The Mercury News

Helen Gurley Brown: Feminist icon?

New biography offers illuminati­ng details of Cosmopolit­an editor’s life

- By Jennifer Kay Associated Press

Helen Gurley Brown’s book about lesbians might be the most entertaini­ng nonfiction that never actually got written.

Brown’s proposal for such a book as a follow-up to her 1962 debut advice guide, “Sex and the Single Girl,” is almost a throwaway detail about halfway through “Not Pretty Enough” (Sarah Crichton Books, $27, 528 pages), Gerri Hirshey’s new biography of the legendary Cosmopolit­an magazine editor. It’s just one of many illuminati­ng details uncovered by Hirshey that link Brown to modern conversati­ons about relationsh­ips, the workplace, branding, body imagery and the media.

Yes, pussycats, Brown’s lesbian project might have contained egregious factual errors, a questionab­le focus on pleasing men and cringe-worthy seduction tips. What would a woman notorious for being man-hungry have had to say to or about women who, well, aren’t?

Brown’s sequel ultimately explored more familiar terrain — “Sex and the Office” — that she rehashed again and again in subsequent books and magazine columns. A study of lesbians for a massmarket, mid-1960s readership, though, might have secured more serious considerat­ion for Brown among feminists.

As one of two biographer­s sifting through Brown’s many contradict­ions this year, Hirshey argues for Brown’s inclusion in the feminist pantheon alongside such luminaries as Betty Friedan (after all, “Sex and the Single Girl” was published before “The Feminine Mystique”).

With exhaustive research despite limitation­s imposed by Cosmopolit­an’s publisher, Hirshey peels back decades of parodies and kitsch to reveal how Brown turned a dying magazine into a cultural juggernaut.

Hirshey dwells on Brown’s fraught relationsh­ip with her calamity-prone mother, a woman whose hips were unbalanced from carrying around younger siblings when she was still a child herself. Yet it’s pride in a self-made woman, not pity for childhood trauma, that Hirshey evokes as she considers the astonishin­g distance Brown traveled from her Depression-era roots in Arkansas.

For anyone who thinks Brown flirted her way to the top desk at Cosmopolit­an, Hirshey has the details of the sexism and double standards that dogged her success. “Not Pretty Enough” makes clear how Brown worked hard for everything she got (including men).

Think Cosmo and “women’s magazines” are just newsstand candy? Wait until Hirshey lists the now-revered authors hired by Brown to write for her.

Brown’s editorial voice may have been, “I am woman, hear me purr,” but that voice carried discussion­s about equal pay, women’s health rights and sexual freedoms further — and more lucrativel­y — into middle America than “serious intellectu­als.” She made mistakes and seemed out of touch with the feminists of her era, but she was talking about slut shaming and mantras like “I am enough” long before anyone started communicat­ing with hashtags.

In Hirshey’s portrait, the men who regard Brown as a peer shine well. Her husband produced “Jaws” and other beloved blockbuste­r movies, but his tombstone simply reads, “Married to Helen Gurley Brown.” As Brown might have said in today’s social media shorthand: relationsh­ip goals!

Let’s not be snobs, pussycats. HGB may be feminists’ somewhat tone-deaf, sex-crazed aunt, but Hirshey’s right — she was in the fight, and her legacy deserves serious review.

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