Curfew Author Jayne Cowie on Ending Violence Against Women

In near-future England, a strictly enforced curfew was the only option. At least, that’s what seventeen-year-old Cass learns in school. As women suffered increasing levels of violence at the hands of men, the courts took action – and legalized a society in which men would be traced and their movements restricted at night. Cass hates curfew because it limits kind men, like her best friend, Billy. Billy would never hurt anyone, and Cass wants to find a way to prove it… somehow.

Helen, Cass’s teacher, is secretly desperate for a baby, and she knows her boyfriend Tom is a good man, but part of the curfew mandate stipulates that a couple wanting to move in together must first submit an application and participate in a series of interviews with a therapist. She is terrified that their application won’t be approved.

But Cass’s mother, Sarah, owes her livelihood to the curfew. She works at a tagging center and is grateful for the harsh penalties levied against her ex-husband, Greg, who has been imprisoned for breaking curfew.  When Sarah learns that his release is imminent, she’s scared, but knows that the curfew will protect her and Cass.

After all, the curfew was created to protect women from men. And it has – until now. When a woman’s body is discovered in a local park, all bets are off. A woman couldn’t have committed this heinous crime – and the curfew means that any man who tried would have been caught…right?

Curfew imagines a world where men are the restricted ones -- women no longer have to fear walking home alone in the dark, because men aren't allowed out. What led you to this idea, and how do you think it would play out in the real world?

There were a few things that brought me to Curfew – I should start by saying that the book was originally written back in 2019, pre-Covid, when we were in the old normal and the idea of any sort of lockdown or restriction seemed impossible. We were in the aftermath of #MeToo, when we’d seen a small number of high-profile men toppled from their positions of power. It had been a while since we’d had much public debate about women’s rights but all of a sudden it seemed like everyone was talking about it.

I wasn’t convinced that we would actually see changes. It looked to me like a few men were being sacrificed in order to let the rest carry on as usual, like a cheating husband buying his wife a bunch of red roses and a gold necklace in order to sweeten her up, when in reality he has no intention of changing his ways at all. He just wants her to stop pointing out his bad behaviour and go back to washing his pants.

I began to wonder what we would do if we really took male violence seriously, if we stopped talking about violence as a thing done to women and started instead to talk about it as a thing that men do. How would we stop it? Can we stop it? What would it take? My starting point was female safety in public places, something which is often talked about in the media, hence the idea of the curfew. Every violent act is dependent on access to the preferred type of victim. Take that access away and the violence can’t happen. That’s what the curfew does.

Your novel views such a drastic move from both sides -- some people think the curfew is just and fair, while others believe that it imposes harsh restrictions on "good men" who have no history of violence. Was it difficult to imagine arguments from both sides of the fence for the purposes of the novel?

I knew as soon as I began to imagine the world of curfew that there would be arguments for both sides. It does restrict men with no history of violence. There’s no denying that. Some people would argue that’s unfair on good men, but others might argue that a good man is only a violent man who has so far managed to control himself. When the suffragettes campaigned for the right to vote, there were those who disagreed with them, including some other women. There were fears about what it would do to the order of society, to employment, to the role of men, and what else might be asked for if the right to vote was granted.

I felt the same would happen with a curfew. A single mother with sons would have a very different experience to a single mother with daughters. Families reliant on the wages of men who do work that would normally require them to be out of the house during curfew would find the restrictions very difficult. It’s a matter of empathy, I suppose, of understanding that everyone would have their own unique experience of life with curfew, some good, some bad. My aim, when writing the novel, wasn’t to suggest that a curfew like this is a solution to male violence, or even a good idea, but to explore the impacts of restricting men in this way.

Quite a few British novels have recently explored social-sexual inequality, like The Power by Naomi Alderman and The End of Men by Christina Sweeney-Baird. What do you think has driven this interest?

I think that every generation of young women has a moment when they realise that sexism and misogyny still exist and the battle for women’s rights has not yet been won. When girls are at school, they are told that they can do and be anything, but when they become adults, they find themselves trying to navigate a world which won’t let them. We’ve made a lot of progress, it’s true. But the gender pay gap still exists and isn’t getting any smaller. We’ve got a healthcare gap, too; it takes on average eight years to get a diagnosis for endometriosis, for example, and pain relief options for childbirth haven’t improved in years.

Women are asked what they were wearing, how much they’d had to drink, what they did to make a man act in a violent way. Women are expected to work like they don’t have children and mother like they don’t have to work. We don’t have the promised equality of opportunity, as you will know if you’ve ever queued for the toilet during the interval at a theatre whilst men stand around chatting at the bar. I also think that the internet has a role to play; men have embraced the opportunity to spill their darkest thoughts about women without fear of repercussion. Whilst smartphones and social media have brought us many positives, they’ve also brought us upskirting, revenge porn, cyberflashing and a torrent of misogynistic abuse which some sites insist doesn’t break their rules. So it’s no wonder that women are interested in what it would be like to flip the script and hold the power, or that we’re writing about it.

What's up next for you, as a novelist?

At the moment I’m working on my next book, which asks what would happen if we identified a genetic cause for male violence. I suppose you could say that it’s the natural next step after Curfew . The story follows two sisters who give birth to baby boys only a few months apart. One of the sisters has her son tested for the gene, and one doesn’t, something which seems like an inconsequential choice at the time. But as the boys grow up, the decisions their mothers made for them have consequences for every aspect of their lives as society changes as a result of the newfound ability to classify men as good or bad before they do anything wrong.

An avid reader and life-long writer, Jayne Cowie also enjoys digging in her garden and makes an excellent devil's food cake. She lives near London with her family. You can find her on Instagram as @CowieJayne

Re-visiting Rage as Writing Fuel

by SJ Sindu

In 2016, I wrote a blog post for Shade Mountain Press about the rage-trance under which I wrote two essays that appeared in their The Female Complaint anthology, and later in my first chapbook, I Once Met You But You Were Dead. The rage-trance, as I defined it, was the cycle of writing fueled by anger.

I was very angry in those days—angry at my parents, for trying to coerce me into an arranged marriage; angry at the world, for its abysmal treatment of queer people like me; angry at myself, for buying into dominant narratives about what my life and body needed to look like.

I still have rage inside me, but my anger has morphed into outrage. I don’t know how you can live in these times and not be outraged. I’m outraged that so many governments are doing nothing about climate change. I’m outraged that the onus for compassionate and low-waste consumption has been put squarely on us as individuals instead of where it should be—on corporations, the biggest producers of waste and pollution. I’m outraged that the rich are getting richer while most people struggle to survive.

But what I want to highlight is the difference between anger and outrage. Anger is self-destructive, and can eat you up if you’re not careful. Tying your writing to anger can at first be a great source of fuel, but eventually it becomes unsustainable—either because you have to keep producing anger and can’t, or because in the battle over your soul, anger has won.

What I argue for now is to fuel your writing with outrage. Anger can consume you, but outrage buoys you up. Anger is indiscriminately wide-lens, but outrage is focused fury. Anger lashes out, but outrage can aim true.

Let me be clear. When Twitter mobs attack activists fighting for a cause the mob believes in—that’s anger, pure and destructive. When organized Twitter activists push against soda companies stealing water from villages in South Asia and Africa—that’s outrage. There’s a difference.

Anger might have fueled my first chapbook, but it’s outrage that fuels my second, Dominant Genes. The rage is palpable—it is there in between the lines, gluing together the disparate and varied pieces of the collection. The collection features lyric and personal essays along with poetry, so cohesion was of great concern to me. I think it ultimately worked because there are thematic links throughout the chapbook—matrilineal heritage, love and marriage expectations, feminist resistance, queer exploration—but also because all these themes are linked by my approach of outrage.

So if you’re writing from a place of anger, I would urge you to turn that anger into outrage. Let the anger mature. Don’t let it consume you. Rather, use it to create art that does good in the world, even if that good is to hold up a mirror to someone who needs it.

SJ Sindu is a Tamil diaspora author of two literary novels, two hybrid chapbooks, and two forthcoming graphic novels. Her first novel, Marriage of a Thousand Lies, won the Publishing Triangle Edmund White Award and her second novel, Blue-Skinned Gods, was published in November 2021. A 2013 Lambda Literary Fellow, Sindu holds a PhD in English and Creative Writing from Florida State University. Sindu teaches at the University of Toronto Scarborough. Sindu’s newest work, a hybrid chapbook titled Dominant Genes, was published by Black Lawrence Press in February 2022. More at sjsindu.com or @sjsindu on Twitter/Instagram.

My Neighbor Is A Serial Killer

by Leanne Kale Sparks

Let me start this story by saying I live next door to the nicest couple. The wife and I have great conversations. The husband is very calm, soft-spoken, and all-around nice guy. They have four adorable little girls, God bless them. I raised three girls and count my blessings that I still have hair on my head and (so far) avoided a psych ward. Anyway, my office is upstairs in our house and has a balcony. When I sit out there, I can see into my neighbor’s backyard. There is a swing set, a trampoline, and various toys strewn about. There is also a rather large shed.

Now, my neighbor was spending a great deal of time in the shed—so much that I took note of the long days and nights he was in there. He always closed the door upon entering, and the girls were not allowed inside. Once I witnessed one of the girls trying to open the door only to be told—rather sternly—that she could not enter.

It was odd. Disconcerting, even.

The calm, even-keeled man actually raised his voice loud enough for me to hear as I sat on my balcony. To say that piqued my interest is an understatement. I am, after all, a crime thriller writer and pseudo-expert of murderers. There is not a crime show—foreign or domestic—that I have not watched. I do copious amounts of research on the subject. Attend conferences where my fellow crime writers and I learn how to properly excavate buried bodies, various types of gunshot wounds and what they do to a body. How to properly breach a dwelling.

I know a thing or two about murder. And kidnappers.

So, of course, I was able to determine my neighbor was a serial killer. My powers of observation have never failed me (that I know of) so there was really no doubt about it. Shite was about to get real. My life as a fiction writer was about to transition to true crime novelist.

When I told the above story to my fellow crime writer friends, we all agreed my neighbor was up to something heinous in his shed. Right under the nose of his wife and little girls. Most of my closest writer compadres, as well as readers of crime fiction and true crime novels are women. We tend to soak up a great mystery, and the more ghastly the crime scene, disturbing the killer, and twisty the plot, the more eager we are to roll up our sleeves, get in the muck, and discover whodunnit.

But why is that? Why are so many women drawn to serial killer thrillers, murder mysteries, and crime, in general? Well, I’m no expert, but I have actually thought about this and come up with a couple of answers.

First and foremost, women are problem-solvers. Give us a problem, and we will work out a solution. Getting a lipstick stain off a collar, tracking our teenager’s social media without them knowing. Determining if the neighbor is a serial killer. No matter the problem, we are game to find a solution. Spread out all the puzzle pieces and see how they fit together. The more impossible the mystery is to solve, the more we dive into the deep end of the evidence pool searching out plausible—and perhaps implausible--explanations.

Second—well, let’s face it, most violence seems to be directed at women. Sit down and watch a day of Discover ID or a few episodes of Dateline, and nearly every single episode is about some sort of violence against women. Stalker, jilted lover, husband wanting out of the marriage without paying child support, or a serial killer. They kidnap, rape, torture, and/or murder women. There is a kinship there.

We’ve all felt the hairs on the back of our necks stand on end when we feel someone looking at us. Watching. And we are never quite sure if it is a warning of something dangerous on the horizon. Or the fear of walking alone at night, always wondering when someone will jump out of the bushes, run up behind, or come around a corner and catch us off guard. Our imaginations can probably conjure the worst possible outcomes—assaulted, violated, shot, or stabbed and left for dead.

We have compassion for the victims. We feel their pain because—by the grace of God—we are not them. We want to solve these crimes along with the investigators, anxious for the families to find even a modicum of justice for their lost loved ones. We cheer for victims upon hearing their stories of survival. We are empathetic. Sympathetic.

And we take notes.

We learn from the mistakes of others: Trust that gut instinct. Be rude to the guy who wants to give you a ride home giving you the creeps. Say no. Say it again. Keep saying it as loud as you can. Fight back with everything you have. Never feel like you are just being paranoid. Call your dad to pick you up from the party you were forbidden to go to even though you have been drinking. Your life is precious. And it may depend on how you react in situations where there is a threat. Teach your daughters to do the same.

I love to write murder mysteries. I research. I conjure what I believe to be the unimaginable. And I want to believe that is true.

But there are some sick people out there doing abominable things to others.

So, back to my neighbor the serial killer. I was on the balcony again yesterday, watching the children play in the back yard when the father came out of the shed. He called for his wife and rounded up the four girls. When the door swung open, I could see inside. Fairy lights glowed. There was a small table with pint-sized chairs, a plastic tea set as a centerpiece. Each girl picked out their spot and laughter soon filled the late afternoon air.

Turns out my serial killer was simply an awesome dad who sacrificed part of his work shed to give his daughters’ a playhouse.

But—I’m still going to keep my eye on him.

After a short career in law, Leanne Kale Sparks is returning to her first love—writing about murder, mayhem, and crime. Currently, she is an author with Crooked Lane Books and is working on a new series featuring an FBI agent hunting down her best friend’s murderer. The backdrop is the Rocky Mountains of Colorado, the playground of her youth, and the place that will always be home. She currently resides in Texas with her husband and German Shepherd, Zoe.