Status Updates From Sharp: The Women Who Made a...
Sharp: The Women Who Made an Art of Having an Opinion by
Status Updates Showing 1-30 of 1,403
Paula Mota
is on page 64 of 448
Seduction was forged by intellectual discussion. But he [H.G. Wells] refused to touch [Rebecca] West, despite her advances.It was not out of deference to his wife Jane.The Wells's marriage was an open one, his affairs conducted with Jane's full knowledge.But Wells had another mistress on the go at the time and his practical streak seemed to have kicked in.Two mistresses would have been a lot even for a liberated man.
— Feb 22, 2026 03:45AM
Add a comment
Paula Mota
is on page 37 of 448
Like a lot of Fitzgerald's friends, Parker wasn't particularly fond of Zelda. (...) Perhpas there was a feeling of competition: there are rumors of a sexual affair between Scott and Parker though no proof of that survived.
— Feb 19, 2026 06:25AM
4 comments
Paula Mota
is on page 20 of 448
"Their sardonic ways became grounds to ignore these women, to deem them "not serious". Irony, sarcasm, ridicule: these can be tools of outsiders.
(...) There is always intelectual value in not being like everyone else at the table, in this case not being a man, but also not being white, not being upper class, not being from the right school.
— Feb 19, 2026 12:55AM
Add a comment
(...) There is always intelectual value in not being like everyone else at the table, in this case not being a man, but also not being white, not being upper class, not being from the right school.
Paula Mota
is on page 10 of 448
They came up in a world that was not eager to hear women's opinion about anything. It can be easy to forget that Dorothy Parker began to publish her caustic verse before women even had the vote. We don't often think about the fact that the 2nd wave feminism kicked up after Susan Sontag had become the icon she was with "Notes on Camp" essay.
— Feb 18, 2026 10:22AM
2 comments
Marayah Keri
is on page 174 of 384
Unfortunately, I’m in between things right now so ai find it hard to have the time to finish this book. Interesting tales. I especially adore Mary McCarthy and Dorothy Parker. Those ladies were on some different cracks.
— Feb 18, 2026 12:02AM
Add a comment











