It wasn't long ago that I reconnected with some of the cousins of my youth. These cousins, nearly all women and from the hills of Kentucky, were creators of some of my best childhood memories. They were, I believe, the "chicken-fried women" of which author Melissa Radke writes in her latest effort "Chicken-Fried Women: Friendship, Kinship, and the Women Who Made Us This Way."
Truthfully, I hadn't stayed in touch with these women very well. It is largely thanks to the presence of social media that they've re-entered my life. For that, I'm grateful.
In most ways, however, I'm not the target reader for "Chicken-Fried Women," a book clearly aimed toward female readers and clearly aimed at female relationships. I'm a decidedly northern guy in his 50's, an adult male with lifelong disabilities and someone with a more fluid family situation that hasn't produced a whole lot of the type of memories brought to life here.
And yet, I couldn't help but fall in love with Radke and her family, especially her mother, as Radke makes us laugh, makes us reminisce, makes us shed tears, and makes us celebrate the women who made us as she brings to life these chicken-fried women from her childhood and adult years.
Radke is the bestselling author of "Eat Cake. Be Brave," and if you're aware of her then you're likely already highly anticipating this book's arrival in April 2025. It won't disappoint. As someone who was not familiar with Radke, "Chicken-Fried Women" had me looking her up and learning even more as she writes about the women who encouraged, teased, chastised, mortified, and prayed, prayed, and prayed some more.
Radke brings to mind the kind of bonds that I can't even imagine - family that comes along when you go bra shopping, the ups and downs of southern faith, and the ins and outs of daily life.
"Chicken-Fried Women" is filled with an abundance of humor, often laugh-out-loud, and an immersive heart that is warm and wonderful and more than a wee bit uncomfortable in all the right ways. Indeed, an absolute celebration of friendship, kinship, and the women who shaped us, "Chicken-Fried Women" is the kind of book you read and then you read it again.