Feminism

Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day

Oh boy, does she. Seriously. I’ve wanted to read Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day for ages and just never got around to it. Thanks to the 1930’s mini challenge I moved it to the top of my TBR list and read it almost straight through. I love Miss Pettigrew. It’s a shame Watson didn’t write a whole series of Miss Pettigrew novels.

The 1930’s were so awesome. That spot between what was proper and what was fun. Wild, glamorous women (and men) and the prim and proper Mrs whatshername that Miss Pettigrew mimicked so well. The best sort of Cinderella story, that’s what this was.

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The Madame Curie Complex

It was awesome to meet Julie Des Jardins (Jory’s sister and Joy’s daughter) last year at BlogHer 09. I’d heard an awful lot about her and seen a lot of photos of her and her children. It was fun to take her photo with Mrs Potato Head. And it was interesting to hear her talk about her book, The Madame Curie Complex.

I’m not a science nerd but is that because when I was a kid, I was discouraged from pursuing math and science interests? Possible but as with any nature over nurture question, impossible to know for sure.  I didn’t know exactly what Julie was going to write or who she’d include in her pages but any book that talks about invisible women is my kind of book.

When my signed review copy arrived (thanks Julie!) I was thrilled by the names of the women I saw inside. I have always been interested in Marie Curie, haven’t we all?  I’m a huge Roslind Franklin fan, (Watson, Crick and Wilkins… ugh, don’t even get me started… I think I almost drove off of the road the day I discovered The Rosalind Franklin College right next to the Great Lakes Naval Station.)  And, I remember wanting to do a report about Lillian Gilbreth way back when and not being able to find enough information, all I could find was stuff about Frank.

I was really looking forward to reading it but work and kids and life in general kept me from diving in. (Imagine Lillian Gilbreth or Marie Curie making those kinds of excuses…hah.) I decided the Readathon would be the perfect time to sit down with it but I planned poorly and didn’t start it until very late in the Readathon day. I struggled with the intro, though it started beautifully, and ended up putting it down in favor of Nancy Drew – hoping to revitalize a bit. It worked because when I picked it back up, I was hooked – exhausted but hooked.

We’ve all heard the reasons why women didn’t enter (or achieve) in math and science, Julie’s book digs in differently. As she placed these women into historical context, right next to their male counterparts, I found myself thinking about the stories I already knew – in a different way.

The pieces about Gilbreth, the Manhattan project, and the “computers” in Astronomy were fascinating – I suspect I’ll go back and re-read those sections again. I’ve also never been very interested in the Trimates – the primate studies of Fossey,  Galdikas and Goodall- but after reading about them in The Madame Curie Complex, I’ve begun to regret that. I might just end up with a book or two about Primatology – particularly Galdikas and Fossey.  Thanks Julie!

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Everyday is a Good Day

Just finished my first book on the iPad, Everyday is a Good Day (by Wilma Mankiller.)  I’m so glad I read it and just wish I’d read it before Mankiller passed away.  Interesting essays and observations from Mankiller and other women from various tribes. Highly recommend this one.

(Pages – 256)

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When Everything Changed

It’s a good thing I’m still super busy at work. If I’d been able to read When Everything Changed nonstop and tweet my way through it, I’d have been blaming the patriarchy all over the place. And I know some of y’all get tired of that. Because you don’t want to think about all of the ways that you’re still bowing to the patriarchy – that we all are bowing to the patriarchy.

Everything did change – kind of – but we never got quite to where we should have been – on women’s rights or race.

PATRIARCHY. Bah.

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Traveling with Pomegranates

Traveling with Pomegranates is part travel book, part mother-daughter exploration, part coming of age book (for young women and older women), part spiritual exploration. At times it seems like it’s a bit too much mix of too many things, but overall – it works.

It’s also a wee bit disconcerting to read Sue Monk Kidd (and her daughter) while listening to Octavia Butler’s Parable of the Sower. The two books mingle and mix with mixed results.

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Skyscraper

Skyscraper is a bit of pulp fiction by Faith Baldwin, re-released as part of the femme-fatales series, and I noticed it at Women & Children First a couple of weeks ago.

I’m a fan of woman written pulp so I reserved it at the library. It was the perfect read after finishing Say You’re One of the Them. Nice introduction and afterward as well.

If you haven’t read any of the old pulp fiction, or haven’t read any in a long time – check out the femme fatales series. Or anything by Faith Baldwin.

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Princess Ben

I couldn’t figure out why TW was so happy to read Princess Ben. And when she started talking about how excited RJ would be to read it, I was just plain skeptical. (RJ only reads vampire novels right now, unless forced to read something else…)

When TW and the kids came home from school pick up and RJ had stolen Princess Ben out from under TW… and then would not return it to her later that evening so her mother could finish it, I was more than a little shocked.

There are no vampires in Princess Ben. And it seemed like just another strong girl princess sort of book. Also, while I liked Off Season and Dairy Queen, the writing was not so compelling as to cause teenage girls (or their mothers) to fight over them.

So what was it about Princess Ben…? I have no idea, but it was good. It was compelling. It was worth fighting over. There wasn’t anything super surprising about it. This was not the first time we’ve read a Princess slays dragon and wakes the Prince with a kiss sort of book. I don’t even think it was the emotional eating Princess.

Not that I know what, exactly, causes this to be a great book – a combination of those things plus surprisingly good writing, characters you’re drawn to, and the dropped mentions of other fairy tales – all of the above?

Surely this will make the Cybil short list…

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