Best Seller
Hardcover
$30.00
Available on Feb 16, 2027 | 224 Pages
A gripping, centuries-spanning visual history and exploration of books by female authors who have been banned or silenced.
When it comes to censoring women’s writing, everything old becomes new again. Women Writing Dangerously is an astonishing, colorful exploration of the consequences women writers have faced when their books became controversial, honoring those who fought the system by using their pens and typewriters as weapons.
Books by women have long been targeted, from Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe (1852) and The Well of Loneliness by Radclyffe Hall (1928) to The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison (1970) and The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros (1983), with more titles being challenged each year. Women Writing Dangerously explores the fascinating stories of literary trailblazers who first dared to bring sexuality, gender identity, race, immigration, and other controversial topics to reading audiences—even if it meant facing backlash and silencing.
Filled with historical ephemera, covers from forgotten books, and original illustrations, this dynamic volume shares not only the facts and figures, but the passion that went into creating these books and the heartbreak around their banning. Today’s censorship frenzy doesn’t exist in a vacuum, nor is it going away any time soon; but through Nava Atlas’s in-depth research and storytelling, readers will walk away with a more enriched literary history emboldened by the past to fight for a future that ensures freedom of the press.
When it comes to censoring women’s writing, everything old becomes new again. Women Writing Dangerously is an astonishing, colorful exploration of the consequences women writers have faced when their books became controversial, honoring those who fought the system by using their pens and typewriters as weapons.
Books by women have long been targeted, from Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe (1852) and The Well of Loneliness by Radclyffe Hall (1928) to The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison (1970) and The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros (1983), with more titles being challenged each year. Women Writing Dangerously explores the fascinating stories of literary trailblazers who first dared to bring sexuality, gender identity, race, immigration, and other controversial topics to reading audiences—even if it meant facing backlash and silencing.
Filled with historical ephemera, covers from forgotten books, and original illustrations, this dynamic volume shares not only the facts and figures, but the passion that went into creating these books and the heartbreak around their banning. Today’s censorship frenzy doesn’t exist in a vacuum, nor is it going away any time soon; but through Nava Atlas’s in-depth research and storytelling, readers will walk away with a more enriched literary history emboldened by the past to fight for a future that ensures freedom of the press.
Author
Nava Atlas
Nava Atlas is the author of Vegetariana, Vegetarian Celebrations, and Vegetarian Soups for All Seasons, among other vegetarian cookbooks. She has also contributed frequently to Vegetarian Times and other natural health magazines. Visit her web site, “In the Vegetarian Kitchen” at www.vegkitchen.com. Nava lives in the Hudson Valley region of New York with her husband and two sons.
Learn More about Nava AtlasYou May Also Like
The Last Straight Woman
Hardcover
$26.00
Thinking with Our Ears
Trade Paperback Original
$30.00
Around the Sun
Hardcover
$18.99
Turn Where
Hardcover
$30.00
Bibliophobia
Trade Paperback
$18.00
If This Be Magic
Hardcover
$35.00
Monsters in the Archives
Hardcover
$29.00
Love and Death in the American Novel
Trade Paperback
$24.95
A History of Horror, Fear, and the Uncanny
Hardcover
$35.00
×