The book is
The Society of Shameand one of the many, many ways you can tell it’s satire is that it keeps making people who don’t get it mad. Satire is fiction, hopped up on humor and then amped up by all the things that seem like they couldn't quite happen and yet you know they might. (Another commonality of good satire? The most outrageous bits are often the ones that come straight from the headlines.
The author is Jane Roper, who is also the author of a memoir,
Double Time: How I Survived–and Mostly Thrived–Through the First Three Years of Mothering Twins, another novel,
Eden Lake, numerous personal essays and humor pieces, and a very eclectic Substack,
Jane’s Calamity.
She MAY be the first graduate of the famous
Iowa Writer’s Workshop to appear on the pod, and we talk about that, as well as the parenting memoir ghetto. But mostly we’re focused on satire—what it is, how it’s really playing with fire, and why it still needs heart.
A few other satires mentioned:
Dietland, Sarai Walker
The Startup Wife, Tahmima Anam
#AmReading
Jane: The One, Julia Argy
Daughters of Nantucket, Julie Gerstenblatt
KJ: Ms. Demeanor, Elinor Lipman
Find Jane on Instagram -
@writerjaneroper
If you love a good writing retreat—especially one that comes with good solid coaching and the chance to meet others who are working on similar projects—here’s one to check out. This fall, three Author Accelerator certified book coaches are offering Mainely Memoir, a retreat for women writers in historic Biddeford, Maine, held over three days in the gorgeous Maine woods in September, with one-on-one coaching both before and after the retreat. It’s the perfect opportunity to give yourself the gift of time and focus so that you can make real progress on your memoir this year. Find out more at
www.mainelymemoir.com
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