Maegan Carberry

Maegan Carberry

About

Maegan Carberry has been a provocative independent voice in our national conversation, working as a journalist, media strategist, and digital entrepreneur for 15 years. She provides media strategies to organizations and individuals, and is an adjunct instructor at the University of Southern California's Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism. In 2016, Maegan will release her first novel, Do I Have To Vote For Hillary Clinton? The book chronicles the rise of ambitious political journalist Amy Underwood, her English bulldog Mindy Kaling, and a variety of adventures that would make Susan B. Anthony proud and Bridget Jones giggle. 

Maegan began her career as a reporter and columnist with the Chicago Tribune, where she wrote some amusing columns she really hopes you won't google and interviewed exciting folks like Jennifer Lopez, Hugh Hefner, and an up-and-coming senator named Barack Obama. She later worked as Arianna Huffington's Chief-of-Staff during the early days of The Huffington Post, was Communications Director of Rock the Vote, and the first curator of Upworthy.  

When she is not working, Maegan is designing and sewing dresses for 100 inspiring women through her project, birdbrain. birdbrain benefits the creation of The Long-term Guide to Surviving Sexual Assault. 

Godwine Kingmaker: Part One of The Last Great Saxon Earls

Godwine Kingmaker: Part One of The Last Great Saxon Earls

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<p><span><span>Harold Godwineson, the Last Anglo-Saxon King, owed everything to his father. Who was this Godwine, first Earl of Wessex and known as the Kingmaker? Was he an unscrupulous schemer, using King and Witan to gain power? Or was he the greatest of all Saxon Earls, protector of the English against the hated Normans? The answer depends on who you ask. He was befriended by the Danes, raised up by Canute the Great, given an Earldom and a wife from the highest Danish ranks. He sired nine children, among them four Earls, a Queen and a future King. Along with his power came a struggle to keep his enemies at bay, and Godwine's best efforts were brought down by the misdeeds of his eldest son Swegn. Although he became father-in-law to a reluctant Edward the Confessor, his fortunes dwindled as the Normans gained prominence at court. Driven into exile, Godwine regathered his forces and came back even stronger, only to discover that his second son Harold was destined to surpass him in renown and glory.</span></span></p>

Story Behind The Book

After 15 years of working in politics and media, when people started asking me if I supported Hillary Clinton for the presidency all I felt was a gigantic brain fog and the tugging of my heartstrings. I couldn't tell which way was up anymore. I've worked with some of the most traditionally-powerful women in the world, studied the field and the issues, and had my own experiences with misogyny and violence. They all blurred together. Hillary Clinton was my childhood hero, and inspired me to be an ambitious woman. At 35, it feels like feminism and gender roles are at a critical turning point in America — one which some of our predecessors aren't quite wrapping their heads around and my generation may be taking for granted. It comes at a time when the pros and cons of identity-based voting are emerging as a serious factor for the country's electorate, commensurate with our changing demographics. Many Americans will have to face oversimplification just to gain representation, while ultimately trying to cast ballots based on the best possible policy approach. It's a welcome-but-murky science at best. Before I could have anything interesting to say on the subject, I sought out first to process my own life. In the fall of 2015, I fled my life in Los Angeles and rented a condo in the beautiful Palm Desert a couple hours east, where for weeks I spoke only to my pilates instructor and scribbled notes all over the walls like the guy in A Beautiful Mind. It was a weird-but-good time. The result was a unique story that came from my heart. The book's characters and themes are all composites and variations on my real experiences. Writing was cathartic and eye-opening. I opted to write fiction for several reasons. Foremost, I didn't want to be another blowhard pundit preaching to the choir. I also wanted to create an alternate universe where difficult conversations had room for gray areas; this is the kind of reflective opportunity we no longer experience in mainstream media or crowd-sourced internet hysteria. And, of course, I'm a book nerd. This moment has been in the making since I read Anne of Green Gables back in second grade. As I started to understand what happened to me, I pushed myself to attempt to articulate broader societal trends. I teach college students, so I thought about the kinds of questions I get from them. I prioritized providing them with a story that would illuminate their unique moment as young voters. However, this book is one that folks of all ages and backgrounds can enjoy. Frankly, it doesn't fit in one genre or on a specific shelf in the bookstore, which is exactly why I opted to self-publish. It was scary, but I'm a populist. I listened to Macklemore's song Victory Lap every morning, savoring the words: "Nowadays make good music, the people are your label." I wrote a compelling story, and now I entrust it to those souls who will find it. Don't be fooled by its chick lit vibes. While certainly a zany adventure, this book is rigorous, serious, and sometimes quite dark. Just like me. :)

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