All posts by peaadmin

Our Newest Addition!

Visitors to the Main Library may have already met our newest, as-yet-unnamed companion…the Grand and Glorious Book Drop!

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Isn’t he lovely?!

Our book drop made quite the arduous journey all the way from California to be here with all of us, and is now happily ensconced just inside out gates, to the side of our front stairs.

He’s a very friendly beasties, is our Book Drop, always ready to take care of any library materials you wish to drop off, whether we are open or closed.  And just so you know how it all works, in the morning, our incredible custodians go out and fetch all the materials that Book Drop has collected, and bring them to the circulation desk, where we check them in.  When we check them in, we backdate them.  That means that if your stuff is due on Thursday, and you leave that stuff with Book Drop on Thursday, we will check it in as if it were Thursday, so you don’t get charged any fines.  And at the end of the day 30 minutes before we close, our custodians head back out again to fetch any materials that Book Drop has collected, so we can check those things in, as well.

Book Drop is very, very eager to meet you, and loves feeling useful, so by all means, stop by, welcome him to the neighborhood, and feel free to bring him your library materials.  Just make sure you use the proper drop: books on the left, media (non-book things) on the right!

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Now…there’s just one more thing to do.

Book Drop doesn’t have a name.

And if he’s going to be with us for a long, long time, as indeed, he is, I think we need to make some effort at making him feel welcome–and a name is a very good place to start.  So get your thinking caps on, beloved patrons, and give us some ideas.  We’ll be having an official naming ceremony soon!

One More Post About Books That Made Me Cry…

ab0c870ffd359072d82d6c86d98e6fcfI was a very, very lucky kid, because, growing up, my dad read to me every single night before bed.  We read everything from classics to fairy tales, from board books to chapter books, and everything in between.  When he would travel for work, he would read the stories onto a tape, so I could listen to them at bedtime.  It was great…

…Except this one night, when we got to the end of one particular book that shall remain nameless (because I can’t tell you the title without giving away the whole shebang), that had what most people might call a bittersweet ending.

For ten-year-old me, it wasn’t bittersweet.  It was heartbreaking.  Like, stay-up-for-an-hour-ugly-crying heartbreaking.  As I noted yesterday, I don’t handle sad endings well at all, but at ten, I had no defenses at all to this kind of heartbreak, and so all I could do was cry on my poor father’s shoulder until I was too tired to be awake anymore….

After that, and for a while afterwards, my dad and I started reading Garfield comics before bed.  We still got all the joys of reading together, and we got to laugh together, too–as we’ve noted, one of the most therapeutic, stress-reducing things the body can do.  And there was no worries that I would have another ugly-crying session.

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Thanks, Garfield!

As I’ve mentioned before, I–and several readers I’ve met–won’t read books that make them cry, because some of us just don’t finding sad-crying cathartic.  And that is absolutely your choice.

What I don’t mind, though, is books that make me happy-cry.  Or giggle-cry.  You know…those books that just make you smile so hard, or makes your heart flutter (metaphorically speaking) so much that tears just spring to your eyes.  Those kind of books are much, much harder to find, but they are out there.  And those kind of books are precisely, exactly what I need to make a gloomy day better.  And since today is a pretty gloomy day out there…I figured I’d share some of my precious happy-cry books with you, in the hopes that it might brighten your day!

3092802Follow My Lead: I’ve mentioned this book in posts before, but that is because it is just so much fun, and so touching, and so wonderfully unexpected that I want to hand out copies on street corners.  The relationship between Winifred and Jason Cummings, Duke of Rayne on their trans-European roadtrip from Hell is one of my favorites in romance, because both of them, though they certainly have their issues, are, at heart, good and kind people who want the other to be happy.  This results in some of the most touching interactions I can remember–particularly when Jason moves Heaven and Earth to get a souvenir for Win to remember her trip. It’s one of the smallest, silliest things, but it never fails to make me happy-cry just a little.

2041597Mike Nelson’s Mind Over Matters:  Mike Nelson was a head writer, and host of Mystery Science Theater 3000, which I love.  Perhaps a bit too much, it’s true, but that’s beside the point.  Nelson also wrote a few books, one of which is this collection of essays on everything from Radio Shack to men’s fashions to tea, and back again.  Each one is delightfully absurd, surprisingly insightful, and each have the same brilliant wit that made Mystery Science Theater 3000 such a total joy.  This is definitely a giggle-cry book.  It’s also a “scare people by guffawing in public while reading” book.  But laughter is contagious, so maybe that’s not such a bad thing after all…

1940046Carpe Jugulum: Terry Pratchett’s Discworld Series is just plain one of the most joyful, inspiring, funny, satirical, and wonderful things you can find, and Carpe Jugulum is my favorite book in this series, which is saying quite a good deal.  It is a delightful blend of literary satire and homage, as the King of Discworld decides to invite a nearby vampire family, the Magpyrs, to his kingdom to celebrate the birth of his son.  But the Maypyrs have spent years trying to fit into  good society, exposing their children to sunlight and force-feeding them garlic with every meal…and they have no plans to go anywhere.  On the other side of the castle walls, Granny Weatherwax has joined forced with a hapless local priest to force the vampires out, resulting in an adventure that is sarcastic and wonderful and so uproarious that I can’t avoid a little bit of giggle-happy-crying throughout this adventure.

Book Anxiety Is No Reason To Cry

I’d like to tell you a quick story:

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Once upon a time, a fictional patron came to a fictional circulation desk to pick up a fictional book.  As the fictional circulation assistant was checking this book out, the woman put a hand out to stop her, and asked, “Wait just a moment–have you read this book?”

“I have,” replied the fictional circulation assistant.  “It’s one of my favorites.”

“Good.  Then tell me–is it sad?”

The fictional circulation assistant stopped and looked up.  “Well…yes.”  She said slowly.  “But it’s not a tragedy.”

“Will I cry?”  Asked the fictional patron.  “I really don’t like crying at books.  Just tell me.  Tell me I can read it without worrying…”

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Like so many good stories, this story is inspired by real events.  And I use it as an example of how a brave reader deals with book anxiety.

Book anxiety, as Lady Pole has mentioned, is very real.   It’s a condition that affects me, as well.  As a person who deals very frequently with issues of anxiety, I personally read to escape the world.  To meet and come to understand people in a way I can’t in The Real World, and to get out of my own skin for a little while, and air out my brain and my imagination.  The three of us work much better together afterwards, after the reading break

As a result, I really, really try to avoid books that I know are going to make me sad-cry.  For me, sad-crying at a book is not cathartic.  Struggle with the death of a character I have grown to love is not “cleansing”.  It’s traumatic.  When your escape route, the path down which you run when everything else is just too loud, too much, and too close, is full of tragedy, or loss, or sadness, it ceases to be an escape.  It becomes a trap.  And traps hurt.  The loss of a character with whom I have bonded is like an actual death to me, and, because reading is largely a solitary activity, I have to deal with that loss alone.  And that isn’t fun at all.

I see lists very often online about “53 Books That Will Definitely Make You Cry” or “10 Devastatingly Sad Books“.   Maybe you are one of those people who see those lists and click eagerly, ready with your box of tissues and your library card.  I am not one of those people.  I appreciate knowing that a particular title is sad, but I also appreciate knowing that I don’t have to read it, ever.

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Like the patron in the story above, I very often ask for, or seek out “spoilers” to books; major plot points that give away a significant part of the story.  It’s not “cheating”, because I don’t want to read the book, and it’s not “lazy”, because I don’t want to put the effort into the book.  The truth is, I’m asking because I want to read the book; I just don’t want to come out at the end worse than when I went in.

Incidentally, this is one of the reasons I love romance novels.  I truly appreciate the guarantee implicit in the genre that neither of the protagonists will die, and that the ending will be a happy one for all involved.

cryreadingIn fact, in the story above, I think what the fictional patron did is really quite brave.  Asking ahead about a book shows a good deal of self-awareness and self-care.  If there were certain foods that caused you a problem, you would ask about them in a restaurant, right?  If there was a fabric that irritated your skin, you would check the tag before buying a shirt.  Many people check the website Does the Dog Die?, a site which tells you whether any pets are hurt or die in a film, in order to decide whether it’s something they want to go see, knowing that such a scene would upset them.  Checking out the plot and contents of a book is very much the same for many of us, and there isn’t a comprehensive system in place to let us know.

In the end, the point I am trying to make is that we all read differently, for different reasons, and with the hope of different results.  And that is great–and also why there are so many books on the shelves today.  You have the right to read whichever of those books you want.  And you have the right to ask in advance if the book you have chosen will make you cry.  And you can also know that we will do our best to let you know ahead of time, in whatever level of detail you might like or need.

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Saturdays @ the South: Much Ado about BISAC

0030543_renovation_pardon_our_mess_signWe try to make things easy for our patrons here at the library, and that generally doesn’t involve using lots of crazy acronyms. I got used to it when the college I went to for undergrad used acronyms as their own, private language and it was either learn it or never figure out where my classes were. But I remember how exacerbating it was coming in as a freshman to decipher all those letters that seemingly meant nothing. So why on earth would I head my post today with an acronym? Well, it’s less about the acronym and more about the great new system we’re starting to implement t the South Branch. The South is following in the West Branch’s footsteps by implementing the BISAC system.

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An artistic, visual representation of BISAC

BISAC (which stands for Book Industry Standard and Communications) is an alternative way to organize non-fiction books. It’s most commonly used by bookstores, largely because the format is inherently browsable, allowing people to find things more intuitively rather than deciphering Dewey or Library of Congress call numbers. Instead of substituting a topic with a number or a letter, the topic itself is used to identify the item. For example: If you’re looking for a book on the history of colonial times in America, you will be able to find it in History / United States / Colonial.  For another example, check out what Erik Larson’s latest book, Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of the Lusitania looks like in the catalog under BISAC:

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The hope is that by adopting this system, the non-fiction sections at the West and South will be a more pleasant experience for patrons to find what they’re looking for. This is not to say that the Library of Congress system, which is what the Peabody Libraries have been using, or the Dewey Decimal System, which many other NOBLE libraries use, don’t have their merits. The systems were based on logic and organizational principles that have been honed and adapted for years. They are honored library traditions, but sometimes traditions need to be changed or adjusted to meet people’s needs and we here at the branches felt that meeting patron needs didn’t quite fit with the more traditional versions of library classification. (And this is from someone who misses the card catalog dearly!)

What does this mean for you? Well, right now, you can see the BISAC system in action for yourself in the West Branch’s adult non-fiction section. I’ve seen it for myself and it’s pretty darn cool. Over the coming weeks, you’ll be able to see it implemented in the kids’ nonfiction sections at the South and West branches. This fall/winter, the South will be adopting BISAC for our adult nonfiction section as well. Right now at the South, we’re in a bit of a transition, so our kids’ nonfiction books are in their BISAC categories, but aren’t labeled in the catalog or on the book spines yet. That process will be taking place very soon. In the meantime, you are welcome to ask us to help you find books (always!) or you can stop by just to browse the newly organized section to get a feel for what it will look like.

The South Branch very excited about this new development and sharing it with you, our wonderful patrons, so feel free to tell us what you think, or suggest other ways we can improve the library for you! And thank you for your patience this week while I’ve been moving books around instead of writing a more book-centric blog post. Till next week, dear readers, remember that it never hurts to re-think something you’ve been doing for a long time; it might just lead to something exciting .

Five Book Friday!

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So, since we’re winding down National Poetry Month, and the sun is finally (finally!) out this morning, I thought it would be nice to share a  favorite poem about spring (that doesn’t begin “April is the cruelest month”.  Even though it is.)

A quick confession: Growing up, I wasn’t a poetry person.  I don’t think I’m was a metrophobe…but I also didn’t inherently get poetry in the same way I got prose.  Until tenth grade, when I met Keats and Wordsworth.  And then, it was like someone flipped a switch in my little 16-year-old brain and something made sense.  For that reason, both poets are very near and dear to my heart.  Keat’s season was autumn, but Wordsworth taught me to love spring, even in its allergy-inducing haze.  So I thought we could bid adieu, on this lovely spring day, to National Poetry Month with a little Wordsworth, and his daffodils:

Daffodils

I wandered lonely as a Cloud
That floats on high o’er vales and Hills,
When all at once I saw a crowd,
A host, of golden Daffodils;
Beside the Lake, beneath the trees,
Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.

Continuous as the stars that shine
And twinkle on the milky way,
They stretched in never-ending line
Along the margin of a bay:
Ten thousand saw I at a glance,
Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.

The waves beside them danced; but they
Out-did the sparkling waves in glee:-
A Poet could not but be gay
In such a jocund company:
I gazed—and gazed—but little thought
What wealth the show to me had brought:

For oft when on my couch I lie
In vacant or in pensive mood,
They flash upon that inward eye
Which is the bliss of solitude,
And then my heart with pleasure fills,
And dances with the Daffodils.

Published in Collected Poems, 1815

And now…on to the books!

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3733534Gold of Our Fathers: Fans of Alexander McCall Smith’s The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency series will find a great deal to love in Kwei Quartey’s mysteries featuring Darko Dawson, the newly promoted Chief Inspector in the Ghana police service.  This is Dawson’s fourth outing, and while his new title carries some great perks, it also means that Dawson is being transferred from Accra, Ghana’s capital, to Obuasi in the Ashanti region, a place that has become notorious for its exploitative goldmines.  He finds the office there is utter shambles, but before he can begin setting things to rights, Dawson is called on to solve the murder of a Chinese mine owner who was unearthed from his own quarry.  The case brings Dawson face to face with the corruption that has devastated Obuasi, and the greed that keeps it running, in an adventure that is keeping readers and critics alike fascinated, including Publisher’s Weekly, who gave this book a starred review, and called it “Exceptional . . . Fans of mysteries that offer a window into another culture will be more than satisfied.”

3741713The People in the Castle: Selected Strange Stories: By the time of her death in 2004, Joan Aiken had written over 100 books, and was a deeply respected writer for Vogue, Good Housekeeping, and Vanity Fair, to name a few.  Now, some of her creepiest, most imaginative, previously unpublished tales have been collected into a single volume for you to explore.  These tales, on the surface, harken back to some classic tropes of the horror and gothic genres…bumps in the night, a whispered voice in the dark…but Aiken brought her own flare to everything she wrote, and these stories are all better for it.  There is also plenty of heart and humor here, as well, along with an introduction from Aiken’s daughter, Lizzie.  The California Literary Review wrote a glowing review of this book, saying “”Aiken’s pastoral meadows and circus chaos, gothic grotesques and quirky romances . . . have a dream-like quality executed with a brevity and wit that is a testament to her skill as a story-teller.”

3719213The Invisible Guardian: Dolores Redondo’s eerie mystery has already become a best-seller in Spain, and was nominated for a whole slew of literary awards (including being shortlisted for the 2015 Crime Writer’s Association Dagger Award), so it’s arrival on our shelves is quite exciting for mystery buffs.  At the heart of this psychological thriller is homicide inspector Amaia Salazar, who is called back to the hometown she has always hated in order to solve the murder of a teenaged girl.  Amaia’s past is a place full of secrets and nightmares, and being back in the place where it all began is more trying than she could have imagined…particularly as the community’s ancient pagan practices threaten to upend her investigation, and disrupt her very sanity, as she tries to determine whether the crime is really the work of a ritualistic killer, or the mythical Basajaun, the Invisible Guardian.  Library Journal loved this book, giving it a starred review and saying, ““The Basque backdrop gives this thriller an especially intriguing layer of depth; the superstitions and mythologies passed down from the days of Spanish Inquisition penetrate the mystery to such an extent that the reader is easily transported.”

3711275The Last Goodnight: a World War II Story of Espionage, Adventure, and Betrayal: Fans of Erik Larson should keep an eye on Harold Bloom’s work…like Larson, he loves telling historical narratives, and delights in digging up the stories you haven’t heard about some of the world’s most well known events.  This time, he focuses on Bettie Pack, whose real-life career with MI-6 and OSS was full of a kind of daring and danger that would make James Bond pale.  Though it seems few people can get past Pack’s good looks, Bloom does a very good job getting at the woman behind the façade, as much as one can from incomplete historical records, and showing not only how Pack’s work was instrumental in the Allied victory in World War II (she obtained the notebooks that gave Alan Turing the key to the Enigma), but also the toll that spywork took on her in later years.  The result is a well-rounded, and well-grounded, portrait of which Publisher’s Weekly says, “Taking advantage of access to newly declassified material… Blum successfully delineates the social forces in play at the time and conveys the irresistible magnetism that turned a young woman into a world-class spy.”

3738778TartsFrom award-winning French chefs Frederic Anton and Christelle Brua comes over one hundred recipes for sweet and savory tarts, with directions on how to get the perfect crust, where to find the perfect ingredients…I am so hungry right now….

 

 

Until next week, beloved patrons…Happy Reading!

Wednesdays @ West Returns with 10 Ways to Explore a Book

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Wednesdays @ West at been on a bit of a hiatus for the past few months as I was out on maternity leave.  Now that I’m back in the swing of things, I’m pleased to be back blogging about books and other lovely topics for Free for All.

I discovered the idea for this series of blog posts quite by accident.  I was reading a blog post about children’s library services, in which a fellow librarian mentioned that her library in Homer, Alaska is creating a series of posters that encourage families to explore books together.  For each title, they are suggesting “10 Ways to Explore a Book.”

I was intrigued by the idea and it occurred to me that this is one of many ways that we let children have all the fun with books.  After all, when I fall in love with a book, I am sad to see it end, wishing I could dwell within its world a bit longer.  So this series is aimed at helping you do just that.

We’re kicking it off 10 Ways to Explore a Book by offering suggestions as to how to delve into the world of Flight Behavior by Barbara Kingsolver.

flightbehaviorAccording to Novelist, my favorite book discovery database (available for free with your library card number, of course), Flight Behavior is complex, issue-oriented, atmospheric, moving, lush, richly-detailed literary fiction.  How’s that for some adjectives?  In terms of plot, it’s the story of Dellarobia Turnbow, a poor farmer’s wife who discovers that an amazing colony of butterflies has taken up residence on her family’s land.  Dellarobia soon finds herself immersed in the science of the phenomena in ways that begin to expand her worldview.

Ok, I admit, I’ve already written about Flight Behavior here and here.  But you can’t have enough Barbara Kingsolver in your life.  At least I can’t.  And if you can’t either, then I encourage you to check out these ten tips that will allow you to savior the world she created just a bit longer.

1. Read the 1976 National Geographic article, “Found at Last” by Fred Urquhart, which first alerted the wider world to the phenomenon of the monarch butterfly’s winter residence in Mexico.

2. Visit the Museum of Science’s Butterfly Garden.

3. Treat yourself to some good news for a change.   Listen to the NPR story about how monarchs are making a come back.

4.  Get up close and personal with some butterflies by planting a butterfly garden.  For guidance check out Design Your Own Butterfly Garden by Susan Harkins for inspiration.  If gardening isn’t your thing, you can still get started with Super Simple Butterfly Gardens by Alex Kuskowski.

5.  Take inspiration from Dellarobia and commit to learning the wonders of science by taking a biology class with a lab at a local community college.

6.  Watch Barbara Kingsolver discuss Flight Behavior.

7.   If you are a reader who finds the world of farms exotic, go check one out in person.  Find a nearby farm at Northeast Harvest’s website.

8. Learn to knit so you can make unrecognizable creations.  (Need help?  Try Start to Knit by Lynn Bryan). Bonus points if you do it on the side of a mountain.  Even more bonus points if you use sheep’s wool and dye it yourself. If you really want to geek out, shear the sheep yourself and spin the yarn.  For assistance, watch this Time video on How to Shear a Sheep.

9.  Remember the obnoxious environmentalist who Dellarobia tells off when he suggests ways “people like her” can lower their carbon footprint?  Well, many of us aren’t forced to be so eco-friendly by economic desperation.  So we could stand to be a little more green.  Try out of a few of his recommendations: fly less, eat less meat, bring your own containers to restaurants for left-overs and repair things instead of automatically replacing them.  Just don’t become condescending and sanctimonious when encouraging others to be more green too.

10. Finally, when you are ready to move on from Flight Behavior, check out our Pinterest board of read-a-likes.

Stay tuned for more 10 Ways to Explore a Book. And be sure to let us know what book you’d like us to tackle next.

Happy Birthday, Mary Wollstonecraft!

“It is time to effect a revolution in female manners…and make them, as a part of the human species…For man and woman, truth, if I understand the meaning of the word, must be the same… Women, I allow, may have different duties to fulfil; but they are human duties, and the principles that should regulate the discharge of them, I sturdily maintain, must be the same.”
(Mary Wollstonecraft, A Vindication on the Rights of Women, Chapter III)

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Today we celebrate one of the first feminists in modern Western history, a woman whose remarkable life and impressive intellect were forgotten for nearly a century, and woman whose work is still surprisingly relevant to this day–Mary Wollstonecraft, who was born this day in 1759.

In her most famous work, A Vindication on the Rights of WomenWollstonecraft essentially argued that men and women were born and meant to be equals, but that society, and its refusal to train women’s brains and bodies properly, were forcing women into a subservient role, and ensuring that they would never be anything more than a pretty face.  It wasn’t appreciated until much later how much of her writings were inspired by her own life, and her incredibly difficult childhood.

images (3)Wollstonecraft was the the second of the seven children of Edward John Wollstonecraft and Elizabeth Dixon.  Though the family was initially financially comfortable, her father squandered most of the money on speculative investments and, later, alcohol, including inheritance money that should have gone to Mary.  He was abusive, as well, and Mary as a teenager often lay on the floor outside her mother’s bedroom at night to ensure that her father couldn’t get inside.  Things changed for the better when Mary was introduced to Frances (Fanny) Blood, who encouraged her to improve her life through education, and gave her all the personal and intellectual support she could not get at home.

Mary determined to become self-supportive around the age of nineteen, and, after working as a ladies maid for several years, opened a school with Fanny Blood in Newington Green in London (that’s right…Mary Wollstonecraft and I were neighbors!).  The school was a rousing success, but Fanny and her husband soon moved to Portugal in the hopes of improving Fanny’s health, and Mary abandoned the school to help care for her until her death in 1787.

Mary Wollstonecraft's green circle on the site of her school, Newington Green, London
Mary Wollstonecraft’s green circle on the site of her school, Newington Green, London

Though a gifted educator, Mary decided that she was done scrabbling for money and being at the mercy of other people to provide her with a living.  Taking an enormous financial and social risk, she decided to become an author, a career that very few women chose at that time.  She moved to London, and became a trusted and valued member of a number of intellectual circles, making friends with Samuel Johnson and Thomas Paine, among others.  Following the end of an affair with the (married) artist Henry Fuseli, Mary moved to France, eager to be a part of the intellectual, as well as the political revolution that was fomenting there (she had proposed to share Henry, but apparently Mrs. Fuseli was not agreeable to such a proposal.).

It was around this time that Mary penned A Vindication on the Rights of Women, published in 1792, which was a follow-up to her 1790 pamphlet A Vindication on the Rights of Man, in which she argued against class divisions and the aristocracy and championed the Republican sentiments that were spreading across the newly-founded United States and France.

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It was her passionate argument for women, however, that made Mary famous.  In A Vindication on the Rights of Women, she rejected outright the notion that women’s minds were incapable of rational thought or unfit to be educated, and that their bodies were too weak to allow them to work, or be independent from men.  As she describes, “Fragile in every sense of the word, [women] are obliged to look up to man for every comfort… I am fully persuaded that we should hear of none of these infantile airs, if girls were allowed to take sufficient exercise, and not confined in close rooms till their muscles are relaxed, and their powers of digestion destroyed.”

She argued that “females…are made women of when they are mere children”, meaning that girls were taught from a very young age that their only worth lay in physically attracting a man.  The result was that women were forced to remain like children for the rest of their lives.  It was not their natural inclination to be so, but the way in which they were brought up:

False notions of beauty and delicacy stop the growth of their limbs and produce a sickly soreness…and thus weakened …how can they attain the vigour necessary to enable them to throw off their factitious character?—where find strength to recur to reason and rise superiour to a system of oppression, that blasts the fair promises of spring? This cruel association of ideas, which every thing conspires to twist into all their habits of thinking, or, to speak with more precision, of feeling, receives new force when they begin to act a little for themselves; for they then perceive that it is only through their address to excite emotions in men, that pleasure and power are to be obtained. Besides, the books professedly written for their instruction, which make the first impression on their minds, all inculcate the same opinions. Educated then in worse than Egyptian bondage, it is unreasonable, as well as cruel, to upbraid them with faults that can scarcely be avoided…when nothing could be more natural, considering the education they receive, and that their ‘highest praise is to obey, unargued’—the will of man.

This is not to say that Wollstonecraft’s work was and remains utterly unassailable–A Vindication on the Rights of Women is full of class and gender assumptions, many the result of religion, that date the work considerably.  But her argument for the absolute equality of human beings remains a remarkable and moving statement that, largely, is still relevant today.

godwinMary had her first daughter, Fanny, with an American named Gilbert Imlay, whom she met in France.  They were never married (though they claimed to be so that Mary could escape the Revolutionary government in France), and Imlay soon dropped out of Mary’s life, leading to a very serious battle with depression.  Several years later, in 1797, she married the writer and philosopher William Godwin (pictured at left), and the two moved into adjoining houses so that they could maintain their complete independence, and frequently corresponded by letter.  Their marriage, by all accounts, was a happy one, but it was also brief.  Mary died of septicemia following the birth of her second daughter, Mary (who would become the author of Frankenstein).  

Following her death, Godwin published Mary’s unfinished memoirs, titled Memoirs of the Author of A Vindication of the Rights of Woman.  Though Godwin honestly believed that Mary’s shockingly honest memoirs were the best way to memorialize her, the book was considered so scandalous (talking, as it did about her love affairs, single motherhood, depression, and suicide attempts, in very frank and thoughtful terms), that her reputation was demolished.  It would be nearly a century before anyone seriously studied Mary’s works.  However, in 1892, Millicent Garrett Fawcett, a prominent suffragette, wrote in an introduction to A Vindication on the Rights of Women, calling Mary the founder of the women’s movement.   But don’t take her–or my–word for it.  In honor of her birthday, have a look through Mary Wollstonecraft’s surprising and insightful work today (you can find the full transcription of the work here) and see for yourself!