"Caryl Rivers" is an American novelist and journalist.

Rivers' 1984 novel Virgins (novel)/Virgins was a New York Times Best Seller/New York Times Best Seller and sold millions of copies around the world. She is also a journalist, and her articles have appeared in major publications such as The Huffington Post, The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe and The Los Angeles Times.

Rivers is a professor of journalism at Boston University. In 1979 she and historian Howard Zinn were among a group of Boston University faculty members who defended the right of the school's clerical workers to strike and were threatened with dismissal after refusing to cross a picket line. In 2008 Rivers was awarded The Helen Thomas for Lifetime Achievement which is awarded to an individual for a lifetime of contribution to the journalism profession.

Rivers is also the author of several other books including the 1986 sequel to Virgins, Girls Forever Brave and True, Slick Spins and Fractured Facts: How Cultural Myths Distort the News, Same Difference: How Gender Myths Are Hurting Our Relationships, Our Children, and Our Jobs and Camelot, a novel set during the Kennedy administration.

More Caryl Rivers on Wikipedia.

If you are in a marriage where your husband is handling the money and he's terrible at it, you feel you can't step in.

The message that is coming across from the media is clearly, 'Watch out, women, if you're ambitious. If you don't get married and have kids right away, you're gonna be miserable the rest of your life'.