Cover Image: Girlhood

Girlhood

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Member Reviews

Melissa Febos's work is truly a work of art, and after Abandon Me I feel anything is hard to live up to the hype. However, Girlhood is certainly a contender as a powerful exploration of female culture. How does the body affect others' views of a young girl? How does it change the perception of her value?

These questions and more are raised in Febos's new work, and for any gender it is a contemplative, insightful look into the female world; it dares to ask us if we feel this world should exist or if we should simply create our own.

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Amazing and powerful look into a woman's journey. Compelling and raw...................................................................................................

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It's difficult to be a girl. There are stereotypes, conventional paradigms, and social pressure galore. Febos duscusses ,in her collection of essays, her experiences navigating girlhood. I found the parts where she is labeled in junior high and how people went along with it to be truthful. People can be vile and as long as it's not them being the object of the ridicule, they tend to go along with it. In some of her other essays, it was a challenge to relate as her experiences and lifestyle. Girlhood to be forthright and blunt and will likely resonate with a broad spectrum of readers.

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Excellently written This has such a narrative tone that doesn't read like "typical" essays. I felt like I was listening to a story most of the way through, and one that I could identify with in many ways.

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Love Melissa Febos so much, I love that she expanded beyond herself in this collection and managed to continue with the breadth of a long essay.

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I read Febos' earlier memoir, Whip Smart, a few years ago, and you can really see the way her lens has expanded here. Girlhood is sharp and compelling about what it's like to exist in the world as a girl and then a woman. This is memoir mixed with a bit of philosophical nonfiction in essay form, and the book really works as a related whole.

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Febos is an incredible writer. Her prose is so energetic, visceral and always a treat. However, some stories in "Girlhood" felt familiar from her previous work, and the minimalist illustrations (very Rupi Kaur-ish) didn't really add much for me. I do love her blend of personal stories and psychology, particularly in The Mirror Test, and as always, Febos writes amazingly about sex. She definitely unpacks the trials of sexuality from a young girl's perspective. She also often brings in historical perspective. However, I would much sooner recommend '"Abandon Me," which was more gripping for me personally.

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Beautiful and heartbreaking close look at gender, identity and girlhood. A must read for everyone seeking to understand their place in the world.

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As I read this new collection of essays by Melissa Febos, I wondered, with each successive essay, how my own transition to adulthood might have been different had I read this as a teenager, or better yet, discussed its themes with my mother, or my father, or if excerpts of this had been discussed as part of our high school's sex ed. classes. These chapters felt decidedly more essay than memoir; we get Berger and Lacan and Foucault as well as Febos' usual exploration of Greek mythology. However, they are all grounded in Febos' own experience as a girl coming of age on Cape Cod, the emotional tenor of which she excavates so honestly and unflinchingly, it impossible not to read and reflect on my own awkward, yearning, insecure teenage self with perhaps as much compassion I've ever given her.

Of particular note is Febos' discussion of "empty consent" in the essay "Thank You for Taking Care of Yourself" which centers the way women acquiesce to men's desires w/o first considering their own wants. This is, I think, what the viral New Yorker story "Cat Person" was getting at (and why it went viral) and Febos' clear and incisive take is very worthwhile. I found myself almost screaming "yes! yes!" while I read. Additionally of note are the essays, "The Mirror Test," which explores the term "slut" and how we often come to see ourselves as others insist that we are, and, "Thesmorphia," which considers Febos' relationship with her mother.

What is so strong about this collection is, in my opinion, that it explains so much of what was unspoken throughout my own "girlhood" (cough: masturbation, emphasis on knowing how to give a blow job but not knowing how to ask a man to pleasure me, slut shaming, body shaming, the expectation that I be fully desirable but also fully unattainable and also completely responsible for that precarious balance), BUT in a way that is contextualized, intellectualized and also completely centered in Febos's own experience, making her as the writer on the page feel both wise and friendly.

I highly recommend this book for literally everyone. I loved it.

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As a mother to three girls I was really eager to dig into this book, and it did not disappoint. An ambitious book, it dives deep into the social conditioning of girls, with personal anecdotes, research and news stories. It certainly isn’t an easy read, but it is an important one

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Melissa Febos' latest essay collection is moving and lovely. She bolsters her anecdotes by also providing relevant research and news stories. The illustrations are a nice touch, too.

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I had to give myself a few days to even write this review, as the reading experience was so powerful for me. I've read many many books in the long essay, memoir mixed with non-fiction and philosophy genre, and this is one of the best. I'm going to buy it for at least 5 of my friends as soon as it's available. Wow.

This book was so deeply moving, and intellectually energizing. I feel like it needs at least three or four reads for me to grasp the full depth of every connection Melissa Febos made throughout the book. This book proves the maxim that what is most personal is most universal. Though our backgrounds are quite different, many of the lines Febos wrote felt as if they came from my journal.

This should be a must read for all people who have ever identified as femme or female. Endless gratitude for Melissa Febos for writing this phenomenal and important book.

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This book was fantastic and would be a fantastic inclusion in any CNF MFA class. Specifically, I really enjoyed the wide scope of the topic covered in each essay. This would also be really interesting to read juxtaposed to Abandon Me, Febos really outdid herself with this book and I would be surprised if anyone didn't like it.

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Wow, this was difficult to read - because it was so honest and heartbreaking and REAL. The way Febos fearlessly faces the social conditioning and resulting internal loathing and external danger that many American girls live with (many without acknowledging or even KNOWING) is powerful, and I had to keep putting the book down to take a break because it was so overwhelming and DARK.

My favorite essay was the last one, where she visits France as an adult on a path of recovery and reclaiming of herself, and compares it to her first visit to France as a very young adult caught in the throes of addiction, anguish and loneliness. Both of the tales intertwined in that essay were so vivid and powerful for different reasons, and it was a great way to end the book.

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Absolutely enjoyed this compilation of essays that incorporates girlhood, LGBTQ and minority issues.

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Loved this book! Melissa Febos is a literary genius and nails the binds that women are so often caught in and taught to live within. I really enjoy her style of writing and relate to her frustration around how females are forced to quiet their voices to benefit men and fit into cultural expectations.

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A beautifully written exploration of girlhood that cut me to the quick. Both deeply personal and intellectually rigorous, this essay collection is another stunning contribution to the world of books by Melissa Febos. Days and weeks after reading, I am still thinking about this book and her investigation into how girlhood is experienced and constructed by ourselves and those around us. I will return to this book again and again not only for new insights into my own experiences, but to feel connected to other people navigating being female in this world.

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As always, Melissa Febos' writing is stunning. Pull-no-punches, upfront, emotionally loaded and sincere.

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This book is a series of personal essays about the author's relationship to her body, and her body's relationship to the world around her. I am probably not putting that right, but it was the most pithy way I could think to say it. I had to regroup after I started reading, because I was expecting something lighter. The essays are academically rigorous and often relate to the literature and philosophy of feminism, which I know way too little about. But the experience of being an American girl and then an American woman, of rejecting one's own body even though it's wrong and self-defeating, of suppressing one's own feelings and needs to prevent embarrassing a man with rejection, of feeling afraid of sexual assault... all of that is in this book, and in me too. It took me to some dark places, but the writing is beautiful, and I am better for having read it. There are some gorgeous illustrations on the chapter title pages, too. I am going to seek out more work by the author.

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Well written eye opening look at what means to be a woman,If you are familiar with the authors writing you know she will shock shares all Spares no one.Would be great book for discussions #netgalley#bloomsburyboojks

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