Okay, honestly, this book was so hard to rate. On one hand I enjoyed it, the premise is great and a book like this is honestly so important, on the other hand, I really didn't like the writing style and kept getting annoyed every now and then. So like? What do I base my rating on? I ended up on a 2 star, but it's not really 'bad' per se, so it's weird. But I've decided to stick with it. Here's my thoughts which are probably not coherent, but hopefully makes the 2 star make a lil more sense.
What I liked:
- The entire concept. This book highlights 100 (technically 103, but the title says 100 so...) 'nasty' women throughout history. The book basically defines a nasty woman as someone who defied expectations of their time, did really awesome things in one way or another, or simply strayed from the stereotype of women in their time, and all of them are awesome. I had heard of approximately 10 of these women before, and even then, I didn't really know too much about them. So for that, this book is great. It highlights amazing women, who deserves more recognition.
- The diversity in this book is also great. It highlights the stories of women from different time periods, nationalities, sexualities, religions, ethnicities, and gender identities. The diversity in the backgrounds were really great, and one of my favourite aspects of the entire book.
- To a certain extent - the writing. The information is presented to the reader in a very easily digestible way. Not at any point did I feel like the information was too overwhelming to take in, or that there was too much at once. That was the only thing I appreciated about the writing tho, cause... we'll get back to the writing in the 'what I didn't like in the book' section.
- I will get back to why I hate the writing overall, but I have to say that I really appreciated how the author dropped the informalities and the writing turned more serious when she got to the chapters regarding women who did incredibly important work, during WW2. It was pretty much the only time she seemed serious about anything in her writing, and I did appreciated that it was for those specific chapters. Their stories could never be laughable, and I really appreciated that the author didn't try to, more or less, make light of their stories the way she had in earlier chapters.
Okay, moving on to, the things I really disliked:
- THE WRITING STYLE. The author uses incredibly informal language, and plays so much on trying to be funny. And the humor in this is so not my kind of humor, and at several points I rolled my eyes, and I had to put the book down once, because I was so annoyed with the attempts to be funny, which I obviously didn't find funny at all.
- How little serious the writing was. While it definitely made the book easier to read, I also found that the incredibly simple writing with the terrible humor, almost seemed like it was making light of the stories. Like, a few of the chapters seemed like they were made up of just jokes, and not really a lot of the story of the woman that was being talked about. I literally was just sat there, thinking: what is the point of writing this chapter, if you were only going to fill it with your bad jokes, and completely disregard facts?
- The amount of stories in the book. I think it sorta sabotaged itself with that. If the author had just, included half the amount and done more research, I think the book could've really benefited from that. Some of the stories felt half-assed, and didn't really have much info. And of course, for some of these women, there aren't that much information. But in some instances, the author legit writes that she "couldn't be bothered" to research a specific topic? I mean, really? You're writing a history book... and you cannot be bothered to research, about the topic you will be writing you history book about? Do y'all see where this just does not add up? No? Just me????
- The sheer amount of man hate in this book. I get it, this book is supposed to highlight feminism. And I see myself as a feminist too, don't get me wrong. Put the amount of hate towards men in general in this book. It's extreme. And yeah, women have been wronged a lot throughout history, there is no hiding that fact. But that problem isn't gonna be fixed, by turning all the hate on men? Feminism isn't "WOMEN ARE SUPERIOR", you know, it's about equality. And I just really did not appreciate how much the author hated on men, not even specific men, just men in general.
- Similarly: the british-hate. Yeah, the british empire did a lot of messed up sh*t throughout history, but the amount of hait on the UK and the brits, just no. Not a fan, it's just too much.
- The swearing. This is a rarity. I swear a lot personally, like a lot. And I'm not against swearing in books. I actually enjoy some nice real swearing in my books. But in this it was honestly just too much to be completely honest. It was several times per page for some chapters and I just... it really just put me off in this context? There are other ways to express yourself, especially in a non-fiction work, than using f*ck every other sentence.
Overall:
This book is important and the work Hannah Jewell has put down to highlight the stories of these women, is impressive and again, so, so important. The was this was executed was not my favourite though. The humor was not my kinda humor, the informal writing style and the 'bad' jokes took away from my enjoyment, and overall the writing with all it encompassed, really stopped me from fully enjoying this. Several times I debated putting the book down and not reading on, because I hated the writing so much. I definitely think that some other people would have the complete opposite opinion on the writing, so by all means, I would recommend people to read it. But maybe try to read a sample first to see if you enjoy the writing if you are gonna read it... cause for me personally, it was a complete miss. 2/5 stars, I'm sticking with that. I did enjoy the concept and the stories of the women... but the writing dragged this so far down.