Jude Ellison S. Doyle is an author, journalist, and comic book writer living in upstate New York.
Under his former pen name “Sady Doyle,” Jude founded the feminist blog Tiger Beatdown in 2008. He is the author of Trainwreck: The Women We Love to Hate, Mock, and Fear... and Why (Melville House 2016), which has been called "smart, funny and fearless" (Boston Globe), "compelling" and "persuasive" (New York Times Book Review). The Atlantic predicted that "Trainwreck will very likely join the feminist canon." Doyle’s second book, Dead Blondes and Bad Mothers: Monstrosity, Patriarchy and the Fear of Female Power (Melville House, 2019) was named a Best Non-Fiction Book of 2019 by Kirkus Reviews and was shortlisted for Starburst Magazine’s Brave New Words award. His first non-fiction book under his real name, DILF: Did I Leave Feminism, will be published by Melville House in the fall of 2025.
In 2021, Jude published his first comic: Maw, a limited-series horror comic with artist A.L. Kaplan, for Boom! Studios. His follow-up, The Neighbors with artist Letizia Cadonici, was published in 2023, and was nominated for a 2024 GLAAD award for “Outstanding Comic.” Both are now available in collected edition, and Jude’s third series, Be Not Afraid with artist Lisandro Estherren, is forthcoming from Boom! Studios.
Miscellaneous accomplishment time! Jude Doyle has led several successful social media awareness campaigns, including #MooreandMe and #MenCallMeThings, won the Women's Media Center’s first Social Media Award in 2011, and was a founding staffer at Rookie Magazine and a contributor to the bestselling anthologies Book of Jezebel, Nasty Women and It Came From the Closet: Queer Reflections on Horror. His pieces have appeared in Elle, The Guardian, The Atlantic, Buzzfeed, and all across the Internet. He co-wrote the libretto for a German experimental music piece about Princess Diana. He currently writes a regular column at Xtra, Canada’s premier LGBTQIA+ magazine. He has a newsletter that’s not on Substack. He’s been invited to give talks in Italy three times, which was not enough. He once made a flowchart about farts for the New York Times.
If you'd like to ask Jude to give a talk (in Italy or out of it) or to write for you, please do come say hi.
BOOKS
DILF: Did I Leave Feminism. (Amazon.) (Barnes & Noble.) (Bookshop.org.)
The Neighbors. (Amazon.) (Barnes & Noble.) (Your local comic shop.)
MAW. (Amazon) (Barnes & Noble.) (Your local comic shop.)
Dead Blondes and Bad Mothers: Monstrosity, Patriarchy and the Fear of Female Power. (Amazon.) (Barnes & Noble.) (IndieBound.)
Trainwreck: The Women We Love to Hate, Mock, and Fear… and Why. (Amazon.) (Barnes & Noble.) (IndieBound.)
ANTHOLOGIES
It Came From the Closet: Queer Reflections on Horror, ed. Joe Vallese. (Amazon.) (Barnes & Noble.) (IndieBound.)
Marilyn Monroe: The Last Interview. (Amazon.) (Barnes & Noble.) (IndieBound.)
Believe Me: How Trusting Women Can Change the World, ed. Jaclyn Friedman and Jessica Valenti. (Amazon.) (Barnes & Noble.) (IndieBound.)
Nasty Women: Feminism, Resistance and Revolution in Trump’s America, ed. Samhita Mukhopadhyay and Kate Harding (Amazon.) (Barnes & Noble.) (IndieBound.)
Rookie Yearbook Two, ed. Tavi Gevinson. (Amazon.) (Barnes & Noble.) (IndieBound.)
Rookie Yearbook One, ed. Tavi Gevinson. (Amazon.) (Barnes & Noble.) (IndieBound.)
Book of Jezebel: An Illustrated Encyclopedia of Lady Things, by Kate Harding & Amanda Hess, ed. Anna Holmes. (Amazon.) (Barnes & Noble.) (IndieBound.)