June 24, 2022
Summer Reading: Five Slightly Unconventional Chick Lit Recommendations
When you crack it open, you are transported to a story about a young woman starting her career (in journalism or advertising, or maybe she owns a cupcake shop), fumbling through romantic relationships and clumsily aiming to have it all. It鈥檚 sold as women鈥檚 liberation, but the protagonist is riddled with anxiety.
Sound familiar? If you answered yes, you are among the masses who have indulged in a genre deemed, often disparagingly, 鈥渃hick lit.鈥
Dr. Jenny McKenney, PhD is a senior instructor in the 草莓污视频导航鈥檚 Department of English. She teaches a senior seminar called Chick Lit whose syllabus opens with one of the original masters of books by and about women 鈥 Jane Austen. McKenney says the term chick-lit, 鈥渉as been used dismissively to categorize works that are broadly popular to women readers 鈥 slight, comic novels, largely on the topic of romance, work and finding one鈥檚 place in the world.鈥
That might be the truth, but it鈥檚 not the whole truth.
鈥淭here are at least three troubling assumptions at play here,鈥 says McKenney. 鈥淭he first is that a book鈥檚 popularity is inversely related to its quality; two, the very old-fashioned notion that we should only read books for the purpose of moral or artistic improvement; and, three, that the stories women tell about their hopes and insecurities are best kept behind a bubblegum-pink cover and read at the beach.鈥
McKenney sets dismissive readers straight with these five smart picks for summer.
Evelina, or, the History of a Young Lady鈥檚 Entrance Into the World
By Frances 鈥淔anny鈥 Burney
Published in 1778, Frances Burney鈥檚 book (sometimes credited under her nickname, Fanny) precedes the heyday of chick lit by more than 200 years, but is in many ways a template for the books to come. Written in the form of letters, Evelina is about a young woman鈥檚 first entrance into London society. It鈥檚 full of social gaffes, embarrassing relations and predatory men who try to entrap her at every turn. Evelina successfully navigates her way to marriage eventually, but not without some harrowing adventures in the polite and impolite scenes of Georgian London. Jane Austen was a fan.
Bridget Jones鈥檚 Diary
By Helen Fielding
No list of essential chick-lit reading is complete without Helen Fielding鈥檚 1996 novel, Bridget Jones鈥檚 Diary, which set the standard for many years to come. Fielding鈥檚 book is compiled largely of Bridget鈥檚 funny, honest and often vulnerable journal entries that describe her struggles with work, her body and her own self-destructive behaviours. You may remember this book (or the movie) to be about Bridget finding her Mr. Darcy, but it is also a scathing critique of diet culture, women鈥檚 magazines, the self-help industry and the impossible pressure on women to 鈥渉ave it all.鈥
Ayesha at Last
By Uzma Julaluddin
Jane Austen鈥檚 Pride and Prejudice looms largely in chick lit as the prototypical romance plot. Two recent novels, representative of the increasingly diverse field of women鈥檚 fiction, stand out in a saturated marketplace of Austen adaptations for their updated approach to Austen鈥檚 romance and social satire. Uzma Julaluddin鈥檚 2018 novel, Ayesha at Last, brings Austen to a Toronto Muslim neighbourhood where our initially unlikely couple is aspiring spoken-word poet, Ayesha Shamsi, and the pious and traditional Khalid.
Unmarriageable
By Sonia Kamal
The second modern Austen adaptation, Sonia Kamal鈥檚 2019 work, Unmarriageable, set in modern-day Pakistan, features Alys Binat, a 30-year-old schoolteacher. The novel opens with her teaching Pride and Prejudice to a room full of traditional female students, to which she explains that there is more to life than a marriage to a rich man from a good family. Austen herself is a reminder that there 鈥渋s a vast difference between remaining unmarried and choosing to stay single.鈥
Seven Days in June
By Tia Williams
Eva Mercy, a character in Tia Williams鈥 2021 novel, Seven Days in June, is arguably a niche chick-lit writer herself, facing a tight deadline for the 15th book in her popular series of vampire erotica. This is a book about second chances 鈥 both personally and professionally 鈥 as Eva rekindles an old flame and reignites her writing career. Seven Days in June is a cheeky satire on the writing establishment, an homage to New York life and fashion, a celebration of female friendship, a steamy summer romp, and a joyous celebration of Black literature and love.