<p>A groundswell of women are seeking congressional seats this year, as Margaret Talbot recently <a href="https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/2018-midterm-elections-women-candidates-trump">reported</a>, and an all-time high of seventy-eight women are expected to run for governor. Among them is Stacey Abrams, a lawyer, businesswoman, author, and former state representative. If elected governor of Georgia, Abrams would be the first black woman to lead a state, as well as one of the first fiction writers to hold that office; under the name Selena Montgomery, Abrams is the author of a number of romantic novels. Under her own name, Abrams wrote “Minority Leader,” a nonfiction account of her time as a lawmaker. “For me,” she told <em>The New Yorker’s</em> <a href="https://www.newyorker.com/contributors/jeffrey-toobin">Jeffrey Toobin</a>, “there’s no clear roadmap for this.”</p>
A groundswell of women are seeking congressional seats this year, as Margaret Talbot recently reported, and an all-time high of seventy-eight women are expected to run for governor. Among them is Stacey Abrams, a lawyer, businesswoman, author, and former state representative. If elected governor of Georgia, Abrams would be the first black woman to lead a state, as well as one of the first fiction writers to hold that office; under the name Selena Montgomery, Abrams is the author of a number of romantic novels. Under her own name, Abrams wrote “Minority Leader,” a nonfiction account of her time as a lawmaker. “For me,” she told The New Yorker’s Jeffrey Toobin, “there’s no clear roadmap for this.”