For International Women’s Day, we asked some of our friends and colleagues to tell us about their favourite books by female authors. Please enjoy these recommendations!

 

Liesl Rowe

Assistant Librarian

Let's go for the moderately more niche end of my reading tastes and Tamsyn Muir (her twitter handle is @tazmuir). On the one hand, her Locked Tomb series are a gripping space opera thriller with necromancers that I couldn't put down. Then again, her books are also amongst the few that made me love 2nd person with some phenomenal unreliable narration and immersive worldbuilding. There's a reason why my friends and I still have a groupchat analysing new things we've spotted in our respective rereads several years after we first picked up the books. Plus there's also the most ill-timed (and as such best) dad joke I've had the misfortune of reading. So something for everyone!

 

Hazel Bowley

Academic Skills Tutor

As International Women’s Day is about confronting inequalities, one of the books that has been really important for me is Laura Shepherds 2015 edited book Gender Matters in Global Politics. It's a great piece of feminist scholarship looking at gender’s role in politics and warfare.

 

 

Victoria Hunter

Assistant Librarian

Following Hazel, I’d like to recommend Laura Bates and her ground-breaking, "Everyday Sexism.” Missing the point entirely, Cosmopolitan reviewed it as "a must-read for every woman", but I'd suggest it's important for everyone, especially as Bates is really excellent at mixing often tough, well-researched insight with a really engaging voice that shows how important it is everyone calls out gender inequality.

 

 

Christopher R. Moore

Academic Skills Tutor

I’d like to recommend the best book I read in 2021 -Her Body and Other Parties by Carmen Maria Machado. It’s a short story collection that’s as close to perfect as it is possible for fiction to be. Even now, months after reading it, I still find myself picking it back up just to admire it.

There are stories in this collection that are so audacious, it’s amazing that they even exist. One narrative is told through plot synopses for Law & Order SVU episodes. And it’s not just showy for aesthetic purposes either – every quirk and nuance is in service of its themes of trauma and the commodification of bodies, gender, and sexuality.

Read it, then lay on the floor (face down) and praise it.

Share it via:

Continue Reading

News
Introducing ScienceDirect!

We’re pleased to share the addition of the ScienceDirect Freedom Collection to our Library Portal! ScienceDirect is a collection providing…

Blog   Critical Thinking
Knowings

  "…man is an animal suspended in webs of significance he himself has spun, I take culture to be those webs, and the analysis of it to be…

Blog   Reflective Writing
Never Ever Give Up

If completing a degree was easy, then everyone would have one. It is hard work, but that makes the graduation day all the more enjoyable.…

Blog   Academic Writing
A Colossal Wreck: Dissertations, Theory, and Failure

My first dissertation was bad. I vividly remember the very-hot-then-very-cold wash of shame that crept down my neck when I opened the email…

Blog   Careers
Graduate Scheme or Graduate Job?

  I recently supported a student who was entering her final year of study at Arden. She was bright and conscientious and was eager to look…

Blog   Reflective Writing
Bridging the Digital Divide

This brief blog entry reflects on the digital divide in online education and on how to build a bridge across it. At the beginning of my…