asrino's review against another edition

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3.0

When I unwrapped this book as my 17th birthday gift from my aunt, I felt an immediate sense of dread. The cover emanated "poppy white feminist" vibes. And while the text itself breeds that aura at times, I still think it's a great read for any young, beginner feminist.

Firstly, I am glad to admit I had this book incorrectly pegged by assuming it would be predominantly white. The book itself is a series of essays (ft. some poems) from a diverse ensemble of feminist women. There are Muslim women, young ladies, poor women, mothers, celebrities, and there is even a trans woman. It was a pleasure to hear such a range of voices talk about a range of feminist topics.

Naturally, in this series of essays, there will be a fair selection of wonderfully-crafted stories, and boring, confusing messes. Personally, the stand-out essays (and poem) to me were:

• Charlie Cragg's "A Brief History of My Womanhood" - An overview of Cragg's lifetime struggle of being a woman born in a man's body.
• Keira Knightley's "The Weaker Sex" - A raw but heartfelt depiction of labour and motherhood
• Jameela Jamil's "Tell Him" - An open letter to mothers to remind them to dismantle their son's sexist beliefs towards women AND men.
• Tapiwa H. Maoni's "African Feminist" - An account of Maoni's experiences with misogyny in Malawi, Africa
• Grace Campbell's "The -Female- Wank" - A poem that promotes the normalisation of female sexuality & masturbation
• Emtithal Mahmoud's "Sharia State (Of Mind)" - An account of Mahmoud's experiences with misogyny in Sudan.
• Nimco Ali's "Be a Fun Feminist" - Ali's experiences with female genital mutilation (FMG). 
• Dolly Alderton's "Dismantling and Destroying Internalised Misogyny: To-Do List" - Exactly what the title says.
- And all the essays from the "EDUCATION" to brief readers on feminist history. Honestly, the book should have opened with this, instead.

While it appears that I've left a lengthy list of essays to reference, the whole book honestly felt more boring, and even redundant at times.

I think I just preferred listening to women's anecdotes, rather than reading motivational activist messaging.

3/5. It's alright.

jodiesbookishposts's review against another edition

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5.0

Feminists Don’t Wear Pink
I sometimes struggle in rating and reviewing books with various contributions. Also this was different than a book of short stories, or a book of essays. It was more like reading a conversation between a large group of women.
Girls Up are the charity behind the collection – and in a nutshell it is a collection from different women on what Feminism is to them. It is set up in common theme sections. Some parts were larger than others, some were more interesting than others – I particularly liked the parts that weren’t ‘celebrities’ the women who worked in charities and institutions – I wish there had been more of that.
This isn’t a book of feminist theory or deep evaluation. This is a book like a hug, like a friend confirming with you that these things that bother you, you aren’t alone in this. It’s beautiful that a book like this is out there. I’d recommend it for all the girls and young women in your life that might be finding their feet in understanding that Feminism isn’t the scary word that we were raised to believe it was.

lenorecanneversleep's review against another edition

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emotional funny informative inspiring lighthearted reflective medium-paced

3.5

itwig's review against another edition

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2.0

I liked some ‘essays’ - wouldn’t quite call them essays - but most were self explanatory/over simplified thoughts or ramblings. Probs would recommend to people who don’t know much about feminism.

brightfarmns's review against another edition

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4.0

Good collection with diverse perspectives on feminism and what it can mean to each of us.

alles_allerlei's review against another edition

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Wahrscheinlich hätte ich mir noch genauer vorher mit dem Buch beschäftigen sollen.
ABER
Hab ich nicht :D

Nun denn, ich persönlich glaube das ich einfach zu Alt für dieses Buch bin.
Die schreibweise der Texte war dann doch eher für 14 Jährige Mädels gedacht.
Ich gebe zu, die Texte von den Frauen die mich bewogen mir das Buch zu holen (Helen Fielding und Keira Knightly) warena uch in der Tat gut, aber alle anderen die ich las bzw. in die ich rein las nervten mich nur mit ihren platten aussagen bzw. ihrer platten sprache für jüngere, so dass ich das Buch nach ca. 100 Seiten abbrach.

kathi358's review against another edition

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4.0

Idk what to say but I really needed this book.

eml28's review against another edition

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3.0

Was quite disappointed at how short and 'surface level' these essays were when I was expecting detailed, powerful messages of feminism and solidarity.

pennymackett's review against another edition

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5.0

I LOVE THIS BOOK!

sassyykassie's review against another edition

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5.0

Tell Him was my favorite essay ❤️