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A review by ruthsic
Man-Eaters, Vol. 2 by Chelsea Cain
4.0
Warnings: mentions of violent maulings by wild animals, blood, gun violence
Man-Eaters continues to highlight the impossible standards that girls are subjected to, as well as society's obsession with protecting masculinity. In this volume, one of Maude's classmates has turned into a big cat, and the missing girl is a big hole of a question mark that has everybody on edge. They are being monitored even more, and the fear of an attack has increased. Meanwhile, Maude has yet to have a discussion with her father (who suspects she has turned too), and about her and her friends shunning the estrogen-laced products that they are all supposed to have. As usual, the last chapter is fully dedicated to in-universe ads that highlight just how ridiculous companies have become over this outbreak, and honestly I don't have enough words to go into how perfect they are for the tone of the book. There's an UNO-like card game with cards having tampons, lemon, etc, a propaganda-filled school activity game that is 'not a game' meant to scare all the uterus-havers into compliance. But the biggest bombshell is dropped at the end of Ch 7, and while I love this series even with its jokes and slapstick comedy, and its bare-bones plot that doesn't advance much, I did welcome that development very much! Oh, and one final thing I liked - they did acknowledge trans kids in this one, something that was missing (outright, at least) from the first volume.
Man-Eaters continues to highlight the impossible standards that girls are subjected to, as well as society's obsession with protecting masculinity. In this volume, one of Maude's classmates has turned into a big cat, and the missing girl is a big hole of a question mark that has everybody on edge. They are being monitored even more, and the fear of an attack has increased. Meanwhile, Maude has yet to have a discussion with her father (who suspects she has turned too), and about her and her friends shunning the estrogen-laced products that they are all supposed to have. As usual, the last chapter is fully dedicated to in-universe ads that highlight just how ridiculous companies have become over this outbreak, and honestly I don't have enough words to go into how perfect they are for the tone of the book. There's an UNO-like card game with cards having tampons, lemon, etc, a propaganda-filled school activity game that is 'not a game' meant to scare all the uterus-havers into compliance. But the biggest bombshell is dropped at the end of Ch 7, and while I love this series even with its jokes and slapstick comedy, and its bare-bones plot that doesn't advance much, I did welcome that development very much! Oh, and one final thing I liked - they did acknowledge trans kids in this one, something that was missing (outright, at least) from the first volume.