Who Run the World? The Women in These 10 Empowering Books

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March 12 2020
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Think you know what books to read for Women’s History Month? Think again! This multi-genre list was handpicked by our professional bookworms to give you a rundown on what #herstory books you should be reading this month. These inspiring reads will expand upon your feminist history knowledge, introducing you to fascinating heroines (and antiheroines), both real and fictional. From a deep dive into the women’s suffrage movement to a colorful feminist infographic history, these reads will both enlighten and empower you not only this month but all year round. 

This post was originally published on GetLiterary.com.

We Are Feminist
by Helen Pankhurst

Sabrina’s Pick

 If you’re a visual learner like I am, then We Are Feminist is the colorful learning tool for you. Organized into three “Waves of Feminism” with countless illustrations, this little book covers over 150 years of equal rights activism and its major figures. Featuring easy to read guides on topics such as suffrage, reproductive rights, women in literature and more, it’s exactly the crash course I needed to understand women’s history and get to know our matriarchs. Inspirational and empowering, We Are Feminist compiles just about all the historical data you need in order to know how powerful women can be.

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We Are Feminist
Helen Pankhurst

Celebrate the achievements of women and their fight for equality with this inspirational and insightful infographic history of the global women’s rights movement, from the mid-nineteenth century to present day.

Sometimes we need a joyful, visual timeline to reflect on just how far the women’s movement has come over its 150-year history. Honoring women’s collective and individual achievements, We Are Feminist is an accessible and fully illustrated book that serves as the perfect overview of modern feminism for anyone who doesn’t know much about the global women’s rights movement or wants to know more.

Organized into feminist waves, We Are Feminist tells a visual story through graphically represented statistics, key dates and events, quotes, and facts about rights, campaigns, and the women who inspired them. This easy-to-read guide to these international pioneers and their contributions is sure to inspire, inform, and empower both current and future generations of feminists!

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Who Run the World? The Women in These 10 Empowering Books

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The Lady of Sing Sing
by Idanna Pucci

Emily’s Pick

To give a little background to this true story: In 1895, NYC socialite Countess Cora Slocomb campaigned to save Italian Immigrant Maria Barbella from the death penalty after Maria was convicted of murdering her abusive lover. Cora reached far and wide to raise awareness for stopping Maria’s unjust death sentence by way of the newly invented electric chair. That’s the main story line, which was enough to get me pumped to read, but there’s also a lot more going on at the same time—immigrant mistreatment, the injustices of capital punishment, an “electric” rivalry between Thomas Edison and Nikola Tesla, and so much more. At the heart of it all is the empowering theme of women sticking together, fighting for freedom against all odds, and succeeding.

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The Lady of Sing Sing
Idanna Pucci

This “gripping social history” (Publishers Weekly), with all the passion and pathos of a classic opera, chronicles the riveting first campaign against the death penalty waged in 1895 by American pioneer activist, Cora Slocomb, Countess of Brazzà, to save the life of a twenty-year-old illiterate Italian immigrant, Maria Barbella, who killed the man who had abused her.

Previously published as The Trials of Maria Barbella. In 1895, a twenty-two-year-old Italian seamstress named Maria Barbella was accused of murdering her lover, Domenico Cataldo, after he seduced her and broke his promise to marry her. Following a sensational trial filled with inept lawyers, dishonest reporters and editors, and a crooked judge repaying political favors, the illiterate immigrant became the first woman sentenced to the newly invented electric chair at Sing Sing, where she is also the first female prisoner. Behind the scenes, a corporate war raged for the monopoly of electricity pitting two giants, Edison and Westinghouse with Nikola Tesla at his side, against each other.

Enter Cora Slocomb, an American-born Italian aristocrat and activist, who launched the first campaign against the death penalty to save Maria. Rallying the New York press, Cora reached out across the social divide—from the mansions of Fifth Avenue to the tenements of Little Italy. Maria’s “crime of honor” quickly becomes a cause celebre, seizing the nation’s attention. Idanna Pucci, Cora’s great-granddaughter, masterfully recounts this astonishing story by drawing on original research and documents from the US and Italy. This dramatic page-turner, interwoven with twists and unexpected turns, grapples with the tragedy of immigration, capital punishment, ethnic prejudice, criminal justice, corporate greed, violence against women, and a woman’s right to reject the role of victim. Over a century later, this story is as urgent as ever.

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Suffrage
by Ellen Carol DuBois

Molly's Pick

I thought I knew a lot about the women’s suffrage movement—after all, I wrote most of my elementary school reports on Susan B. Anthony before my mom gently suggested I expand my interests (and so began my Amelia Earhart obsession)—but Suffrage: Women's Long Battle for the Vote by Ellen Carol DuBois has greatly expanded my knowledge. Marking 100 years since women won the right to vote, Suffrage takes a well-researched and comprehensive approach to telling vivid stories about the relentless and complex women behind the suffrage movement. We must not forget that the right to vote was hard fought and that there’s still a lot of fighting to do (and here begins my Stacey Abrams obsession).

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Suffrage
Ellen Carol DuBois

Honoring the 100th anniversary of the 19th amendment to the Constitution, this exciting history explores the full scope of the movement to win the vote for women through portraits of its bold leaders and devoted activists.

Distinguished historian Ellen Carol DuBois begins in the pre-Civil War years with foremothers Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, and Sojourner Truth as she explores the links of the woman suffrage movement to the abolition of slavery. After the Civil War, Congress granted freed African American men the right to vote but not white and African American women, a crushing disappointment. DuBois shows how suffrage leaders persevered through the Jim Crow years into the reform era of Progressivism. She introduces new champions Carrie Chapman Catt and Alice Paul, who brought the fight into the 20th century, and she shows how African American women, led by Ida B. Wells-Barnett, demanded voting rights even as white suffragists ignored them.

DuBois explains how suffragists built a determined coalition of moderate lobbyists and radical demonstrators in forging a strategy of winning voting rights in crucial states to set the stage for securing suffrage for all American women in the Constitution. In vivid prose DuBois describes suffragists’ final victories in Congress and state legislatures, culminating in the last, most difficult ratification, in Tennessee.

DuBois follows women’s efforts to use their voting rights to win political office, increase their voting strength, and pass laws banning child labor, ensuring maternal health, and securing greater equality for women.

Suffrage: Women’s Long Battle for the Vote is sure to become the authoritative account of one of the great episodes in the history of American democracy.

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Mr. President, How Long Must We Wait?
by Tina Cassidy

Heather’s Pick #1

I’m not sure what it says about my school lessons in women’s history (or, okay, perhaps my ability to retain them) that it took an episode of the TV show Timeless to drive home for me how integral Alice Paul was to convincing President Woodrow Wilson to pass the 19th Amendment, giving women the right to vote in America. Whatever works, I guess? In any case, I’m now very much looking forward to reading Tina Cassidy’s new book Mr. President, How Long Must We Wait?a deep dive into the complicated relationship between this courageous woman and the newly elected president. Wilson first agreed to meet with Paul after she organized an attention-grabbing protest in Washington, D.C., which was attended by 8,0000 suffragists, yet even amid conversations, she and other leaders of the movement kept up the pressure on the White House with constant demonstrations. Obviously, I must know more about this badass lady.

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Mr. President, How Long Must We Wait?
Tina Cassidy

In this “heroic narrative” (The Wall Street Journal), discover the inspiring and timely account of the complex relationship between leading suffragist Alice Paul and President Woodrow Wilson in her fight for women’s equality.

Woodrow Wilson lands in Washington, DC, in March of 1913, a day before he is set to take the presidential oath of office. He is surprised by the modest turnout. The crowds and reporters are blocks away from Union Station, watching a parade of eight thousand suffragists on Pennsylvania Avenue in a first-of-its-kind protest organized by a twenty-five-year-old activist named Alice Paul. The next day, The New York Times calls the procession “one of the most impressively beautiful spectacles ever staged in this country.”

Mr. President, How Long Must We Wait? weaves together two storylines: the trajectories of Alice Paul and Woodrow Wilson, two apparent opposites. Paul’s procession of suffragists resulted in her being granted a face-to-face meeting with President Wilson, one that would lead to many meetings and much discussion, but little progress for women. With no equality in sight and patience wearing thin, Paul organized the first group to ever picket in front of the White House lawn—night and day, through sweltering summer mornings and frigid fall nights.

From solitary confinement, hunger strikes, and the psychiatric ward to ever more determined activism, Mr. President, How Long Must We Wait? reveals the courageous, near-death journey it took, spearheaded in no small part by Alice Paul’s leadership, to grant women the right to vote in America. “A remarkable tale” (Kirkus Reviews) and a rousing portrait of a little-known feminist heroine, this is an eye-opening exploration of a crucial moment in American history one century before the Women’s March.

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She Came to Slay
by Erica Armstrong Dunbar

Holly’s Pick #1

Behind every strong, powerful, and influential woman in American history is a complex web of obstacles—and accomplishments she tirelessly achieved. She Came to Slay offers a new perspective on the life of the astounding Harriet Tubman. This tribute illustrates the incredible role Harriet Tubman played in the Civil War era by freeing slaves and serving as a spy for the Union Army, and also how her legacy still inspires activists in the fight for civil rights today. With a twang of pop culture thrown into the mix, Erica Armstrong Dunbar’s story reiterates just how fearless and powerful this heroine truly was.

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She Came to Slay
Erica Armstrong Dunbar

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Lawbreaking Ladies
by Erika Owen

Heather’s Pick #2

I’m a rule-follower by nature, but if adulthood has taught me anything, it’s that life isn’t fair, especially for women (and people of color, and the LGBTQ+ community…). Maybe that’s why I admire the ladies who’ve proven that some rules are made to be broken and am endlessly fascinated by the ones who’ve chosen a life of straight-up crime, even if I don’t understand it. Erika Owen’s Lawbreaking Ladies is still a few months from release (it’ll be out in August 2020), but you can bet it’s already on my radar. Featuring brief biographies of society-bucking ladies like female pirate Ching Shih, train robber (and member of Butch Cassidy’s Wild Bunch gang) Laura Bullion, and Prohibition-era gambling queen Stephanie Saint-Clair, this little book looks like it’s going to be entertaining andeducational. Win/win!

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Lawbreaking Ladies
Erika Owen

A fascinating, illustrated book featuring brief biographies and trivia about remarkable yet little-known female lawbreakers through the ages.

We’re all familiar with the popular slogan, “well-behaved women seldom make history.” But that adage is taken to the next level in this book that looks at women from the past who were not afraid to break the rules and challenged conventional feminine stereotypes. From pirates to gangsters, bandits to scammers, and madams to deviants, women throughout the ages haven’t always decided to be sugar, spice, and everything nice.

Lawbreaking Ladies features the stories of fifty remarkable women whose penchant for criminal behavior has solidified their place in the history books. This impressive collection features women who did not let society define them, including the swashbuckling female pirate Ching Shih, the outlaw Laura Bullion aka “Rose of the Wild Bunch,” the Prohibition-era crime lord Stephanie Saint-Clair, and the female band of prisoners knows as the Goree Girls.

Perfect for true crime fans and lovers of women’s history, Lawbreaking Ladies serves as an entertaining and informative guide to girls who were not afraid to be daring, defiant, and downright criminal.

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Who Run the World? The Women in These 10 Empowering Books

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The Power Notebooks
by Katie Roiphe

Courtney’s Pick

As the name The Power Notebooks suggests, Roiphe shares her personal notebook entries—offering up insights of divorce, single motherhood, and being a female writer. She also intertwines these musings with the lives of famous writers such as Sylvia Plath and Simone de Beauvoir. From the first journal entry, you are immersed in Roiphe’s head and can feel the way she must have felt when writing each one. The book as a whole is more informal than most nonfiction I’ve read, and lends itself to creating an intimate connection with the author. As a reader, you’re drawn into Roiphe’s circular thought processes as she grapples with contemporary womanhood, her professional writer self, and the private person she is when she’s all alone in the early morning. You will find yourself relating to this feminist writer’s internal battle and hopefully, at the end, leave with a bit more understanding of your own self too and the world around you.

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The Power Notebooks
Katie Roiphe

Katie Roiphe, culture writer and author of The Morning After, shares a timely blend of memoir, feminist investigation, and exploration in famous female writers’ lives, in a bold, essential discussion of how strong women experience their power.

Told in a series of notebook entries, Roiphe weaves her often fraught personal experiences with divorce, single motherhood, and relationships with insights into the lives and loves of famous writers such as Sylvia Plath and Simone de Beauvoir. She dissects the way she and other ordinary, powerful women have subjugated their own power time and time again, and she probes brilliantly at the tricky, uncomfortable question of why.

In these informal musings and notes, Roiphe delves into treacherous, largely untalked about, contradictions of contemporary womanhood, going where few writers dare. The Power Notebooks is Roiphe’s most vital, thought provoking, and emotionally intimate work yet.

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We Are Not Here to Be Bystanders
by Linda Sarsour

Saimah’s Pick 

As a Muslim-American woman, I am really thrilled to read We Are Not Here to Be Bystanders by Linda Sarsour, who was one of the organizers of the inaugural Women’s March. In this book, she shares her story about how the racism and backlash after 9/11 affected her and Muslim communities around the nation. She has spent her career fighting for women’s rights. She serves as an inspiration and role model not just for other Muslim-American women but for women of all backgrounds.

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We Are Not Here to Be Bystanders
Linda Sarsour

Linda Sarsour, co-organizer of the Women’s March, shares how growing up Palestinian Muslim American, feminist, and empowered moved her to become a globally recognized activist on behalf of marginalized communities across the country.

On a chilly spring morning in Brooklyn, nineteen-year-old Linda Sarsour stared at her reflection, dressed in a hijab for the first time. She saw in the mirror the woman she was growing to be—a young Muslim American woman unapologetic in her faith and her activism, who would discover her innate sense of justice in the aftermath of 9/11. Now heralded for her award-winning leadership of the Women’s March on Washington, in We Are Not Here to Be Bystanders Linda Sarsour offers a poignant story of community and family.

From the Brooklyn bodega her father owned, where Linda learned the real meaning of intersectionality, to protests in the streets of Washington, DC, Linda’s experience as a daughter of Palestinian immigrants is a moving portrayal of what it means to find one’s voice and use it for the good of others. We follow Linda as she learns the tenets of successful community organizing, and through decades of fighting for racial, economic, gender, and social justice as she becomes one of the most recognized activists in the nation. We also see her honoring her grandmother’s dying wish, protecting her children, building resilient friendships, and mentoring others even as she loses her first mentor in a tragic accident. Throughout, she inspires readers to take action as she reaffirms that we are not here to be bystanders.

In his foreword to the book, Harry Belafonte writes of Linda, “While we may not have made it to the Promised Land, my peers and I, my brothers and sisters in liberation can rest easy that the future is in the hands of leaders like Linda Sarsour. I have often said to Linda that she embodies the principle and purpose of another great Muslim leader, brother Malcolm X.”

This is her story.

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Feast Your Eyes
by Myla Goldberg

Holly’s Pick #2

This powerful novel is so fitting for this list of feminist reads since it depicts a fiercely independent woman’s exploration in art as she attempts to find her voice. On a quest for artistic recognition in the late 1950s through the 1970s, Lillian Preston comes into the national spotlight. Her partially nude photographs of her daughter would likely be regarded as works of artistic expression in today’s society, but decades ago they landed her an arrest. Narrated by Lillian’s daughter, Feast Your Eyes (new in paperback) presents a collection of memories, interviews, and journal excerpts that paint a vivid portrait of one woman’s dedication to art and authenticity (and the effect it had on her daughter).

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Feast Your Eyes
Myla Goldberg

ONE OF NPR’S BEST BOOKS OF 2019

2020 Andrew Carnegie Medals for Excellence Finalist

2019 National Book Critics Circle Award Finalist

“A daringly inventive parable of female creativity and motherhood” (O, The Oprah Magazine) from Myla Goldberg, the award-winning, New York Times bestselling author of Bee Season, about a female photographer grappling with ambition and motherhood—a balancing act familiar to women of every generation.

Feast Your Eyes, framed as the catalogue notes from a photography show at the Museum of Modern Art, tells the life story of Lillian Preston: “America’s Worst Mother, America’s Bravest Mother, America’s Worst Photographer, or America’s Greatest Photographer, depending on who was talking.” After discovering photography as a teenager through her high school’s photo club, Lillian rejects her parents’ expectations of college and marriage and moves to New York City in 1955. When a small gallery exhibits partially nude photographs of Lillian and her daughter Samantha, Lillian is arrested, thrust into the national spotlight, and targeted with an obscenity charge. Mother and daughter’s sudden notoriety changes the course of both of their lives, and especially Lillian’s career as she continues a life-long quest for artistic legitimacy and recognition.

“A searching consideration of the way that the identities and perceptions of a female artist shift over time” (The New Yorker), Feast Your Eyes shares Samantha’s memories, interviews with Lillian’s friends and lovers, and excerpts from Lillian’s journals and letters—a collage of stories and impressions, together amounting to an astounding portrait of a mother and an artist dedicated, above all, to a vision of beauty, truth, and authenticity. Myla Goldberg has gifted us with “a mother-daughter story, an art-monster story, and an exciting structural gambit” (Lit Hub)—and, in the end, “a universal and profound story of love and loss” (New York Newsday).

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Women’s Work
by Chris Crisman

Heather’s Pick #3

Anything men can do, women can do better! Don’t be surprised if you feel exactly that way after paging through your copy of award-winning photographer Chris Crisman’s gorgeous book Women’s Work, a collection of portrait photographs of and interviews with formidable women whose work is changing the world. His subjects include presidential historian Doris Kearns Goodwin, architect Meejin Yoon, firefighter Mindy Gabriel, chemical engineer Connie Chang, former CEO of PepsiCo Indra Nooyi, ranch owner Anna Valer Clark, and many more. We still have a long way to go to make sure women are truly equal in the workplace, but this book is a pick-me-up that’ll remind you of how far we’ve already come. 

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Women’s Work
Chris Crisman

“A beautiful book that provides genuine encouragement and inspiration. Vivid portrait photography and accompanying essays declare that all work is women's work.” —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

In this stunning collection, award-winning photographer Chris Crisman documents the women who pioneered work in fields that have long been considered the provinces of men—with accompanying interviews on how these inspiring women have always paved their own ways.

Today, young girls are told they can do—and be—anything they want when they grow up. Yet the unique challenges that women face in the workplace, whether in the boardroom or the barnyard, have never been more publicly discussed and scrutinized. With Women’s Work, Crisman pairs his award-winning, striking portrait photography of women on the job with poignant, powerful interviews of his subjects: women who have carved out unique places for themselves in a workforce often dominated by men, and often dominated by men who have told them no. Through their stories, we see not only the ins and outs of their daily work, but the emotional and physical labors of the jobs they love. Women’s Work is a necessary snapshot of how far we’ve come and where we’re heading next—their stories are an inspiration as well as a call to action for future generations of women at work.

Women’s Work features more than sixty beautiful photographs, including Alison Goldblum, contractor; Anna Valer Clark, ranch owner; Ayah Bdeir, CEO of littleBits; Beth Beverly, taxidermist; Carla Hall, blacksmith; Cherise Van Hooser, funeral director; Jordan Ainsworth, gold miner; Magen Lowe, correctional officer; Mindy Gabriel, firefighter; Nancy Poli, pig farmer; Katherine Kallinis Berman and Sophie Kallinis LaMontagne, Founders of Georgetown Cupcake; Doris Kearns Goodwin, presidential biographer; Sophi Davis, cowgirl; Abingdon Welch, pilot; Christy Wilhelmi, beekeeper; Connie Chang, chemical engineer; Danielle Perez, comedienne; Indra Nooyi, former CEO of PepsiCo; Lisa Calvo, oyster farmer; Mia Anstine, outdoor guide; Meejin Yoon, architect; Yoky Matsuoka, a tech VP at Google; and many more.

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Who Run the World? The Women in These 10 Empowering Books

By Get Literary | March 12, 2020

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