Caitlin Moran does not shake my hand when we meet. She throws her arm around my shoulder, kisses me generously on the cheek, and pulls my face into her distinctive mane of dark, skunk-striped hair. We have barely sat down and Moran, one of Britainâs most beloved writers, is already talking at a dizzyingly fast clip about Marxism and masturbating (âwankingâ) to the Muppets when she was 13. âI fancied Gonzo. I probably would have done Fozzie as well. But not Kermit. Too weird.â
This is Caitlin Moran: ebullient and frenetic; passionate about social justice and feminism, without being fanatical; celebrated as much for her intellect as her ribald sense of humor. If ever there was a woman to dismantle the stereotype that feminists are strident, humorless man-haters, itâs Moran. All of this comes across in her writing about cultural politicsâand she is staggeringly prolific.
Moran, 39, writes two weekly columns for The Times of London (she has a shelf full of journalism awards, including a 2010 British Press Award for best columnist) and is the author of the best-selling 2012 book How to Be a Woman, which is equal parts polemic, memoir, and book of advice.
The book sold over a million copies, established Moranâs celebrity and positioned her as her generationâs Germaine Greerâthe bad girl of the feminist movement. And the BBC recently named her the 10th-most powerful woman in the UK.
Moran is swanning around New York City to promote How to Build a Girl, an autobiographical novel about Joannah Morrigan, a chubby teenage girl who consumes literature and masturbates with equal ferocity. When she isnât engaged in her two favorite pastimes, Morrigan, a clear stand-in for Moran, is looking after her three younger siblings and plotting to save her family from being taken off benefits by becoming a music journalist at the tender age of 17. Itâs rapier wit and blunt sex talk. âI was coming thinking about talking lions in Narnia while you were doing your fucking A-levels,â Morrigan shoots back at a male character.
Those familiar with Moranâs work will recognize novelized elements of her own life scattered through How to Build a Girl. Moran was raised in a working-class familyâthe eldest of eight childrenâin a housing project in the industrial English city Wolverhampton. Moran started writing for The Times at 18, after having written for various national music publications since she was 14. She has been married to the music critic Pete Paphides (âthe loveliest man who ever livedâ) since 1999.
With a husband she describes as âthe most instinctive feminist I know,â itâs important to Moran that their two daughtersâages 11 and 13âbe brought up like mini Gloria Steinems.
âI taught them whenever they fell over to say, âDamn you, patriarchy!â And they know the difference between menâwe love menâand âthe man.â Generally, they just think Iâm this big hairy idiot. They just want me to put some clothes on when I walk around the house and to stop swearing.â
Despite a difficult upbringing, Moran avoids depressing and Dickensian-ish themes. âIf I had written the book another way, it could have so easily been a misery memoir. It could have been fucking Angelaâs Ashes,â she says. But she was raised on âcheerful 19th-century women and literature,â listing Anne of Green Gables and Little Women as profound influences.
âOnce you realize that life divides into two thingsâbrilliant experiences and awful experiences which will later make amazing anecdotesâthen you have the perspective to say, âThis is the shit Iâm going to write about.â This is the brilliant thing about being a writer: you can just turn it into material instead.â
Moran does so with fearless honesty and bravura, but admits she was wary about oversharing when she wrote How to Be a Woman.
âI wondered if I would fuck up my career as a Times critic by being that honest about abortions and my eating disorder and fantasy love affairs,â she says. âI admit to wanking for the first time ever while watching The Three Amigos! I would have done all of the Amigos, to be honest. All in their fucking sombreros. Still on their donkeys if they wanted it.â
There were to be no adverse effects on her career. How To Be A Woman was a megahit, morphed into a successful one-woman show (during which she talks about âmen, women, Sherlock, David Bowie, big hair, feminism, welfare, and the Revolutionâ) and has been optioned for a feature film. She has since become a cultural celebrity, so much that young women scream and cry when they meet her on tour.
âThe idea that an overweight 39-year-old woman with two children who talks about Marxism, socialism, and feminism is provoking the same reaction in teenage girls as One Direction does, it just makes my heart sing,â says Moran.
Even more inspiring were the readers who wanted to share their versions of her Three Amigos story. "A famous female writer told me the first time she wanked she used a copy of Jackie magazine [a teen magazine], which she rolled up and used as a dildo,â she says. âSo Iâve become Britainâs repository for wank stories and that makes me quite happy."
With her acerbic wit and indie sensibility, Moran is often compared to Lena Dunham, whom she met on the set of Girls during its first season. When she tweeted about meeting the budding young actress-screenwriter, one Twitter user asked if she was going to address Girlsâ âcomplete and utter lack of colorâ in her subsequent profile for The Times. Moranâs response: âNope, I literally couldnât give a shit.â
The offhand remark ignited a debate about modern feminismâs diversity problem (Moran has a half-million Twitter followers) and prompted accusations of bigotry from some of her fans. âI was having a very bad day and I was angry that someone was telling me how to do my job,â she says. âWe live in a really dangerous world where someone is called a racist by omission, by not writing about black issues. Letâs be careful about how we use that word.â
Anger and confrontation have never been part of Moranâs shtick, but she is proud to âstand on the achievements of angry womenâ who ignited the feminist revolution. But she is quick to point out that expressions of unbridled rage, whether in disputes between feminists or politicians, do more harm than good to developing social movements. âIt turns off people you need to align with,â she says. âYou can get so much more wisdom in a joke than you can in a hurt rant.â
Still, Moran understands well where that anger comes from (âItâs astonishing how untruthful the mirror of pop culture is, how few peopleâs faces you see reflected in itâ), but thinks itâs too often directed at the wrong people. âBe angry at the commissioners who donât find new talent, not the one person [Dunham] who got through the power system and has been making herself so vulnerable.â
Moranâs own background may be uncommon in the world of journalismâraised in a firmly working-class family, home-schooled, and never having attended universityâbut it has provided material. Indeed, there is so much crossover between Moranâs early life and that of Joannah Morrigan (âItâs about a fat girl who becomes a music journalist, so I know that terrainâ) that one wonders why she didnât just write a memoir, particularly since she is so skilled at writing non-fiction.
âThere are only so many people who will read a nonfiction book or a memoir thatâs full of polemic,â she says. So she has chosen the path as her literary heroes, Charles Dickens and George Orwell: the entertaining but didactic novel. âI know so many people who just watch TV and read novels, and these are the girls I want to reachâthe ones who donât know enough about feminism to buy a non-fiction book about it. Plus, itâs fun to make things up!â
And in traditional journalism you canât make things up, though she longed to do so when profiling outlandish rock stars as a teenager. When interviewing Marilyn Manson for Select magazine, he confessed that his favorite film was Willy Wonka and The Chocolate Factory. âI thought, God, itâs a brilliant quote, but it would be even funnier if he had ended it by describing the bit where Augustus Gloop gets stuck in the chocolate tube.â
So she added that bit, prompting Manson to call her editor in a rage. âI realized you canât make things up in the real world, but you can make your pop stars say the things you wanted them to say in a novel.â
In How to Build a Girl, she finally constructs her ideal pop star in John Kite, Joannah Morriganâs love interest, a man who embodies everything Moran admired in 1990s Britpop bands. âThey were all sharply dressed, working-class boys who were complete autodidacts, and weâd sit in the pub all day and have these brilliant, whimsical conversations.â
Kite, she confesses, is based on ânearly every single member of Teenage Fanclub and the Boo Radleys, Guy Garvey from Elbow, and Richard Burton, another working-class boy whose turn of phrase was fabulous. Heâs got that brilliant pimp style and is so fucking funny and horny.â
How to Build a Girl is part one of a planned trilogy (the second book, How to Be Famous, takes place six months after Girl left off when Britpop kicks off.) âI want to find working-class cultureâTracey Emin, Irvine Welsh, Trainspotting, Oasisâand mid-â90s Britpop was the last time there was a big flaring of that in our country.â
Moran still fetishizes working-class culture, despite having transcended it. When I point this out, she is defensive. âItâs based on the presumption that middle classes co-opt you when youâre successful. But that means that the only character traits of the working class are to be unsuccessful and poor--basically a culture entirely predicated on failure. And thatâs so wrong. Working-class culture is sharing your influences. You never draw the drawbridge up. Itâs a communal thing.â
And her missionâsex, feminism, and socialismâis pure working-class Wolverhampton: âSo this is my plan: to teach 13-year-old girls how to form a sexual revolution while having a big wank. Itâs important you do both.â