Our red book Intimate histories of periods, growing & changing

Rachel Kauder-Nalebuff

Book - 2022

"A collection of essays, oral histories, and artworks about periods across all stages of life, gathered by the editor of the New York Times bestselling anthology My Little Red Book. After hearing a harrowing coming-of-age story from her great aunt, Rachel Kauder Nalebuff started gathering stories about menstruation in her family that had never been told. What began as an oral history project quickly snowballed: Rachel heard from family and friends, and then from strangers--writers, experts, community leaders, activists, young people, and other visionaries--about the most intimate physical transformations in their lives. Our Red Book takes us through stories of first periods, last periods, missing periods, and everything about bleeding ...that people wish they had been told. Weaving together powerful voices--from teenagers, midwives, Indigenous scholars, Olympic athletes, incarcerated writers, disoriented fathers, elected leaders who fought to make period products free, friends transitioning genders, grandmothers, and lovers--the book invites us on a collective journey of growth and change, with Rachel's own voice as a guide. The result is a people's history of menstruation, told through an array of perspectives and identities that span the globe. Gathered over twenty years, the collection takes stock of our shifting relationships to family, cultural inheritance, gender, aging, and liberation."--

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Subjects
Published
New York, N.Y. : Simon & Schuster [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Rachel Kauder-Nalebuff (author)
Edition
First Simon & Schuster harcover edition November 2022
Physical Description
x, 367 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781982168650
  • A Note From the Editor
  • The Aunts
  • Nina Bassman
  • Lienna Silver
  • Nina Kauder
  • A Small City: Stories from Home
  • Zannette Lewis
  • Kica Matos
  • Nina Bentley
  • Ma Xiao Ling
  • Into the World
  • Enrique
  • Claudia Pacheco
  • Ray Lipstein
  • A Small Flood: Stories from Writers & Artists
  • Judy Blume
  • Trinidad Escobar
  • Sarah Ruhl
  • Michelle Memran
  • Daaimah Mubashshir
  • Sam McCann
  • Leah Hazard
  • Kubra Khademi
  • Jennifer Thomas
  • Tanaya Winder
  • Florence Given
  • Fiona Hallinan
  • Te Awa Atua: The Divine River: An essay by Ngahuia Murphy
  • Alexis Sablone
  • Irena Haiduk
  • Sarah Rosen
  • Tamora Pierce
  • Hannah Bae
  • C.C.
  • Elena House-Hay
  • Zhi Kai Hoffinan Vanderford
  • Kwaneta Harris
  • A Brief Interlude on Menstrual Justice (or, What Is Menstrual Justice?)
  • A Conversation with Madame Gandhi
  • A Conversation with Amira Pierotti & Amy Yao & Anika Sanyal & Maggie Di Sanza of Bleed Shamelessly
  • A Conversation with Julianna Baldo
  • A Conversation with MSP (Member of Scottish Parliament) Monica Lennon
  • If Men Could Menstruate: An essay by Gloria Steinem
  • Back into the Flood: More Stories from Writers & Artists
  • Fatema Maswood
  • Drew Pham
  • Shira Grabelsky
  • Mariana Roa Olivia
  • Una
  • Katherine Agard
  • Somán Haaland
  • Agnes Borinsky
  • Intimate Conversations
  • Laurelin Kruse talks with her mom, Barbara Bolanovich Kruse
  • Cassie da Costa talks with her mom, Chilombo da Costa
  • Cristina Fernandez talks with her mom, Mercedes Artime Bordas
  • Mary Marge Locker talks with her aunts Lucy Locker Crosby & Susan Locker Farris
  • Maria Gaspar talks with her niece Thais Beltran
  • Henry Hoke talks with his mom, Melissa Oliver
  • Emily Mast talks with her partner, Yehuda Duenyas
  • Mara Hoplamazian talks with their friend Kellyn Kusyk
  • Rachel Kauder Nalebuff & Caitlin Ryan O'Connell listen to their students Pamela Beckford & Victoria Lynch talking
  • Salty Xi Jie Ng talks with her grandmothers, Teo Siew Lan & Tan Cha Boo
  • A Full Circle: More Stories from Home
  • Nadia Gaskins
  • Axel Gay
  • Jordyn McBride
  • Piper Zschack
  • Mindi Englart
  • Marian Evans
  • Lily Grace Sutton
  • A Conversation with Odette Waks
  • Simran Ankolkar
  • A Conversation with Alice Lu-Culligan
  • Sofiya Moore
  • A Note on Process
  • Acknowledgments
  • Contributor Bios
  • Permissions
Review by Booklist Review

Nalebuff leaves no menstruation scenario uncovered in this diverse collection of true tales that greatly expands on her seminal My Little Red Book (2009). Here writers, activists, artists, experts, and Nalebuff's family and friends share their experiences in essays, interviews, and artworks. Judy Blume remembers what it was like to be 14 years old without having had a period yet. Gloria Steinem adds a postscript to her reprinted 1978 Ms. essay, "If Men Could Menstruate," thus introducing a new generation of readers to lines like, "Men would brag about how long and how much." Other contributors include an artist from Singapore who uses her menstrual blood to make paintings of mushrooms, brooms, rain, and uteruses, an incarcerated trans male, an activist who runs the London marathon while "free-bleeding," and a girl who bakes her friends red velvet "period cakes" to celebrate the first time they menstruate. Nalebuff, who teaches writing at Yale, is ever present, but she wisely lets her subjects, ranging from young girls to a 91-year-old woman, tell their stories in their own words. Eye-opening and empowering.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

"Like periods, these histories are not tidy or neat," writes Nalebuff (Stages) in her introduction to this powerful collection. Contributors include members of Nalebuff's family, as well as activists, artists, and other visionaries. Ma Xiao Ling describes the secretive nature surrounding getting one's period in China during the Cultural Revolution, Mariana Roa Oliva reflects on the relationship between menstruation and gender, and Judy Blume recalls wishing her period would come. "You'd think that a fourteen-year-old girl, desperate to get her period, would have a clue what this is. But I don't," she writes. A section on "menstrual justice" features Gloria Steinem's essay "If Men Could Menstruate," which argues for "federally funded and free" period products, and a conversation about "the intersection of menstrual equity and climate justice." Nalebuff interjects frequently with commentary and anecdotes, artfully linking stories together ("At the time that the essay was published, it was viewed as satire. After all the above conversations, reads pretty differently," she notes of Steinem's essay). Bold and candid, these missives go a long way in breaking through what one contributor calls "the taboo of bleeding." (Nov.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Nalebuff (editor of the anthology My Little Red Book) collects yet more personal stories about menstruation from writers, experts, community leaders, activists, young people, and other visionaries, some solicited in interviews and others by submission. These short essays, graphics, and poems comprise a variety of perspectives, cultures, and gender identities, and they're grouped based on the respondents' experiences and their responses to Nalebuff's questions. Beyond addressing the onset of periods, contributors also touch on menopause, gender dysphoria, religion, menstruation complications, and their experiences helping their children navigate their first periods. The respondents' feelings toward their periods are complex. Some celebrate them and believe that menarche is a transition to adulthood. Others view their periods with shame and apprehension and feel the burden of responsibility that it brings. The collection includes contributions from activists who raise awareness about the reality of periods for incarcerated people, the intersection of menstruation and climate change, and access to menstrual products and reproductive health education. VERDICT A vibrant collection of stories evoking joy, dread, loss, and celebration that will resonate with many.--Rebekah Kati

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