EPBOT Readers discussion
FoE Book Club
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Book selection for April 2022
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I propose something nonfiction for a change of pace! This one looks like a fun and fascinating read:
Because Internet: Understanding the New Rules of Language
Because Internet: Understanding the New Rules of Language
I like Shel's proposal. Since it's (the end of) Women's History Month, I suggest The Woman They Could Not Silence: One Woman, Her Incredible Fight for Freedom, and the Men Who Tried to Make Her Disappear. This gave me so many feels and emotions, ending with "how have I never heard of her before"?
This book is by Kate Moore, the same author who wrote The Radium Girls.
ETA: I realized I didn't give any context about what the book is about. Here's a good synopsis from someone's review on the book on GR:
This is the story of Elizabeth Packard and her garbage husband who was intimidated by her intelligence so claimed she was insane and had her committed to an asylum. Only for her to discover that the asylum is just full of perfectly sane women who’s husbands didn’t want to deal with them anymore. The torture and abuse these women went through was horrendous and the amount of injustices and blatant lies they were told is unfortunately not as appalling as it should be. This book embodies the whole “nasty woman” mentality and it’s brutal and incredibly empowering seeing how many times Packard was shoved down only to pick herself back up and keep trying. And yet have you ever heard of her? Probably not.
This book is by Kate Moore, the same author who wrote The Radium Girls.
ETA: I realized I didn't give any context about what the book is about. Here's a good synopsis from someone's review on the book on GR:
This is the story of Elizabeth Packard and her garbage husband who was intimidated by her intelligence so claimed she was insane and had her committed to an asylum. Only for her to discover that the asylum is just full of perfectly sane women who’s husbands didn’t want to deal with them anymore. The torture and abuse these women went through was horrendous and the amount of injustices and blatant lies they were told is unfortunately not as appalling as it should be. This book embodies the whole “nasty woman” mentality and it’s brutal and incredibly empowering seeing how many times Packard was shoved down only to pick herself back up and keep trying. And yet have you ever heard of her? Probably not.


Please make sure you give a sentence or two why you think we should read it together, not just a list of books you're planning on reading.
If a book is recommended that you also want to recommend, you can mention it again to add support. If there's a bunch of titles, I'll just pick the ones that seem to have the most interest in the poll, if there's just a few i"ll pull them all.
This is a new selection round, so if you want to suggest a book you've suggested before, put it here again to be considered, I won't be going back to past suggestion posts.
Happy reading everyone!