Amber (The Literary Phoenix)
Here is where The Little Book of Feminist Saints excels:
- It highlights 100+ women from different time periods and different walks of life and the contributions they have made.
- It's light and easy reading.
- It's illustrated, which is always fun.
Here is where it fell short for me:
- The entries are organized by "feast day", so you're jumping all over the globe and across time to very different women who have done very different things. The flow is really broken in that way.
- Some of the entries are well done, but others are less focused on the women in question and more focused on an event surrounding them. Personally, I'd've preferred information on the women.
- In entries where more than one woman was represented, the blurb tended to focus on one or the other.
- In Josephine Baker's entry, an anonymous YouTube comment is quoted? That really bugged me.
Overall, I don't feel like I really learned anything from this book and ended up skimming a lot, trying to find portions that talked about the women themselves instead of random things (Anne Frank's entry was largely about a tree). I believe The Little Book of Feminist Saints would serve well as a pocket guide or daily calendar, but doesn't really suit this book format. It could be used as a launching board to find incredible women, then research and learn about them elsewhere.