Entries tagged with “feminism”.


 Amelia Bloomer

We just got word of another important list of awards for our books: The Amelia Bloomer Project list, a yearly round-up of strong feminist works. Here is what the project is all about:

“In an effort both to alert readers to society’s opposition toward women’s equality and to highlight progress toward this vital goal, the 2010 Amelia Bloomer Project members selected 54 books notable for feminist content, quality of writing, and appeal to young readers.”

And congratulations to the authors, editors, and contributors to the following books!

The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie by Alan Bradley (Delacorte Press)

Mare’s War by Tanita S. Davis (Alfred A. Knopf)

Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide by Nicholas D. Kristoff and Sheryl WuDunn (Alfred A. Knopf)

The Road of Lost Innocence by Somaly Mam (Spiegel & Grau)

The Secret Keeper by Mitali Perkins (Delacorte)

Bloodhound by Tamora Pierce (Random House)

-Dave

commencement1

What do you get when you take four females with different backgrounds, personalities, and experiences and center a novel around every giggle, every boy, every argument, and every hug? Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants? Sex and the City? Not quite…

Commencement, the debut novel by J. Courtney Sullivan, follows Sally, Bree, April and Celia as they forge an intense bond with one another in the halls of a Smith College dormotory. Spanning from their first year at this all-girl university to the geographically and demographically different paths they take after graduation, this book is more than just “chick-lit”. While the author gives her girls “female” issues to tackle such as men, dating, marriage, careers, and babies, she also addresses family issues, feminism, identity struggles, and even sex crimes making this “gaggle of girls” read quite refreshing. On her website (which, by the way, features fun goodies like videos of Smith convocations from 1940 and 2008) Sullivan elaborates on the feminist undertones that exist within the novel:

…I certainly didn’t set out to write a book about feminism, per se. I wanted to tell a story about the first generation of American women to have all the choices in the world laid out before them; a gift that is wholly incredible and a little bit terrifying. I was about the same age as the women in the book while I was writing it, and I watched my girlfriends struggling with choices: Who to love. How to work. Where to begin.

 

These things combined with the candor and honesty with which Commencement addresses the complexities of female friendship made this book not just a fun read for this member of the book’s target demographic —  I felt a lot less guilty about reading it! Enjoyable and thought provoking, this will surely spark discussion among your female patrons.

-Marie