Posts tagged female author
Review: This Arab Life by Amal Ghandour

Amal Ghandour’s writing is intimate, gripping, and so wonderfully done. Not only does she seamlessly weave in actual historical moments with her more personal back story, but it’s also an eye-opening read into the lives of a group of young people who grew up as the Middle East begin to change into a place of political turmoil.

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Review: The Bread the Devil Knead by Lisa Allen-Agostini

The crushing, powerful and moving story of a survivor of domestic violence in Trinidad and Tobago, The Bread the Devil Knead nevertheless manages to find glimmers of light, love and wit in the aggressively and painfully patriarchal world inhabited by our protagonist.

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Review: Small Deaths by Rijula Das

Small Deaths begins with death: a murder inside a brothel in the red light district in Calcutta called Shonagachi. A woman named Maya is murdered and no one seems to know who did it. The local authorities don’t care and brush it off as an everyday occurrence in such a neighborhood. Soon it’s up to the other women in the brothel to get to the bottom of whodunit.

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Review: The Chosen and the Beautiful by Nghi Vo

When I picked up Nghi Vo’s debut novel The Chosen and the Beautiful, I was excited to get a more femme retelling of one of my favorite books of all time, The Great Gatsby. What I ended up getting was a new mantra: if white men can rewrite history, women of color can rewrite their books. Let’s face it, literature has stood the test of time better than history, anyway.

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Review: Someday Mija, You’ll Learn the Difference Between a Whore and a Working Woman by Yvonne Martinez

I had the honor of receiving an advanced copy of Someday Mija, You’ll Learn the Difference Between a Whore and a Working Woman by Yvonne Martinez. Intrigued by the title alone, I gladly ate it up. It tells the story of author Martinez’s tumultuous childhood and young adulthood, as well as what happens after she distances herself from her family.

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Review: Childhood Unlimited: Parenting Beyond the Gender Bias by Virginia Méndez Mesón

Virginia Méndez, a Spanish author, speaker and founder of the Feminist Shop, lives in Belfast, Northern Ireland with husband Chris, son Eric and daughter Nora. She is the writer of a feminist book series for children called Mika & Lolo, but what fascinated me was her feminist and gender-creative parenting guide, Childhood Unlimited.

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Review: This Is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar & Max Gladstone

Does the novelty of This is How You Lose the Time War lie in the authors who penned it, the feminine and LGBTQ themes, the lack of male characters in sci-fi, or the fun reimaging of the time travel subgenre? Yes to all of the above.

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Review: Messengers of the Gods by Kathryn Gahl

Gahl’s style ranges throughout the book, making it interesting and enrapturing to read. She moves from stream of consciousness to sonnets to free verse to alternate rhymes and beyond. The thread that brings the entire collection together, however, is the theme of dance. Dance clearly holds a special place in the author’s heart. In a lot of ways, it makes sense. Poetry can give you the feeling of dancing across the page as you read.

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Review: Beautiful World, Where Are You by Sally Rooney

It is not easy to write a review of a publishing sensation like Sally Rooney, who has captured the hearts of readership in Europe and worldwide. Her latest book, however, has triggered me and I feel, in my small way, that I have a word to say about this publication, so I have decided to dedicate a space to Beautiful World, Where Are You.

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Review: Build Your House Around My Body by Violet Kupersmith

Build Your House Around My Body by Violet Kupersmith is one of the best books I’ve read in recent years. It is a brilliant, symbolic exploration of colonialism, generational trauma, women’s bodies, and the history of place. And it’s all told as a ghost story. Yes, I am obsessed. No, I will not stop recommending this book to my friends.

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Review: I Was Born For This by Alice Oseman

I Was Born For This by YA author and illustrator Alice Oseman is a heartwarming and eye-opening look at the often misunderstood world of fandom and online culture, which brings to life a delightful and very human set of characters with compassion and nuance.

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Review: A Manual for Cleaning Women by Lucía Berlin

Reading Berlin is like getting punched in the face. She forces you to look at the ugliest parts of humanity while writing in such a direct and entrancing way you can’t escape it. From the first few stories, you’ll realize you’re in for a ride. And even though they’re not obviously connected, many themes repeat along the 470-pages, including alcoholism, racism, abuse, trauma, and pain.

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Review: Flâneuse: Women Walk the City in Paris, New York, Tokyo, Venice, and London by Lauren Elkin

Elkin’s book is a homage to women walking and wandering the cities of the world, in various forms and for various reasons. It’s a lyrical and contemplative study of the relationship between women and the city, with the act of walking as a mediator through which this relationship is realized, nurtured, and as Elkin demonstrates deftly, conveyed. Part memoir and part an exercise in biography, Elkin intersperses the life stories of women like Jean Rhys, George Sand, Virginia Woolf, and others, with her own experiences of walking in Paris, New York, Tokyo, Venice, and London.

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Review: No One is Talking About This by Patricia Lockwood

No One Is Talking About This is not your typical novel. It’s among many books that make me ask, “When can we get a subgenre for novels written by poets?” Laced in metaphor to mirror the confusing layers of information one gets from the internet and told in two main parts rather than three acts, it’s the kind of book you finish in an afternoon, as long as you can get past the daunting and dizzying first few pages. I’ve never gone from laughing to sobbing the way I did reading this book.

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Review: Girls Will Be Girls by Emer O'Toole

Girls Will Be Girls by Emer O’Toole is that sparkling book we need. O'Toole brilliantly explains the difficulty of eradicating society's misconceptions about gender and sexual orientation (i.e. the structure), and in particular how they shape our choices (i.e. our agency, our performance) and how they have changed standards of normality.

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Review: The Service by Frankie Miren

The Service intertwines the stories of three very different women whose lives are connected by the sex industry. The book shows just how much the sex workers involved in the industry rely on this work, with many living from payment to payment to cover rent, childcare, food, upkeep and other necessities. While a few are high-end call girls, these for the most part are the exception.

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Review: Black Box by Shiori Ito

Hailed as Japan’s answer to the #MeToo movement, Black Box by Shiori Ito is an at times chilling, at times uplifting story of Ito’s experience of when she was raped by a prominent Japanese reporter in 2015. She came forward with her story in 2017 after she was told by the police that they could not (and would not) help her in pressing charges.

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