Ms. Brown wrote "Sex and the Single Girl" - which I haven't read but will add to my list - and also edited Cosmopolitan for over thirty years. Ms. Brown taught women quite a bit about sexual empowerment through her book and the magazine, an education that surely benefited members of both sexes.
Helen Gurley Brown, Who Gave Cosmopolitan Its Purr, Is Dead at 90
By CHRISTINE HAUGHNEY
Helen Gurley Brown, the former editor of Cosmopolitan who transformed the magazine in the 1960s into a source of sexual empowerment for women, died Monday morning.
A spokesman for the Hearst Corporation, which publishes Cosmopolitan, said that Ms. Brown, 90, died after being hospitalized briefly at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia hospital.
Ms. Brown, who wrote “Sex and the Single Girl,” took over at the magazine in 1965, giving it its sexually frank tone. She remained editor until 1997 and is still listed as editor in chief for Cosmopolitan International on all mastheads. Until her death, Ms. Brown was known for coming into her pink corner office nearly every day.
The Hearst statement reads: “It would be hard to overstate the importance to Hearst of her success with Cosmopolitan, or the value of the friendship many of us enjoyed with her. Helen was one of the world’s most recognized magazine editors and book authors, and a true pioneer for women in journalism — and beyond.”
source: The New York Times
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