Come with me now, if
you will, on a stroll down memory lane for a look at my life through
women’s magazines.
The very first mag I ever read was a comic and I can vividly remember my mum bringing in Twinkle from the shops, just for me. I must have been under ten years old. From Twinkle I graduated to reading, greedily, both Bunty and Mandy each week and absolutely loving and taking delight in the wickedly subversive Blind Bettina comic strip. There's a fab woman here called Mel Gibson (yes, really) who did her PhD on girls' comics.
Next, it must have been Jackie which
became my bible for a few years, getting all the advice from Cathy and
Claire that I never knew I needed. Oh, and then came the biggest leap of
all. From Donny Osmond and David Cassidy pin-ups in Jackie I stepped up to My Guy, the magazine I had to hide from my mother because she didn’t approve. It was racy, was My Guy, it had snogging and girls on the pill. I learned a lot from My Guy,
believe me, I did. And then through my late teen years and early
twenties I was heavily into music magazines so women’s mags went by the
wayside as Rolling Stone, Smash Hits, Sounds and NME became my reading of choice.
And then something exciting happened, Company magazine was launched as a magazine for the younger sister readers of Cosmo. Company
magazine fired up my imagination, I copied the clothes, the make-up, I
even knitted up some of their patterns in the ‘80s. I especially
remember a fantastic black mohair jumper with batwing sleeves and
buttons up the back. It went a treat with black knickerbockers,
back-combed black hair and pixie boots. Company magazine even
published an article of mine back in 1987, my first ever piece of
published writing since getting a poem in my parents’ local Sunday
paper.
The logical step up from Company was Cosmo which I’d only ever read – in pop-eyed shock at what women could and did do - in the hairdresser’s while waiting for my mum who was under the dryer with curlers in her hair. I invited Cosmo into my life for a few years although not in the way I had enjoyed Company earlier. Cosmo was
glossier, more self-aware, more self-promoting and it carried more
advertising. I think I knew then that my love affair with women’s
magazines was coming to an end but when I lived overseas I still had the
English Cosmo sent to me on subscription each month,
preferring it to any of the no-brainer women’s magazines aimed at the
Southern California market.
Back in England, Cosmo and I parted
company. Part of this was wanting something real, down to earth again
after living in the candy floss of La-La land. Cosmo was too candy floss. New women’s magazines had sprung up while I’d been away and Real, Red and Eve
became my reading of choice until they too stayed on the shelf in the
shop after I realised that I was of an age and opinion now that nothing
these mags could ever say to me would be something I’d want to read.
Becoming
a mature student on a journalism course involved spending time
analysing print media where women’s magazines came under the academic
microscope. The more I studied their appeal to the masses of misses, the
more they repelled me. I don’t touch them any more, I just said no.
Well, ok, that’s not entirely true.
There’s
one women’s mag that I read avidly, every word, cover to cover and back again. I’ve subscribed to it since Issue
1 and was lucky enough to interview its original editor as part of my
degree a few years ago. It’s Mslexia magazine, a specialist journal that comes with a tagline of “for women who write”.
Speaking of which, since I turned a full-time freelance writer in 2015 after far too many years wasting away in University admin jobs, I've been writing for women's magazines. My stories have turned up in Take a Break, My Weekly and The People's Friend. I'm very proud to say that I'm also writing a weekly soap called "Riverside" for The People's Friend, the magazine's first in its history. It's an honour indeed and a weekly writing task I enjoy immensely.
Find out more about me and my books. Click on the image below:
I'm on twitter @flaming_nora
'Such a good writer. She's fantastic!' Woman's Hour, BBC Radio 4
Find out more at glendayoungbooks.com
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