Member Reviews
A really important topic, that is covered fantastically in this book.
4/5 stars.
Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for an early reading copy.
I thought I would enjoy this book. I have an interest in the subject. In fact, I took a BA Hons degree, and higher degrees, in women’s studies. However, this felt a little 101 and I was bored. If you are new to feminism, and need an introduction, this could be useful. However, if you are advanced in your feminism, then I’d look elsewhere
I never made it through the whole book, the angst was just too much for me at the time, even though I do see the solid points the author made. This book is just... a lot - and I say that as a feminist activist. I do believe it will find its readers though.
I’m a feminist but... I’m sometimes scared of heavy feminist manifestos, and I avoid them as a consequence. Fight Like a Girl is much more manageable, and CF’s anger instils real passion in the reader. I learnt a lot from reading this title, thank you for giving me the opportunity to review it.
This book is unapologetically angry and emotional and I LOVE that. Often you are encouraged to water down your feminism, to make it more palatable for those around you, but reading Fight Like A Girl was incredibly cathartic, Ford is angry and that validates your own anger in a way which is productive and tangible.
Fight Like A Girl is a mix of investigative journalism, with Ford delving into issues that affect women and girls worldwide, feminist polemic, and memoir, all with a healthy dose of humour (which is sadly needed to stop the statistics becoming too depressing). The perfect gift for any young feminist in your life, man or woman, who wants an arsenal of statistics to hand for when they're required to debate whether women are, you know, actually deserving of human rights by the tiresome pub bore who thinks he's (it's always a he) "just playing devil's advocate". When you get to my age, you realise you're not required to debate anyone and that women's rights aren't up for debate anyway, but in that case the book would still come in handy to hit the pub bore over the head with.
I am so glad there is a trend in the publishing world right now to publish books that remind us to fight and be strong in the heavily dominated male world. Fantastic work by Ford.
Clementine Ford is angry. She isn’t afraid to express it and Fight Like A Girl sets out the reasons you should be angry too. If you aren’t already raging, that is.
Fight Like A Girl explores Ford’s journey into feminism starting with her “I’m not a feminist, but” phase. Something I can relate to, a lot, and explored in my essay about why I am a feminist.
Unlike other feminist non-fiction books I’ve read, Ford acknowledges the limitations of her experiences as a white, middle-class cisgender woman when it comes to intersectionality. This shouldn’t be refreshing, but it is. Acknowledging your privilege in certain areas while discussing your difficulties in others should be the baseline for everyone.
If you enjoy a good feminist rant, this is the book for you!
Clementine Ford tackles feminism head on in this book, writing about everything from beauty standards, eating disorders, sex, mental health, rape culture and online trolls. I was actually quite surprised at how in-depth this book is, not only through the various topics covered but how far the analysis goes. I've read quite a lot of feminist books but this is the one I've found the most relatable for a very long time.
This for me was a feisty, Girl Power, and life affirming kinda read, that I will be recommending to most women and certainly if you enjoyed the likes of Laura Bates Girl Up, in fact I would liken it to an adult version of that book.
My only criticism would be however it could have been a little smaller, all its points, arguments and information were valid and important but sometimes they were lost in repetitive tangents.
But really that’s a minor flaw because overall this book had me like yes! She has encapsulated her anger and fire so on point and I wanna march, angry mob, shout from the roof with her
I have never reviewed a non-fiction book. This is my first one and Im not entierly sure how to do, so I did it my way :)
Overall
This was one amazing read! It's a mix between a memoir and an opinion, and shifts between being a "laugh out loud" sarcasm to honest and angry. I would like to think it's not an aggressive book, but it makes several points which will make you angry at society and the way the world looks at and treat women.
I considered myself a feminist but after reading this I have clearly not always acted like it.
The book deals not with the standard subjects of equal pay, and equal right. Those subjects is a given. As the author says, it should not be a privilege but a given right. This book deals with the small stuff. How we (all genders) look at women. How we treat women. How we look at feminists. How we behave towards women we don't know.
I learned so incredibly much from this book, and I absolutely love it.
The Structure
This book starts off very angrily which again made me angry. Unfortunately, I was reading this during lunch at work - at one point (5% in) it made me so angry I was agitated and firey for the rest of the day until I went to bed. I had to listen to my audiobook The Silk Road by Peter Frankopan to calm down. Lol.
It clearly hit me.
After this turbulent introduction, the book takes on a new subject for every chapter. It eases you in with a chapter on body weight. Then it goes on to t take about other subjects like female sexuality (hush hush subject and generally bad, but it's not), "the Good Guys", "dicktionary", and it's ok to be angry (cause anger causes change) amongst a few.
Every chapter is build up in a similar way too. First, it's Clementine Ford's experience with the subject, then a general experience by women around the world before she moves on to the way it should be or how we could react and why we should react.
I loved how she included all women not just the ones who are born women. She also includes statistics on the subjects she is talking about and who its relevant to men too. She doesn't exclude anyone and its not a "man-hating" book.
However, this book does not contain a solution to our problems but it creates a very interesting discussion about the current methods and issues.
Favourite Quotes
How we look at women's appearance: "For girls, the pursuit of thinness is so often tied up with the desire to take less space" "Why is the measure of a man's worth the size of his power, while the measure of a women's is the size of her waist?" "Without a man to qualify our existence with an appreciative erection what's the point of even being alive?"
About the fight for male attention: "Men are often oblivious to the fact these power dynamics exist, which is why it can be so frustrating to try and explain it. How do you tell someone what air looks like? Just because you aren't aware of something doesn't mean you don't benefit from it."
Talking about people against abortion: "As far as I'm concerned, these people are terrorists waging a war against woman and our fundamental right to be in charge of our own bodies and destinies, and I will not negotiate with terrorists by operating within their own arbitrary, misogynist set of rules"
About being a feminist: "Unless you're a cis, white, heterosexual man whose minimal expressions of solidarity with women always nets you the maximum number of pats on the head, maintaining faith in the feminist identity can feel like pushing shit uphill while having more giant buckets of shit fired at you from a cannon constructed entirely out of shit"
Reaction to a specific abuse comment on her tweet: " I invite you to count the fucks I give in the field in which I store my fucks where there also happens to be no fucks left because the field is made entirely out of concrete and actually doesn't exist"
About the value of women: "Out bank balance rise and fall based on how fuckable we are, how polite, how docile, how deferential, how eager to please and how willing we are to pretend that this state of affairs is just normal but actually desirable - and all of that happens before we even take into account the value meted out arbitrary according to our skin colour, size, physical ability, biological sex and economic status."
About the good guy: "Sure, most men might not be bad. You're probably not bad. But it takes more than 'not being bad' to be 'actually good'."
All in all: "Bitter is the new black, babes."
Summary
I absolutely loved this book and can't recommend it highly enough to people.
But bear in mind it will make you angry, but it will also make you laugh out loud.
This brilliant feminist manifesto covers a number of difficult topics; eating disorders, mental health difficulties and sexual assault. It is unapologetically honest and provides a brilliant overview of the struggles women face every day in their battle to find gender equality. More than that, it considers female sexuality, desires and needs, and how these are often not acknowledged in the same way that they might be for men.
This book acts as a toolkit for empowering girls and women, and I think that many teenage girls would find this book a useful guide for navigating being an adult woman. It is a no nonsense, straight talking book that gives the information that cannot always be easily found. It is one of those books that should be in every school library.
Thank you to the publishers and NetGalley for the opportunity to review this book.
I really hope they start to teach this book in schools. Every girl should read this inspirational and exciting book, and every boy should too.
I think this book is being marketed on a slight pretence. If you're hoping for something closer to Laura Bates' Everyday Sexism and Girl Up, then this isn't really the right book. If you're hoping for a frank look and analysis about different topics that feminism is significant to- this ain't the right book. It started off well, with interesting thoughts about abortion, the presence of women in the media and online, as well as the influence of trolls and men who have nothing better to do than sit around and call women sluts. But after a while, this just keeps being repeated. We get it, we need to fight. But repeating the same message over and over isn't teaching anyone about feminism: all it's doing is hammering the point home that feminism isn't a dirty word. Let's hear more about different parts of feminism, let's talk about intersectionality, about the gender pay gap, about the huge inequality in almost every working industry. It was disappointing to read this book and not get what you hoped for.