Wednesday, March 4, 2009

So You Think You Can Write?

I know, I know. This blog is supposed to be about art - and it is - but it's also about thinking. So here's what I'm thinking...


Forget it, Daphne. I've found someone who can really write about lesbians - and about anything else. Her name is Ariel Levy and she caught my attention with her funny, informative and nostalgic piece: Lesbian Nation: When gay women took to the road, in the March 2nd issue of The New Yorker. (It's about a small tribe of lesbian separatists known as the Van Dykes who travelled around the U.S. in the 1970s seeking radical empowerment and escape from society's "testosterone poisoning" in womyn's lands. It brought me back to my one excursion to the New England Women's Music Retreat - a festive occasion, to say the least.)

My new writing idol is a staff writer for The New Yorker, formerly a contributing editor at New York Magazine (my other standby) and has written for other publications such as Vogue and Slate (about glamour and good looks on The L Word). She has authored two books, most recently Female Chauvinist Pigs: Women and the Rise of Raunch Culture about pornography, feminism, sex and female behavior in the 21st century. (See Ariel on youtube talking about how pornography has influenced women's body image.)

Sorry to say, Daphne, but she's also a looker - one might even say glamorous - and yes, she's married, to Amy Norquist. You can read about their wedding or, as she termed it, "a party about love," as described by the "bride" (her quotes) in NY Magazine.

Ariel Levy, right, and Amy Norquist on their wedding day in Bluemont, Virginia.
(Photo: Thad Russell)

I do remember reading a great article by Ariel last September in the New Yorker about Cindy McCain, not that I remembered the name of the author, but this was the only place I had ever read all those facts about Cindy's background, interests, etc. that the campaign was certainly not putting forward. I loved it and now I understand why I enjoyed it so much.

So, there you go, Daphne. If the NY Times had any sense, they would give you the boot and beg Ariel to pen a few lines whenever they felt the need to expound on any aspect of lesbian sensibility, fashion or intellectual perspicacity.

Buh-bye!



3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I always enjoy your posts. I don't get any of the magazines or read them that you refer to but one of my daughters probably knows about them.

Abraham Lincoln
Brookville, Ohio

Anonymous said...

Let's not forget that art IS about thinking, which means that a thoughtful blog on page that focuses on art is more than fitting.

Anonymous said...

Brava! I had read that egregious piece by Daphne Merkin and found it chilling -- I kind of forgot about it after that. I'd always enjoyed her writing, even when it became whiny and self-involved it was still interesting and seemed quintessentially New York, at least to me, reading from the hinterlands.
Then the lesbians-are-gross essay came out and, well, yuck.

SO! How wonderful that you posit the brilliant, irrepressible, generally sunny, also-self-involved but in a way that makes us cheer for her, Ariel. I love her writing, too. Kudos!