“Always it came back to the women,” Blake Bailey wrote of novelist (and noted misogynist) Philip Roth in his best-selling biography of Roth’s life.
For Bailey, too, it seems, it ultimately came back to the women. At the end of April, a series of reports from outlets including The New York Times, The Times-Picayune of New Orleans, the Los Angeles Times and Slate revealed that Bailey was alleged to have engaged in inappropriate, grooming relationships with some of his students when he was a middle school teacher in New Orleans in the 1990s. In 2021, the women alleged to have been affected by Bailey’s life choices were “ready to talk,” as former student Eve Crawford Peyton wrote in an essay for Slate. The stories that came flooding out painted a disturbing, stomach-turning picture of an educator and writer who took advantage of women who saw him as a trusted mentor and authority figure.
Peyton accused him of having raped her — after years of grooming — when she was 22. Another woman, publishing executive Valentina Rice, also came forward, alleging that Bailey had raped her in 2015. Bailey has denied the allegations, calling them “false and libelous.” The principal at the school where he taught also has said she never received any complaints about him during his employment.
The allegations also raise vital questions about whom we allow to shape public narratives. What does it mean that a man who is now alleged to have been a sexual abuser wrote a widely circulated, mostly critically lauded biography of a man who himself displayed a lifetime of harmful misogyny — misogyny that was present both in his personal life and in his work?
As a culture, we routinely prioritize men’s power, access and humanity above women’s safety. Nothing drives this point home more than the fact that Rice emailed Bailey’s publisher, W.W. Norton, about her allegation in 2018. Norton’s president, Julia A. Reidhead, did not respond to Rice, but she did forward the email to Bailey, according to The New York Times. (The publisher told The Times in a statement that it took the allegations seriously, confronting Bailey and contacting others who could better verify the claim.)
There is something particularly disturbing about realizing that so many of the arbiters of our public narratives are themselves alleged to be abusers.
There is something particularly disturbing about realizing that so many of the arbiters of our public narratives are themselves alleged to be abusers. The role of a biographer, presumably, is to examine and elucidate truths about a public figure that the person cannot accurately articulate. There is both a closeness and a distance necessary to do the job well. But what happens when the biographer sees himself in his subject’s greatest faults?
Bailey openly admitted that part of what got him the job as Roth’s biographer — granting him access to Roth that no one else had —- was, in his own words, his willingness not to take “too prim or judgmental a view of a man who had this florid love life.” This ability to not only excuse Roth’s misogyny but also relate to it led to a biography that in turn reflected a misogynist worldview. The New Republic’s Laura Marsh aptly pegged Bailey in March as “a biographer who is exceptionally attuned to [Roth’s] grievances and rarely challenges his moral accounting,” who ultimately wrote a narrative that casts women as “forever screeching, berating, flying into a rage, and storming off, as if their emotions exist solely for the purpose of sapping a man’s creative energies.”
How many stories that frame the stakes this way can people absorb before they, too, believe that imperfect women make for acceptable sacrifices at the altar of male artistic talent?
Allowing abusive men to write the public-facing narratives of other abusive men’s lives creates a dizzying cycle of cultural empathy for abusers. These genius men, these tortured artists, get to be sympathetic characters, whereas the women who suffered because of them are written off in the footnotes of their lives as nags and scolds and roadblocks to be overcome.
How many stories that frame the stakes this way can people absorb before they, too, believe that imperfect women make for acceptable sacrifices at the altar of male artistic talent?









