RAE’S READS

This non-fiction book by Becca Anderson would make an excellent reference book and is also, at the same time extremely readable.  It was fun to go through and learn about “famous” women, who are presented in a way that kept me reading and wanting to learn more. The title, cleverly, says it all.  The chapters are divided into women who broke boundaries of race, gender and personal obstacles to be overcome; those who fought for freedom from the earliest days to the twenty-first century; “Sheroes” some of whom were my personal “heroes” as a young girl and as an adult; and those females who dared to be the first to do whatever needed to be done.

The forward by Vicki Leon made the statement that, “Well behaved women rarely make history,” so some of the women were considered unseemly,  un-ladylike, pushy etc. when they were just ahead of their time in their thinking and actions. Anderson chooses environmentalists, athletes, scientists, women of color, music muses, resistors, and artists, in the broadest definition of the word.

This book is a catalog of “Sheroes” that would make a great outline for a women’s study course or a personal study of women in general. Many of my “old friends” from sixth grade forward like Elizabeth Blackwell, the first female doctor; Florence Nightingale, who reformed the institution of nursing; Marie Curie, the discoverer of Uranium and the “inventor” of x-rays; and many many more of the childhood biographies I read were discussed in excellent, attention-keeping detail, and readable entries. The section on Women of Color is especially well done, including women from Sojourner Truth to Michelle Obama, as the author discussed the women’s lives and the real “obstacles” they overcame to make their contributions to our culture and our society.

Some of the entries were short, little known (to me) ancient women in leadership positions whom little is known about, but the author included them in her listings.  Others, more familiar, had longer entries which often gave little known facts about these sheroes that were fascinating to read and made me admire them even more.

It is not a book for just women. Young men and women, older adults who hear of names that sound familiar but aren’t sure of what they’re “famous” for, and anyone who wants information presented in a reader-friendly, interesting way should read this fine book.

The exciting news is that this book will be released on July 20th by Mango publishing  at http://mangopublishingroup.com

Information is available at http://bit.ly/2uRV9Vw or http://amzn.to/2uRWf3p

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12 responses to “THE BOOK OF AWESOME WOMEN: Boundary Breakers, Freedom Fighters, Sheroes, and Female Firsts”

  1. TheChattyIntrovert Avatar

    Nice–I was just about to pick up and read my copy of “Queen, Empress, Concubine: fifty women…” and refresh my memory of the ones revered and reviled in political history and myth. Now I have a new book on women leaders to add to my read list (Dad needs to win the lottery so I can build a reading/writing room in the backyard–I’m running out of shelf space again). Thanks for the tip.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rae Longest Avatar

      Loved your reply! A reading/writing room is a wonderful idea, and I hope you don’t have to wait until you’re retired like me to get one! LOL

      Liked by 1 person

    2. Rae Longest Avatar

      Just another mention about Awesome Women. The publisher just provided me with the information to check out at Mango Publishing, Barnes and Nobel and Amazon. I have added those helpful links to the bottom of my revised review. thanks!

      Liked by 1 person

  2. James J. Cudney IV Avatar

    Good feedback. This sounds like an incredibly strong book for people to look out for.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rae Longest Avatar

      It is a strong book, but it’s best feature is that it is easy and fun to read!

      Liked by 1 person

  3. sjhigbee Avatar

    I love the sound of this one, Rae. An ideal book to dip in and out of, it seems to me – in addition to hanging onto as a valuable reference read:). Thank you for sharing.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rae Longest Avatar

      It is an invaluable book for teachers of any subject who would like to inject women heroes, sheroes as the author labels them into her classroom or curriculum. It also is very readable just for fun-type information.
      Browsing in it is great too.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. sjhigbee Avatar

        Yes… I got that impression from your excellent review, Rae:)

        Liked by 1 person

  4. Rae Longest Avatar
  5. readerbuzz Avatar

    Yours is certainly the perfect blog for this title!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rae Longest Avatar

      I was honored that the publisher/promoter contacted me. This was my first “professional” blog. Another milestone.

      Liked by 1 person

  6.  Avatar

    very nice put up, i definitely love this web site, keep on it

    Liked by 1 person

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