Chick-Lit
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About the Author

Cris Mazza is the author of a dozen novels and collections of fiction. Her most recent books are the novels Disability and Homeland, and a memoir titled Indigenous / Growing Up Californian. Among her other notable titles are Dog People, Your Name Here: ___, plus the critically acclaimed Is It Sexual Harassment Yet? She was also co-editor of Chick-Lit: Postfeminist Fiction, and Chick-Lit 2 (No Chick Vics), anthologies of women's fiction, and was a recipient of an NEA fellowship. Mazza's first novel, How to Leave a Country, while still in manuscript won the PEN / Nelson Algren Award for book-length fiction. The judges included Studs Terkel and Grace Paley. Since then, Mazza's fiction has been reviewed numerous times in The New York Times Book Review, The Wall Street Journal, MS Magazine, Chicago Tribune Books, The Los Angeles Times Book Review, The Voice Literary Supplement, The San Francisco Review of Books, Time Out: London, and many other book review publications. In spring 1996, Mazza was the cover feature in Poets & Writers Magazine, and in December 2004 Poets & Writers published her essay "Chick-Lit and the Perversion of a Genre." The October 2005 Contemporary Literary Criticism as well as Routledge Press's Chick Lit: The New Woman's Fiction (October 2005) feature Mazza's essay on Chick-Lit. A native of Southern California, Cris Mazza grew into early adulthood in San Diego County. She now lives 50 miles west of Chicago and is a professor in the Program for Writers at the University of Illinois at Chicago

Jeffrey DeShell, novelist, professor, and literary critic, is the author of six novels: Expectation, S & M, Arthouse, The Trouble With Being Born, In Heaven Everything is Fine (FC2), and Peter: An (A)Historical Romance (Starcherone), as well as a critical book, The Peculiarity of Literature: An Allegorical Approach to Poe's Fiction. He has co-edited two collections of fiction by American women, Chick-Lit I: Postfeminist Fiction and Chick-Lit II: No Chick Vics (FC2), and was a Fulbright Teaching Fellow in Budapest, Hungary, 1999-2000. Currently, DeShell is a Professor of English, where he has served as the Director of the Creative Writing Program at the University of Colorado at Boulder.

Reviews

A must-read for girls who have considered selling out. This book hails the dawn of an inclusive, fun, sexy, silly, literary feminism." —Eurudice

This collection of 22 short fiction pieces was selected from 400 manuscripts submitted in response to a call for "postfeminist writing" from women working in alternative fiction. The stories demonstrate diverse styles and play with variations of the real and surreal. For example, Lara Anderson Love's "Skittles" portrays a couple making life decisions by playing cards; Suzanne Greathouse's "Operator Seven" concerns a deranged hairdresser who subjects herself and others to a vengeful, disloyal dog; and Lily James's "Up There" features a woman who counsels a group of impotent males while a former member watches from the skylight. These stories contain violence, sex, madness, and perversion. They are not all pleasant, but they are fresh, creative, powerful, and challenging. Recommended for literary collections.-Jeris Cassel, Rutgers Univ. Libs., New Brunswick, N.J.

A must-read for girls who have considered selling out. This book hails the dawn of an inclusive, fun, sexy, silly, literary feminism." -Eurudice

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