Author: Jen Doll

Ben Greenman and Being a Literary Provocateur

Ben Greenman is a writer who pokes, prods, and sets readers off balance in hopes of generating emotion and thought — and maybe, sometimes, simply because he feels like it. This is a man who has purposely inserted typos in his books.

By Jen Doll

Sep 6, 2012

The A.P. Does Not Want Us to Forget Bill and Monica

Fourteen years ago there was a sex scandal that rocked our nation to its core. In the wake of Bill Clinton's speech at the DNC, it rears rears its increasingly tepid head yet again. Lewinsky is a long legacy for former President Bill Clinton, but it's also a rather impotent one. 

Comments | 3,790 Views

By Jen Doll

Sep 6, 2012

The Quest for Gender Equality Stops and Shops

You might say, haven't there always been men's departments? Do not underestimate the power of the new gender-based selling. As Eric Wilson writes in the New York Times, "it would seem that the fight for gender equality has finally come to the place where one might least expect it."

Comments | 7,402 Views

By Jen Doll

Sep 5, 2012

The Secret Language of Restaurants

There's much to learn about the way we dine from a piece in today's New York Times by Susanne Craig. It follows an awesome linguistic restaurant chart from Ben Schott that appeared in the paper in early August listing a variety of the terms and acronyms assorted restaurant waitstaff use to describe guests.

Comments | 12,974 Views

By Jen Doll

Sep 5, 2012

Judy Blume Still Has Lots to Teach Us

Judy Blume, formative author for generations of girls and boys, is 74. She's still writing and she's still teaching us lessons, this time, about breast cancer in the form of a blog post, that went up today, titled !@#$% Happens.

Comments | 1,869 Views

By Jen Doll

Sep 5, 2012

Michelle Obama and the Power of Mom

Much of the Internet appeared awash with love for Michelle Obama last night, and today, as the analyses of her speech at the Democratic National Convention come through, there is more praise, much of it dealing with Michelle as the self-dubbed "mom-in-chief."

Comments | 5,836 Views

By Jen Doll

Sep 4, 2012

How Not to Ask Someone to Marry You

People, people, people. We realize some of you are very eager to wed one another, and that you want to do it in the right way. You know, by asking in the most visible and obvious fashion that shows the world how much you really do care. While this is a lovely gesture, you should stop. 

Comments | 11,604 Views

By Jen Doll

Sep 4, 2012

Joanna Coles Takes the Helm of Cosmopolitan

September brings some shifts in the world of women's magazines. Joanna Coles, Marie Claire's editor in chief since 2006, has been named the editor in chief of Cosmopolitan, replacing Kate White, who helmed the world's largest women's magazine for 14 years and is leaving to focus on her established writing and speaking career.

Comments | 644 Views

By Jen Doll

Sep 4, 2012

An Actual Submissive on What 'Fifty Shades of Grey' Got Wrong

We spoke to Sophie Morgan, the pseudonymous author of the book being described as the "real" Fifty Shades of Grey, about the inevitable comparisons to the best-selling trilogy and what she hopes to accomplish with her memoir, Diary of a Submissive.

Comments | 50,273 Views

By Jen Doll

Sep 4, 2012

The End of the End of 'Organic'?

Would an apple by another name taste as sweet, or so free of antibiotics, so nutritious and healthful? Or would it taste exactly the same, but just cost more? Such were the concerns of Stanford University doctors who researched whether organic foods are actually better.

Comments | 3,894 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 31, 2012

A Goodbye to Summer: It's Not Us. It's You.

We're breaking up with Summer, and moving on to Fall. We'll always have the memories, though—at least, of the things that we remember.

Comments | 3,793 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 31, 2012

Many More Types of Book Readers: A Diagnostics Addendum

Enough of you have gotten in touch to admit your own book-reading characteristics that we feel the Diagnostics Guide deserves an addendum. Herewith, many more types of book readers. Let us know if we left you out.

Comments | 26,060 Views

By Jen Doll and Richard Lawson

Aug 31, 2012

The TV Couples Who Should Have Lasted Forever

Yesterday brought us a rumor (via The New York Post) that Beverly Hills 90210's Kelly and Dylan, or Jennie Garth and Luke Perry, might actually be an item IRL. We can dream! While we're dreaming, we're going to dream big. Here are the other TV couples we want to see to forever and ever, onscreen or off.

Comments | 19,702 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 31, 2012

Shulamith Firestone, Feminist Author of 'The Dialectic of Sex,' Dies

Shulamith Firestone, the author of The Dialectic of Sex: The Case for Feminist Revolution, has died at the age of 67, apparently of natural causes, The New York Times' Margolit Fox.

Comments | 690 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 30, 2012

Y.A. for Grownups

The Fall Book Preview of Cross-Under Reads

We've been reading review copies all summer, and with the help of some bookseller friends, have compiled this fall preview of teen-and-younger books you won't want to miss.

Comments | 5,565 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 30, 2012

A 'Deconstructed, Purposeful' Cigarette for Hipsters

Let no one say that hipsters are not entrepreneurial. If the new "organic" cigarette for people who ride fixies is any indication, hipsters are very much entrepreneurial indeed, and they do not want to smoke garbage.

Comments | 2,484 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 30, 2012

The Fight Over the Future of 'The Godfather'

Paramount Pictures and the son of Mario Puzo, the creator of The Godfather, are in a turf war over the literary rights to the franchise, reports the Associated Press.

Comments | 413 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 29, 2012

What Kind of Book Reader Are You? A Diagnostics Guide

The New Yorker's Page-Turner blog includes a book-reader coinage that got us thinking about our reading styles. There, Mark O'Connell confesses his dirty little reading secret: He doesn't finish books; he's a "promiscuous reader." We can think of some other types of book readers, too. Which are you?

Comments | 169,028 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 29, 2012

How Storms Got Their Names

In the best case scenario, a storm is never named. It putters out well before it reaches land, or if on land, it's just a lot of rain, a regular annoying damp day but nothing dangerous, definitely not a hurricane, and no one is any the wiser. Other times storms start small and rise to an occasion of terror, becoming quite powerful and doing dreadful things. And we insist on naming them.

Comments | 2,069 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 29, 2012

The Only Thing We Have to Fear Is Math Itself

Since we outsourced math to the machines, we do a lot less active math in our daily lives. Who's really bearing the brunt of all this math-apathy or, sometimes, even math-fear? The children. The children are not learning the math.

Comments | 1,162 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 28, 2012

There's a Right Way and a Wrong Way to Insult Someone Online

Donald Trump's tweet that Arianna Huffington "is unattractive both inside and out" reminds us that there are good ways and bad ways to deliver a pithy online retort. His is the latter. 

Comments | 2,352 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 28, 2012

Things Get Mean When Everyone's a Critic

On the Internet, everyone can have an opinion. It is in this place, where backlash can beget backlash on both sides, for those criticized as well as those doling out the negative comments, that the book review now exists. Call it the new equality, for good or for bad. It's not nice and it's not mean, but it is a free for all. 

Comments | 6,616 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 28, 2012

Everything We Thought We Knew About the Swedish Chef Is Wrong

Americans of a certain age who grew up on the Muppets often adore the Swedish Chef, but many actual Swedes hate the dude, or, really, really dislike him. He may not even be Swedish. Who is this Muppet, anyway?

Comments | 31,066 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 28, 2012

The Squirrelly Side of the New Urbane Eating

Earlier this month, an issue of Chicago Reader's Mike Sula proclaimed that the meat of the climbing, scurrying, nut-eating mammals that urbanites encounter daily was the "Chicken of the Trees." Well, New York City has squirrels, too.

Comments | 1,531 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 27, 2012

Generation X Mystified (Again) by Growing Up

It is hard to go from cultural darling to elder statesman. That, essentially, is the takeaway from Alex Williams' piece in the New York Times reflecting upon how a bunch of formerly cool-kid Gen Xers feel about having one of their cohort, Paul Ryan, 42, running for vice president.

Comments | 7,017 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 27, 2012

The Waitstaff Is Watching You Date

Your best-kept dating secrets are not so secret after all. According to Ellen McLaughlin's recent sociological study in the New York Post, the waitstaff and bartenders and managers at any number of New York City restaurants and bars (and then some) are on to your techniques. 

Comments | 4,779 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 24, 2012

Unexpected Fisticuffs at a Literary Event

Your typical literary reading is not a thing that tends to lead to physical fights and broken glasses. But at last night's Vol. 1 Brooklyn, what was shaping up to be a harmonious meeting of literary minds turned into something a bit more dramatic.

Comments | 1,518 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 24, 2012

Going Numb in the Summer of the Gun

On July 20 we woke up to the news that a 24-year-old man had killed 12 people and wounded countless others in a shooting at the midnight premiere of The Dark Knight Rises in Aurora, Colorado. That July 20 was a summer Friday, like today. Today, there's another shooting.

Comments | 10,443 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 24, 2012

The Moral Decline in the Words We Use

If the frequency of word usage "related to moral excellence and virtue" in the Google Books archive is to be believed, America is in a steep moral decline.

Comments | 15,001 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 24, 2012

Free Eggs Benedict: Brunch Backlash Is Back

Today in the New York Daily News, with enough time to give you plenty of room for discourse prior to your Benedict-and-Bloodies date tomorrow—say, 1-ish? No sense having to get up too early!—Alexander Nazaryan writes that we need to get rid of brunch, because brunch is, he says, ruining America.

Comments | 2,414 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 23, 2012

Random House Canada Launches Hazlitt, a 'Writer-centric' Online Magazine

Random House of Canada has launched Hazlitt, a new online magazine that's part of the publisher's revamped digital strategy. This is no Fox News Magazine.

Comments | 662 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 23, 2012

Y.A. for Grownups

Reading Lois Lowry's 'The Giver' as an Adult

The Giver is one of the books you probably read as a kid, somewhere between late elementary or middle school and early high school, depending on your school and curriculum. Two of us hadn't, though, and finally did.

Comments | 13,966 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 23, 2012

'Mwahahaha': Introducing Oxford Dictionaries' New Words

We got pretty excited about the new words added to Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary recently, so it's only fair that we muster the same enthusiasm for the terms Oxford has unveiled in their quarterly update of new words and meanings. 

Comments | 6,207 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 23, 2012

Coping with the Worst House Guests on the Planet

Today The New York Times offers some solutions to an issue of etiquette that you may have confronted this summer, or perhaps another time of year, if you're popular or have a great house in a great location. Are people always wanting to stay with you, and you don't want them to, and you don't know what to do about it?

Comments | 1,470 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 22, 2012

Can They Ever Be as Good? The Books We Want to See as Movies

What's better, the book or the movie? Can the movie ever be as good as the book? The debate is an age-old one, probably existing since the very first screenplay was derived from a popular work, because when we fall in love with books we typically fall hard.

Comments | 3,621 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 22, 2012

Free Pussy Riot: When 'Vulgar' Words Become Acceptable

There's a word we keep seeing in the news of late, a word it seems like we weren't supposed to say in mixed company, much less in "family" newspapers. Now it's everywhere—or, at least, in way more places than it used to be. 

Comments | 3,074 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 22, 2012

The Return of the Wine Spritzer, Now More Open-Minded Than Ever

Recently, we learned that just about the worst thing a person could ever do in a bar is to—I don't even want to say it—order that foul concoction, the mojito. Whatever to drink instead? 

Comments | 2,841 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 21, 2012

The Imagined Lives of Punctuation Marks

We feel strongly about the punctuation we interact with in our daily lives. Today, we learn something about the @ that we did not know, leading us to wonder about the personality traits of our other favorite grammatical marks?

Comments | 15,754 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 21, 2012

How to Just Be a Twentysomething

It seems we're always going on about the hows and whys and what's of the contemporary twentysomething, as evidenced in recent reactions to The New York Times' piece on Emma Koenig's blog to the many "thoughtful" or "navel-gazing" (or both) posts on Thought Catalog.

Comments | 7,961 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 21, 2012

Claim: Hillary Clinton Convinced Obama to Go After Bin Laden

Investigative journalist Richard Miniter has a new book out today, Leading From Behind: The Reluctant President and the Advisors Who Decide for Him, in which he claims Barack Obama is "fully vetted" for the first time in history. He also claims Obama has been heavily influenced in his decision-making by women.

Comments | 1,379 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 21, 2012

Old Folks Remind Us How to Feel About Kids These Days

It's rather a fact of life that we will all grow up to think that the generations coming after us are spoiled, have it too easy, are entitled, know nothing about the rough life we had, couldn't have hacked it in the old days, are completely and totally self-absorbed, and so on and so on. There's a bit of "Get Off My Lawn" in all of us. 

Comments | 517 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 20, 2012

Phyllis Diller's Lessons for Funny Ladies

Phyllis Diller has died at the age of 95. It seems relevant to mention that very recently we were talking about whether women can be funny or not. Of course they can be. Diller was a special example, though.

Comments | 1,840 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 20, 2012

A Guide to Talking About 'Women's Issues'

Herewith, a discussion of a few words and phrases that have become stumbling blocks for a variety of men, and sometimes women, in the public arena—and what one should know before using them.

Comments | 5,757 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 20, 2012

Learning to Live with Our Human Hatred of Lines

Of all the things one might hate as related to our fairly good, not terribly challenging lives, line-standing is clearly not the worst—the worst is obviously bad pizza—but it's an offense that galls nonetheless.

Comments | 900 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 20, 2012

Meet Sal Strazzullo, Lawyer After Dark

Sal Strazzullo, New York City night-life lawyer, is just a regular guy from Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, who wears bespoke Italian suits and knows his way around both a velvet rope and a bar exam.

Comments | 422 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 17, 2012

'The Hunger Games' Breaks the Potter Book Barrier on Amazon

The Hunger Games trilogy by Suzanne Collins has surpassed J.K. Rowling's seven-book Harry Potter series as the best-selling books of all time on Amazon.com.

Comments | 7,587 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 17, 2012

Y.A. for Grownups

The Legacy of 'The Baby-Sitters Club'

The Baby-sitters Club: Kristy Thomas, Mary Anne Spier, Claudia Kishi, Stacey McGill. They were the originals, the quintet of female friends who preceded the ladies of Sex and the City and came well before the foursome in Girls.

Comments | 11,027 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 17, 2012

How We Use Pronouns Now: You, Me, and Everyone We Know

Last week I wrote of a shift that's occurring in gendered pronouns: More she and her, less pronoun domination by he and him, as per a recent study from a professor at San Diego State. Today, we take on the I. And me. And you, too.

Comments | 5,006 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 16, 2012

Lessons in Underbragging, the World's Best New Form of the Brag

Tuesday we introduced a new form of bragging: The underbrag, or the brag that isn't, except it is. Today, we check back to see how you're doing. 

Comments | 4,052 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 16, 2012

Is Paul Ryan Ushering in 'The Year of the Manslut'?

One of the most immediate reactions to the announcement that Paul Ryan would be Mitt Romney's V.P. was the ensuing debate over whether he was hot or not. Today, The New York Post's Andrea Peyser has a column on our dirty little habits. 

Comments | 2,034 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 15, 2012

Inside Scrabble's Cheating Scandal: 'And Then His Hands Went Below the Table'

Yesterday, those outside the inner echelons of the competitive Scrabble-playing world were shocked to hear of a scandal beyond anything we could have imagined, cheating at Scrabble Nationals. Some of those within the scene were less surprised.

Comments | 17,931 Views

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