Episode 23: Alice Martin, author of Westward Women; and, Is Exposition Gendered?

Women everywhere have an indescribable urge to get up and go west. That would be weird if it was real; in the hands of Alice Martin, author of the novel Westward Women, it’s not only weird but an incredible conceit for a thoughtful work of literary fiction that’s among the best books we’ve read this year. We were lucky to have Alice as a guest.

This was followed by some deep thoughts about exposition in fiction, such as “what is it” and “is it for girls?” Turns out it’s for everyone, but there may be some expectations about how manly men writers don’t do much of it, because it’s not masculine to tell people what you’re thinking, I guess?

Westward Women is out now.

Works Cited this episode:

A New Home, Who’ll Follow?, Caroline Kirkland
On the Calculation of Volume, Solvej Balle
Bunny, Mona Awad
The Husbands, Holly Gramazio
Once and Again, Rebecca Serle
The Sun Also Rises, Ernest Hemingway
The Orchard Keeper, Cormac McCarthy
Brighton Rock, Graham Greene
One Hundred Years of Solitude, Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Legends of the Fall, Jim Harrison
Speak, Memory, Vladimir Nabokov
The Housemaid, Freida McFadden
Mockingjay, Suzanne Collins
Legends of the Fall, dir. Edward Zwick

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Episode 22: Nina McConigley