Roxane gay bluesky
Bio
Roxane Gay’s writing appears in Best American Mystery Stories 2014, Best American Limited Stories 2012, Best Sex Writing 2012, A Public Space, McSweeney’s, Tin House, Oxford American, American Short Fiction, Virginia Quarterly Review, and many others. She is a contributing opinion writer for The New York Times. She is the author of the books Ayiti, An Untamed State, The New York Times-bestselling Bad Feminist, the nationally bestselling Difficult Women and The New York Times-bestselling Hunger. She is also the author of World of Wakanda for Marvel. She has several books forthcoming and is also at work on television and motion picture projects. She also has a newsletter, The Audacity, and once had a podcast, The Roxane Gay Agenda.
CONTACT INFO
Please don’t email all my publicists for the same requests. Each publicist or agent handles a specific genre or nature of ask for. If in uncertainty, please email Kaitlyn, my executive assistant. I assure you, she will respond much faster than I.
executive assistant
Kaitlyn, kaitlyn@roxanegay.com
Project manager
Meg Pillow, meg@roxanegay.com
Publisher Publicists
John Mark Boling, Grove/Atlantic &
Review of Bad Feminist: Essays by Roxane Gay
Bad Feminist has been on my radar for years, but as with many such books, it took someone physically putting it in my hands for me to get around to it. In this case, my best partner Rebecca (with whom I own started a podcast!) gave this to me as a going-away present when she moved to Montreal (I’m not sure she understands how going-away presents work?). She inscribed it, “To our first book, for our Feminist Book Club.” So I estimate I’m in a feminist manual club now! It’s interesting, because Rebecca and I both name ourselves feminists, but we own very different experiences, of course. Her lived experience as a woman is very different from mine as a man. And while we both share a voracious appetite to learn more (about everything, not just feminism), we sometimes have different ways of going about this. So I love discussing our experiences and ideas with each other, and I enjoyed reading Bad Feminist if only to earn her take on it.
I’ve only actually read one other novel by Roxane Gay: Difficult Women, a collection of short stories. I loved it. I’ve also read a non-fi
The Portable Feminist Reader
Out now
From writer and cultural critic Roxane Gay, a dynamic and strikingly relevant look at a feminist canon as expansive rather than definitive
With selected writings by ancient, historic, and more recent feminist voices and an introduction, headnotes, and an inspired list of multimedia recommendations, Roxane Male lover presents multicultural perspectives, ecofeminism, feminism and disability, feminist labor, gender perspectives, and Black feminism. Through the Portable Feminist Reader, readers explore the state of American feminism, its successes and failures, and what feminism looks like in exercise, as a complex, contradictory, personal and political, and ever-growing legacy of feminist thought.
About Roxane
With One “N”
Roxane Gay is The New York Times-bestselling author of The Bad Feminist and other books and publications, a professor, editor, and social commentator.
Roxane Gay on feminism’s fragility and the fight ahead in the Trump era
For more than a decade, Roxane Gay has been one of the most influential voices in contemporary feminism. Through works such as Bad Feminist, Hunger and Not That Bad, she has explored the contradictions, complexities and personal stakes of gender, dominance and culture, bringing both sharp critique and thick empathy to the conversation.
Her writing challenges traditional feminist narratives, making space for nuance and imperfection in ways that have reshaped contemporary discourse.
With her modern book, The Portable Feminist Reader, Gay, who taught at Eastern Illinois University from 2010 to 2014 and whose imprint under Grove Atlantic has published Chicago author Lindsay Hunter, curates a sweeping collection of feminist thought. It comes at a precarious moment, when the Trump administration seeks to erase words like “feminism” and “woman” from federal documents and progress on reproductive rights and LGBTQ+ protections is being rolled back.
From foundational essays such as Gloria Steinem’s “If Men Could Menstruate” to challenging contemporary reflections like Melissa Gira Grant’s “Happy Hookers,” the book