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.

Read More
Review: Live Alone and Like It by Marjorie Hillis

Published in 1936, Live Alone and Like It is a guide for women who live alone, whether that is because they want to, or because they are widows, spinsters, or pretty young things. According to Hillis, it doesn’t matter why they want to live alone, what matters is they can live alone… and like it!

Read More
Review: The Lying Life of Adults by Elena Ferrante

The Lying Life of Adults is also set in Naples. The book follows Giovanna as she navigates puberty, her parents’ failing marriage, changing friendships, and issues among estranged family members. The story begins with a bang — Giovanna overhears her father calling her ugly and the world around her begins to crumble (understandably at 13 years old).

Read More
Review: Convenience Store Woman by Sayaka Murata

The protagonist of Convenience Store Woman, Keiko Furukura is a 36-year-old, you guessed it, convenience store worker. Every day looks the same, she wakes up and takes basic care of herself because that’s what’s good for her job, the same she’s had since she was 18 years old. Keiko forces us to ask ourselves, what is ambition? And why do we chase it?

Read More
Review: Under Red Skies by Karoline Kan

Across countries and continents and borders and oceans, women feel, wonder, think, experience, regret, worry, and are faced with issues that feel all too familiar. Under Red Skies, told across three generations in China, touches on this (among other things), which is comforting and disheartening all at once.

Read More
Review: Adult Publishing for Middle-School Girls by Stacy Jo Coffey

The book takes place in a small town in Arizona in 1976 - already I’m sold because I love reading anything set in the 1960s or ‘70s. The story is centered around Melanie Chaffee, the 13-year-old main character. Melanie decides that she wants a new pair of platform sandals, but her “uptight” mother won’t let her have them. Melanie comes up with a plan: she’ll buy the shoes herself with her own money. But how is a middle-school girl supposed to get a job?

Read More
Review: Jane Austen on Film and Television by Sue Parrill

Jane Austen's incomparable Regency novels are ideal screen adaptation material, not only to enhance the reading experience of "Janeites," as her devotees are called, but as a tool to introduce this gifted author to anyone who might need some visual prompting before "plunging" into the original books.

Read More
Review: Nightbitch by Rachel Yoder

After one too many sleepless, summer nights, Nightbitch emerges from the mother as an animalistic rage, canine one might say. Deep down, however, the mother knew this rage always existed within her. Until now, I hope I have not scared you away, reader. Though this plot sounds rather surreal like a Dalí painting, author Rachel Yoder’s words play off the page—absurd, hilarious, and thrilling all at once.

Read More
Review: Dr. Martha: The Life of a Pioneer Physician, Politician, and Polygamist by Mari Graña

Dr. Martha is the second book about pioneering female physicians by Willa Cather award winner Mari Graña, whose earlier work, Pioneer Doctor (2005), was a biography of the author's own grandmother, Mary Babcock Atwater. Martha Hughes Cannon, or Mattie, is a remarkable Welsh-American medical doctor, women's rights activist and suffragist.

Read More
Review: the_atmospherians by Alex McElroy

I was excited to receive and read this one. First, a little background about the book: It follows Sasha, the narrator for the majority of the book, and someone that used to make a living teaching women how to live the simplistic lifestyle of doing nothing. Just as her career is on the rise and she's gaining attention, one of her followers (and trolls) kills himself on social media, blaming her for it.

Read More
Audiobook review: Rosedale in Love by Lev Raphael, narrated by Robin Siegerman

Author Lev Raphael, Jewish himself, had always loved Wharton’s The House of Mirth, but the treatment of Rosedale didn’t sit with him right (which he explains in the introduction). And so he decided to write a redemption story for Rosedale, aptly called Rosedale in Love, as it follows Rosedale’s infatuation with Lily Bart.

Read More
Review: How We Go Home: Voices from Indigenous North America edited by Sara Sinclair

Reading this book will leave you heavy and with a spark to do more for the indigenous community. This could be through volunteering, advocating for indigenous rights to your government leaders, and donating money. This book is outstanding and should be read by those who want to educate themselves about the indigenous communities in North America.

Read More
Review: The Mountains Sing by Nguyễn Phan Quế Mai

In The Mountains Sing, Nguyễn Phan Quế Mai weaves a story about 20th-century Việt Nam spanning four generations—from the Japanese occupation and the Great Hunger in the 1930s and 40s to the brutal Land Reform, and the Việt Nam war and its aftermath in the 1980s. The chapters alternate between two main characters the grandmother and granddaughter, as one looks back at the past and the sacrifices she has had to make to keep her family alive, and the other looks towards the future, and the hope of a life without hostility.

Read More
Review: Kim Ji-Young, Born in 1982 by Cho Nam-Joo

Kim Ji-Young is a character that will stick around with you for months after you finish the novel. Her story of how the patriarchy has affected her will make anyone sit down and reflect on their own experiences. This book will touch anyone who reads it, women will feel it emotionally, and men can learn from it.

Read More