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Strong Enough For A Man

Add this to your August vacation reads and gear up to kick some *** this fall:

An Assortment of Thoughts of Some of the Best Female Creative Directors

Ihaveanidea and AdWomen launched a book of interviews of female creative director: Strong Enough For A Man: An Assortment Of Thoughts Of Some Of The Best Female Creative Directors
• Interviews to 16 professionals considered as some of the World’s Most Influential Female Creative Directors


Strong Enough For A Man
is the result of a nearly year-long effort by AdWomen, an initiative to recognize the important contribution of women to the global advertising industry, andihaveanidea, “the community of the international advertising industry”. It is an union of both organization’s passion to celebrate and educate creatives the world over.

This is the first book of interviews to female creative directors ever published, and you will find in it An assortment of thoughts from 16 of the 22 women considered as some of the World’s Most Influential Female Creative Directors (WFCD).

Strong Enough For A Man features thoughtful remarks and philosophies from this genuine and lauded professionals:

Suzana Apelbaum, Executive Creative Director at StrawberryFrog New York
Susan Credle, US Chief Creative Officer at Leo Burnett
Colleen DeCourcy, CEO & Founder at Socialistic
Mary Dean, Founder & Chief Creative Officer at KickSkirt
Ilkay Gurpinar, Executive Creative Director at TBWA\Istanbul
Uschi Henkes, Executive Creative Director & Founder at ZappingM&C Saatchi Madrid
Natalie Lam, Executive Creative Director at OgilvyOne Shanghai
Alessandra Lariu, Founder at SheSays
Linda Locke, CEO & Creative Director at Godmother Consulting
Masako Okamura, Creative Director at Dentsu Tokyo
Pepa Rojo, Chief Creative Director of Digital and New Media Development at Grey Group Madrid
Tiffany Rolfe, Co-Executive Creative Director at CPB Los Angeles
Fernanda Romano, Former Global Creative Director of Digital & Experiential at Euro RSCG
Vivian Rosenthal, Co-Founder at Tronic
Joyce King Thomas, Former Chief Creative Officer at McCann Erickson New York
Nancy Vonk, Co-Chief Creative Officer at Ogilvy Toronto

Within the pages of this book, you will find very inspiring insights from some of the most respected female creative directors in the world. Some are funny, some are provocative, some offer opinions that you’ll agree with 100%, while others will have you shaking your first saying “that’s not right!” No matter your reaction, you’ll be sure to take away something from every single creative star in this book.

Meet the remarks and philosophies of two of them:

Tiffany Rolfe “Men get away with being dicks a lot easier than women can”  (My Former Co-Worker!!  -Chauncey)
Fernanda Romano “Young people are not as qualified anymore”

To get a book, visit these two sites:

Official website: Strong Enough For A Man 
AdWomen’s blog page: Strong Enough For A Man 

For more information contact Naiara Luja at adwomenblog@gmail.com

via @adwomenblog

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What Women Publish: How Miss Pettigrew Came to Live Another Day

Persephone Books is a female-run publishing house and London bookstore that publishes out of print 20th century female authors. It’s a quintessential example of the kind of business built of passion, intellect and saleability that inspired Girl on the street and What Women Make.

On my way from Brompton to Bloomsbury to interview Nicola Beauman, Persephone’s founder, I had to quickly change gears from innovation and novelty-seeking to the section of my brain that strikes even closer to my heart,  creative writing and its hopeful end product, publishing.

When I walked into the store, I further detached from the streamlined design arena and took in the intimate, cluttered and well-lighted store stacked sky high with books in gray and floral print covers.  There I was ushered toward the back to a room that was even more cluttered and more charming, filled with the smell of new paper from boxes of books.

I tripped down a step, a graceful entrance, and took a seat opposite Ms. Bauman and settled into a worn leather chair adjusting my bags and jacket around me.  When I looked up, she was smiling and unaffectedly curious, not a word or sneer of disapproval about my clumsiness.  An hour later, after her urging me to move to London, listing all of its charms and scholarly offerings, my blossoming crush on the city and it elegant restraint had cemented itself. Not to mention that the part of me that perennially wishes for the mentor / teacher / editor I never had had been piqued.  Here are outtakes from my conversation with the smart and funny-as-hell woman who started and runs Persephone Books. Without her, Miss Pettigrew would literally not have lived to see another day.

How did you get started?

I didn’t know that much about publishing but one can learn these things really.

Why mid-20th century women?

Nowadays, women who could be writing are doing a million and one other things but in the mid-20th century, women stayed home and took to writing.  Also, there isn’t the same sense of tragedy now because we don’t have the same moral conflicts do we? Today everything goes. These books have plot. They’re page turners. Now a novel like this would have to be set against a historical background.  This is a chance to see what really went on during that time.

When did you start Persephone Books?

1998.

How did you start your career?

I had children young. At 26, I secured a contract to write a book on female authors. A Very Great Profession: The Woman’s Novel 1914-39.  I was writing and reviewing books for the Observer in my twenties.

And your children?

They are about your age I’d say.  I have three sons and two daughters, all in the arts. My oldest son is a children’s book writer. Another son just wrote a cultural history of the pineapple.

Wishes, regrets?

I wish I was more techie.  I’m a little late getting to the party.  (She has an amazing blogging concept and a great website. For her blog, she sends out an image every day that is historically relevant to her titles. I’d say she’s got quite a handle on the medium..)

Can you touch type? (I answer in the affirmative.) Oh good! It’s very important to be able to touch type!

Wisdom?

I tell my son, find a stable of people who can help you. An electrician, a handyman, a type setter, people who you like who won’t be offended if you call up for a last minute request, people that you don’t have to explain yourself to.  I’ve had the same delivery man the whole time, the same accountant, the same bank but I do have a new printer. (She considers this.)

What are your plans for the future?

Well, we’ll just continue as we are! We put out 6 books a year. We have 3 new books coming out next month. 80% of our business is mail order. Ms. Pettigrew is our best seller. You know there are 30M women in this country. We have 20k on our mailing list. You know only 3% of London buys books?

I love these prints. I told a pattern designer I was meeting with you and she told me she had tried to reach you about using her designs in your books.

We are quite ruthless about requests. I just get so many requests and I can’t answer them all. Most of the books are gray though.  They have to have a uniform look you see because they are coming by mail and then they know what they are getting when they open the package.  The books we sell to stores have a print pattern because it catches the reader’s eye. They expect that. For those, we use prints from fabrics produced the year the book was written.

Who are some women you find inspiring, from any field?

Lucienne Day, fabric designer. She’s 95 years old. Marjorie Scardino who runs Pearsons which owns the Financial Times. She’s gone very far in a man’s world.  Sarah Waters who was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. She’s a very very nice person. She just gets on with it. I admire her. Jane Brocket. She’s in the domestic arts and lives in Windsor. She bakes a lot. She writes about tapestry. She’s interesting without being annoying.

-Chauncey Zalkin

*See some Lucienne Day Converse sneakers here.

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