Telling womenâs stories is what excites writer Iris Jamahl Dunkle. Since 2019, the biographer, poet and creative writing instructor has been shedding light on these previously underappreciated women in two books as well as a weekly online newsletter, , via Substack.
Her latest book, , is about a female writer who, while living among Dust Bowl refugees in California, was asked to share her notes with author John Steinbeck. Steinbeck used those notes in his novel The Grapes of Wrath. Babbâs own book, , was due to release just months later but publishers pulled it because, as Dunkle tells it, they thought there wasnât enough demand in the market for two books about the Dust Bowl.
But thereâs much more to Babbâs life than her overlap with Steinbeck. And thatâs the story that Dunkle tells in her literary biography, which was released in October to great acclaim. An excerpt of Riding Like the Wind was recently published in and reviewed in .
A shared âOkieâ heritage
Dunkle, who grew up in Sonoma County, can still recall her own grandmotherâs feelings about Steinbeckâs novel. She had moved to California during the Dust Bowl and was frustrated by how âOkiesâ like herself were characterized in the book.
âI didnât understand her anger and I was kind of ashamed of my Okie heritage,â Dunkle said. âI didnât really celebrate it. In fact, we werenât even allowed to say the word âOkieâ because it was used as a slur.â
The Grapes of Wrathâs depiction of the fictional Joad family â poor and constantly struggling â doesn't leave much room for empathy, according to Dunkle.
Dunkle will be making appearances for the next six weeks
., including at UC Davis.
âIt's a story thatâs built on stereotypes and itâs heralded as this great American story â and itâs good writing â but itâs another mythology of the west that puts women in a disempowered situation without agency,â Dunkle said. âAnd I'm really tired of that story in literature.â
Babb, on the other hand, helped Dunkle feel proud of her Oklahoma roots. In Babbâs novel, characters are more diverse, realistic and have agency.
âIt helped me see my heritage differently and, I thought, well, what could that do for other women who have not seen themselves, especially, in Western stories?â Dunkle said.
Immersing herself in Babbâs story, then writing it, was a five-year process that included trips to Oklahoma, Texas, Colorado and even Connecticut for archival research, sensory research and interviews.
âHer life is so storied,â Dunkle said.
The biography, meant to read with the flow of a novel, covers Babbâs early life growing up in Oklahoma and Colorado. She lived in a dugout on a broomcorn field and learned how to read from The Denver Post pages her mom posted against the dirt walls. Her life was hectic with her abusive, gambling father, but everything changed after she escaped to Los Angeles. Babb became a writer, hanging out with the likes of Tillie Olsen, Ray Bradbury and Ralph Waldo Ellison, whom she had an affair with.
"Story was my most important guiding principal â and really writing sensory rich scenes because she was such a sensory rich writer,â Dunkle said. âWhen you read her stories, you feel her connection with the land and the place. In order for me to write it, I had to go to eastern Colorado and see its beauty and feel what it feels like to walk on buffalo grass or hear the geese flying overhead, smell the sage in the air.â
Bringing womenâs stories forward
Babbâs story is the second biography of Dunkleâs to be published. The first, , is about another near-forgotten woman, author Jack Londonâs wife who, Dunkle said, helped him write many of his books but was never given credit for it.
Growing up, Dunkle was always familiar with Jack London because Sonoma County is home to Jack London State Park.
âThatâs where I discovered you could be a writer,â she remembered.
After that biography was published in 2020, the local museum, the House of Happy Walls Museum, asked if Dunkleâs research could be used during its remodel.
âIt brought Charmian Kittredge Londonâs story into the museum and that was so meaningful to me as a scholar to have the work that I've done change something in the physical world that could maybe change the experience for young girls going to the park,â Dunkle said.
Since then, Dunkle has been committed to telling the stories of women like London who have been âforgotten or misremembered.â
Finding lost voices
Her newsletter, , which she began last year, already has more than 3,000 subscribers.

âItâs been amazing, people are just coming out of the woodwork,â she said. âThere's a lot of women who are interested in learning about women who have been forgotten.â
Dunkle, in the College of Letters and Science at UC Davis, will give readings from Riding Like the Wind across the U.S. for the next six months in addition to teaching undergraduates.
âI love being able to show my students what itâs like to be a professional writer,â Dunkle said. Some of her students have been following her writing journey and, she said, itâs exciting to be able to share the end result with them so they can see âyou can actually do this.â
âAs an undergrad, I didnât know that I could get here and I just feel like itâs really important to make them realize how gifted they are and how this is a possible path for them,â she said.
Dunkle will in conversation with Matthew Stratton at the Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art at UC Davis on Nov. 19 at 4:30 p.m. That same week, she will be holding readings in San Francisco, Berkeley and Oakland. .
This from the College of Letters and Science.