This was moving.
Starkey claims: "One of the great problems has been that Henry, in a sense, has been absorbed by his wives. Which is bizarre. But it's what you expect from feminised history, the fact that so many of the writers who write about this are women and so much of their audience is a female audience. Unhappy marriages are big box office. We're trying to say, 'Hang on a minute, Henry is centre stage.' This is Henry - wives complicate the story of Henry. This is his development, his psychology and, above all, why he matters."
David Starkey's history boys: The argument that women turn history into a soap opera panders to a sexist notion of popular history by June Purvis
Don't explain your sexual identity to her via any form of instant electronic communication, even if you've turned off the notification that lets her know when you're typing and deleting and rephrasing and retyping again. (And if you haven't turned off that notification, believe me, you should.)
THE SEXUALLY FLUID PERSON'S GUIDE TO A SEAMLESSLY UNEVENTFUL COMING OUT. BY AMY YORK RUBIN Twitter seems to be, first and foremost, an online haven where teenagers making drugs can telegraph secret code words to arrange gang fights and orgies.
TRULY GROUNDBREAKING MARKETING RESEARCH: UNDERSTANDING TWITTER. BY DAN KENNEDY