
Women's Work
Stories from Pioneering Women Shaping Our Workforce
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

Starred review from December 1, 2019
Vivid portrait photography and accompanying essays declare that all work is women's work. Every picture tells a story, and these photos alone, many of them full page or two-page spreads, show women fighting fires, dealing with prisoners, flying planes, taming horses, mining gold, farming oysters, writing, teaching, coaching basketball, and baking--among dozens of other professions. Take the two sisters responsible for Georgetown Cupcake in Washington, D.C., who "had dreamed about opening a bakery since we were young girls," before getting sidetracked into "careers in fashion and venture capital." And now? They "bake over twenty-five thousand cupcakes a day and have over three hundred employees across the country." In addition to bakers, the book includes a butcher, a blacksmith, a firearms and archery instructor, a beekeeper and urban gardener, and a vice president of Google. Many of them are immigrants or minorities; some of them find themselves in fields where there is no family background or female mentorship. They have taken as many different career paths as there are careers, yet much of the advice they offer is straightforward and consistent: Do what you love. Be persistent. Don't worry about what others think or say. The younger women often recognize that earlier generations of women had it tougher, and they are determined to level the playing field even more for generations to come. The personal testimonies are inspirational throughout, and the photos embody the same spirit. Some are stunning in their composition and color contrast, from the many that are shot in the natural world--the author/photographer biography notes that in addition to his prizewinning commercial work, he is "a photographer specializing in environmental portraiture"--to the ones at the slaughterhouse, the funeral home, and the prison. Says a prison guard, "I will always be an advocate for women pursuing any career interest they have. You've got to remember that there are others, somewhere, doing what you want to do." A beautiful book that provides genuine encouragement and inspiration.
COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

December 1, 2019
What does it mean to be a woman in a male-dominated field? Photographer Chrisman asked over 50 women who are quietly breaking barriers in the arts, media, business, agriculture, law enforcement, and whichever of those categories taxidermy fits into. Each woman tells her work story: the sometimes surprising path to her current field, accomplishments and goals, and what she loves about the work she does. There are surprises: a penitentiary worker credits her success to the customer-service skills she learned in the grocery industry, for example. But there are also commonalities, namely that mentorship helped them grow and a connection to other women in the same career helps them thrive. Each entry is accompanied by at least one arresting photograph of the subject in the field (those that accompany the butcher and the veterinary pathologist are not for the squeamish), helping to ground the reader in the physical and mental strength needed for each job and highlighting the broad range of careers represented. Readers of every gender will find something inspiring in these diverse, interesting stories.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)
دیدگاه کاربران