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Author: Steve Himmer

  • Girl Lit Five: 'Rings Only Get Lost Down Drains in Films' by Laura Tansley

    Below is a tense piece of the domestic from Laura Tansley. I love her use of detail of life in an early nineties household, and the subtle ramping of stress between the woman and girls, even as they are introduced as a single unit – it appears as if they are, in fact – like…

  • Literature of the Girl Essay Two: Bad Girl Lit

    The Panopticon by Jenni Fagan + How the Light Gets In by M.J. Hyland Girl lit we’ve covered. So what’s a bad girl and how do we talk about her fictionality? Oh, you know, employ stretchy terminology. Ping the elastic with your teeth. So let us say to begin, a bad girl is someone who…

  • Girl Lit Four: 'Where She Came From' by Chris Rice

    This is an excerpt from a novel ms entitled Rambler. Rice writes with fine-tuned sensitivity to how natural landscapes shape identity. I’m watching the grey autumn rains fall here, but here’s the alchemy of fiction, the transmutation of senses: I can feel instead the desert heat, see the glints off a hot car chassis, the…

  • Girl Lit 3: 'Fuck You Too, Pixie Meat' by Kirsty Logan

    Below is a story of teenage self-destruction, rock and roll, drugs and punch ups – a fairytale of all these things, from the hand of Kirsty Logan, fellow The Female Gaze Review writer and inhabitant of Scotland. She writes lustily and skewed, injecting old forms with modern feeling. And in her explorations of marginal spaces,…

  • A conversation with John McNally

    What books and/or authors have had the most influence on your writing? As a child, the novels and short stories of Ray Bradbury and Ursula K. Leguin introduced me to fiction’s possibilities. In college, John Irving’s The World According to Garp made me push in all the chips and say, “This is what I’m going…

  • Literature of the Girl: Ch5, ‘Wakamurasaki’ from The Tale of Genji by Murasaki Shikibu (trans Royall Tyler) + The Voyage Out by Virginia Woolf

    The first essay on Literature of the Girl! At first sight, these two novels seem to be without a great deal of overlap, but they do have one theme in common – relationships, and specifically, the liminal time before and while a girl is betrothed. I use betrothed for its dusty, weighty quality, hinting at…

  • Girl Lit Two: from Domestication Handbook by Kristen Stone

    As promised, Girl Lit as written by Kristen Stone. Below are five short pieces that I can’t begin to quantify, but to let you know, they are all from her Domestication Handbook, which I shall hopefully be writing about here in greater length. + More notes for a suburban memoir I grew up near a…

  • Girl Lit One: Excerpt from Kilea

    Below is the first Literature of the Girl fiction I want to share with you. It’s from my first ms, Kilea, an early draft of which formed a large part of my Creative Writing thesis. I think it will go nicely with tomorrow’s fiction by Kristen Stone – I know! A departure already from the…

  • Girl Lit Suggested Reading List

    Autumn comes in with a high gale and here I am this September to write away with you on an exploration – of girls in books, of inner and outer landscapes. Like the best adventures, though not perhaps the best essays, it is likely that borders and edges will be misted over, vague, malleable. Come…

  • On Fiction: An Interview with Jared Yates Sexton

    Jared Yates Sexton, an Indiana native, is an Assistant Professor of Creative Writing at Georgia Southern University. His short story collection, An End to All Things, was published by Atticus Books in 2012, and he is putting final touches on his second novel. His work, which has appeared internationally, has been nominated for two Pushcarts,…

  • Goodbye August

    It has been a great pleasure to gather and present to you all these stories from Atlanta fiction writers. Still, I wasn’t able to corral every fiction writer who lives in Atlanta. There are so many budding fiction writers coming out of this city. I chose to include those writers actively at work. And still,…

  • The Waters (an excerpt from Pickett's Charge) by Charles McNair

    Here’s an excerpt from the long-awaited second novel from Charles McNair. I loved Charles’s first novel, Land O’ Goshen, which was set in a near-future distopic Alabama. This chapter from Pickett’s Charge gives us a glimpse into the surreal world of the novel. Not only is Charles a fantastic writer, but he’s a centerpiece to…