Used price: $0.98
Collectible price: $6.00
Used price: $4.49
Beyond that, it's difficult not to enjoy reading an essay that narrowly missed being titled "The Triumph of the Flasher." Russ writes clearly and humorously of the problems that face women connected with the written word -- both as authors and as characters (often in stories written by men).
Used price: $4.00
Used price: $0.99
Collectible price: $7.95
Buy one from zShops for: $6.92
Used price: $11.99
Collectible price: $27.96
Buy one from zShops for: $8.90
To which sentiment I , an unreconstructed straight white male, would have to reply in the following manner: "Your life, Joanna, may well be as horrible as you say it is --god knows it looks unappealing -- but that has nothing to do with me. My happiness does not create your misery. My successes do not determine your failures. You and me, we have nothing more in common than the air we breath. Mope away the remainder of your days in ideological squalor if that's what floats your boat. Just don't point your finger at me. "
Joanna Russ is more than thorough in her analysis of the current wave of reactionary feminism. She asserts that those who are active in this "wave" are primarily interested in personal beliefs, opinions and relationships instead of political analysis and action. She clearly articulates how the current mass reaction in the feminist movement has essentially reduced feminism into lifestyle and personal aggrandizement devoid of political and economic analysis, agenda and impact.
Russ'work illustrates that what has been lost is the understanding that feminism is an impetus to the radical reordering of society through socially conscious political struggle. She challenges those interested in women's rights to examine (or reexamine) and analyze the roots of women's oppression with a socially conscious perspective and all those claiming to be feminists to develop a political agenda based on the reality of the relationship of forces and to immediately end their support of patriarchy.
If nothing else, the bibliography of this book is a shining model for every feminist's bookshelf.
I would also add that you should make sure to read all the endnotes; they're every bit as good as the text itself.
Used price: $0.63
Collectible price: $1.50
First does not always mean best, and even best does not necessarily mean great.
I'm sure that die hard feminists would disagree with me, but, after sharing this and other Russ books with my female feminist friends, I can only say that her work is sometimes good, sometimes passable, sometimes garbage. Rarely great. The Female Man is an IMPORTANT book, but by far not a GREAT book.
This collection is probably the best, and not coincidentally, the least radical she has to offer. It is certainly more enjoyable, although could not be considered important.
It contains several stories collected from other sources (presumably previously published stories from magazines) containing, loosely, a chronological tale of an adventurer named Alyx. The descriptions and chronology are variously inconsistent; this is not necessarily a bad thing, since the stories stand independent, and since they are suppposed to represent an idea more than a single character.
Her writing style is short sentences and sentence fragments, if that is your sort of thing. Also of note, this book contains what is probably her only reference to heterosexual sex (I could be wrong, but there were no other references in the two other books of hers that I read).
Russ has often been vocal about getting people to go out and read the female corpus of literature, naming some great women writers as her inspirations. I agree; there are some great women writers. You should probably read them instead.
Used price: $2.50
Buy one from zShops for: $11.66
List price: $13.00 (that's 20% off!)
Used price: $0.75
Collectible price: $5.99
Buy one from zShops for: $8.25
Used price: $0.73
Collectible price: $1.00
Other reviewers seemed awed by the fact this book deals with, you guessed it, death. This book should have been killed in its infancy.
A cruise vessel of the future manages to miss the point in space that it was attempting to fold to, spinning amazingly far off course and crashing into a planet that is in no way guaranteed not to kill the survivors. A politician, an upper class family, a "jock", a young sex object, a washed up waitress, a supposed tactical expert, and a musician (our heroine) all help make an ensemble from Hell. Nothing goes according to protocol, and chaos ensues as the musician experiments liberally with her psychoactive drugs.
While in a science-fiction setting, Ms. Russ manages to maintain a surprising lack of the technological; the underlying concept of the story being Gilligan's Island on Acid. As Social Darwinism takes its course, the value of life itself is called into question.
This is not a book for those who are set in their ideas of God and living; this is for those who remain unsure as to what lies in store for them, and what may be the meaning of life.
Used price: $5.00
Collectible price: $7.41
There are many varied and brilliant feminist and/or women writers, who take the time to study writing, character analysis, style, form, etc... Such must have all bought into the "oppressors" dictum of "male" writing, if one were to believe this "liberated" author.
I somewhat enjoyed "The Female Man", but that was back in the days when I was more radically femenist myself, in college. If the book can't hold interest past the college age, it is not very much worth the writing, or the reading. In any case, take a look at The Femal Man, and you will get the gist of this author, allowing you to skip the rest.
"The Little Dirty Girl" is funny and touching story about a woman who had resolutely turned aside from life finding something new and compelling in her sudden friendship to a very dirty little girl who is more than she seems--a woman reawakening to human contact. Her emotional state is finely conveyed with a really good first-person POV.
"I Had Vacantly Crumbled It Into My Pocket..." is a scary-sad tale of loneliness and the way that some people seek out the dark predator, blackest Death, in relief. Despair! Despair!
"Come Closer" is a goodish horror tale of a pretty house on the end of a lane filled with fruit trees... only what are those fruit exactly?
"Window Dressing" is fun and fashion through the eyes of a mannequin, the ultimate seductress. She's plastic and she can't think--making her thoughts hilarious.
"The Cliches From Outer Space" is funny; a short little reworking of some feminist pet peeve stories done with blackest humor.
But my favorite story, the best one in the book, is "The View From This Window" which is just this wonderful story about what it feels like to fall in love, which I know sounds derivative and commonplace, but not so well as in this story. 90% of fiction features falling in love somewhere in its plotlines and thematic paradigms, while in this story, Russ captures perfectly, in her evocative and fearless prose, the craziness, the wonder, the need and scariness of realizing how much this one person means to you. Russ doesn't sketch out the characters or elucidate their thoughts, but merely writes with perfect pitch the roiling confusion of emotion, of love. It's not linear, it doesn't strive for clarity--just immediacy of emotion, of feeling, of the freefall (scary, uncertain, anguished and exalted) of finding oneself in love. This is a beautiful story.
"The Little Dirty Girl" is funny and touching story about a woman who has turned aside from life finding something new and compelling in her sudden friendship to a very dirty little girl who is more than she seems. "'I Had Vacantly Crumbled It Into My Pocket...'" is a scary-sad tale of loneliness and the way that some people seek out the dark predator, blackest Death, in relief. "Come Closer" is a goodish horror tale of a pretty house on the end of a lane filled with fruit trees... only what are those fruit exactly? "Window Dressing" is fun and fashion through the eyes of a mannequin, that ultimate seductress. "The Cliches From Outer Space" is hilarious; it's a short little reworking of some feminist pet peeve stories done with blackest humor. But my favorite story, the best one in the book, is "The View From This Window" which is just this wonderful story about what it feels like to fall in love, which I know sounds derivative and done about a million times, but not so well as in this story. 90% of fiction features falling in love somewhere in its plotlines and thematic structures, while in this story, Russ captures perfectly, in her evocative and delicate prose, the craziness, the wonder, the need and scariness of realizing how much this one person means to you. While many writers can convey emotions like hate and pain and nihilistic blankness, only a few can do the same with that most blatantly ill-used of all emotions deployed in fiction, love.