Published in 2014 (first published 1992)
304 pages
Robin Morgan is an award-winning poet and writer, author of the memoir Saturday’s Child, the novel The Burning Time, and the best-selling The Demon Lover: The Roots of Terrorism. One of the founders of contemporary American feminism, she is the author of numerous germinal books about the women’s movement, and editor of the classic anthologies Sisterhood Is Powerful, Sisterhood Is Global, and Sisterhood Is Forever.
What is this book about?
These two decades (almost a quarter-century, in fact) of essays are a personal window into the birth, truths, and changes of the Women’s Movement, by one who co-founded this feminist wave and who has been there – nationally and internationally – for it all. From the first Miss America Pageant protest in 1968 to the “divorce” from the New Left, from the first fights for abortion rights to the burgeoning of a global feminist consciousness and actions, Robin Morgan raised, embraced, and recorded issues from housewives’ rage to racism, through women’s love for women to global peace, neocolonialism, and the environment. Here is her voice in its full range: alternately journalistic, humorous, intensely personal, meditative, theoretical, and analytical, but always impassioned – with an obsession for human freedom and for the power of language.