged)

(via somethingchanged)

  10:51 am  |   September 24 2010   |  20 notes   |  View comments  

  1. therestoftheworld liked this
  2. thereisnosignofland reblogged this from somethingchanged
  3. secondfloorsceance liked this
  4. verderame reblogged this from theuglyearring
  5. lonelyselfishmaladjusted liked this
  6. theuglyearring reblogged this from somethingchanged
  7. annieatkins reblogged this from jeanhannah
  8. annieatkins liked this
  9. norsknowsnada liked this
  10. bisutun liked this
  11. shorterexcerpts liked this
  12. claudineise liked this
  13. looceefir liked this
  14. jeanhannah reblogged this from somethingchanged
  15. elizmayerle liked this
  16. choire liked this
  17. okmabelle liked this
  18. broadcastingfromhome liked this
  19. absolutefucker liked this
  20. elena2 liked this
  21. somethingchanged posted this
blog comments powered by Disqus
Back   |   Next
twentyten by Justin Waggoner