Other Girls to Burn is a collection of formally inventive essays that explores the relationship between women and violence, from the Santa Barbara shooting to 13th century virgin martyrs, mixed martial arts, true crime, and rape culture. What does it mean for women to be complicit in the violence of the patriarchy? How do women navigate risk as well as revel in thrill? What does it mean to both fear and perpetuate violence? The essays in this collection are in conversation with contemporary nonfiction writers such as Maggie Nelson, Sarah Manguso and Anne Boyer. These formally inventive, lyric-leaning essays shift between cultural criticism and personal essay. The book coheres around a central motif of female mystics.
She edits the online poetry journal, ILK. She has written several chapbooks, and her full length poetry collection, PINK MUSEUM, is out from Big Lucks.
She holds degrees in English Literature from the University of St Andrews and the University of Oxford, as well as receiving the Robert T. Jones Scholarship at Emory University. Caroline completed her MFA at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, where she taught composition in the First Year Writing Program and creative writing at the Juniper Institute for Young Writers.
Her poetry and essays have appeared or are forthcoming in Conjunctions, Hunger Mountain and Black Warrior Review, among others.
“The meat asks itself: Am I the body or its labor? Am I the self or the fighter?”
I stand by my statement that poets are my favorite essayists. Don’t sleep on this incredible essay collection by Caroline Crew that blazes the intersections of the (female) body & violence through wrestling, true crime, fairy tales, saint-hood & more.
"The parade of perfect martyrs marches right on through history, taking on each era's peculiar beauty standards to arrive as today's parade of perfect victims." (91)
The collection culminates in the question: what is it we are pathologizing about womanhood?
For fans of Anne Boyer, Bassey Ikpi, Maggie Nelson.
Essays that take you to unexpected places and will stick with you long after you put the book down. I especially loved the parts about female friendships, both the joy and sorrow that one experiences with different friends. It also made me examine my own interest in true crime as a woman and the author explained how I felt very well.
Absolutely obsessed with the delight and awe these essays provide. Crew writes through multiple approaches with each essay, showing versatility and vulnerability within every moment. It's been a book I've been recommending to everyone.
Essays that are poems. Standouts for me are "The Discomfort Index," "What I Should Consider...," and "Boys on the Radio." I would read "Origin Unknown" as a novel in a flash.
Coming back to this one to reiterate: love an essay collection. Made me violently upset every time I opened it, and I looooved to open it. Women and violence, sainthood and boxing and the body. Super interesting and super moving.