Citizen Girl is a gift from Emma McLaughlin & Nicola Kraus for the every woman--any college educated, young career woman of my generation will relate to the struggles of Girl, the protagonist.
(Side note--since many reviewers were annoyed by her being named Girl, and her new boss being named Guy, and the company being called My Company. This isn't the writers being lazy you dipsh*ts, this is a common literary technique used in Classic literature to indicate that this is a character we can ALL RELATE TO AND THEY REPRESENT THE EVERY MAN, EVERY WOMAN, ETC. HOW DO YOU NOT GET THAT?!?!?! End rant).
Intelligent, hard working, idealistic young Girl struggles against the Capitalist juggernaut after graduation from college. She has done everything right--worked hard, gotten good grades, landed a job in her area of study that will truly make a difference. As we were all taught as little kids, if you work hard, you will be rewarded. Except, Girl has her dream job and a nightmare boss. Like many other young, intelligent women, her menopausal female boss is threatened by the promise and change this new employee brings. She stifles Girl, emotionally abuses her, and gaslights her until Girl, completely confused, tries to understand what she can do to make this woman happy (nothing) and ends up getting fired. This leads to weeks of uncertainty, of feeling useless and worthless and like she'll never find another job, validating everything her awful boss ever said to or about her, until...the perfect job comes along. Well, maybe it's perfect. Like each of us, Girl is so desperate for SOMETHING, she tries to view the new job in the best possible light. She gets a new boss, equally ridiculous, only this time it's a male who gives her no support, no guidance or leadership, and then complains whenever she asks for him to DO HIS JOB AS A MANAGER AND LEAD HER that she is a whiny Feminist. *Cue eye roll so hard my eyes get stuck* The rest of the novel details Girl's struggle to maintain her idealism in the face of corporate success. How far can she go and still live with her choices?
I HAVE HAD THESE BOSSES, Y'ALL. I HAVE BEEN GIRL. It took me a year of this abuse to figure out I wasn't doing anything wrong--this person is a Narcissistic Psychopath. Women who hold back other women are deeply, fundamentally flawed. There is nothing you can say or do that will allow you to be successful under a boss like this. Her second boss, Guy, is equally awful. He only cares about the end result, and how it will make him look. He doesn't support or grow his employees because he doesn't know how--he got his job through the good old boy network, and is completely incapable of managing people. When Girl asks for a ridiculously simple request, i.e. he give her an idea of what he wants because she is not a mind reader, he berates her and emotionally abuses her. Any time Girl has a valid question or request, it's couched behind her being a Feminist instead of the real issue--none of these people know what they are doing or how to manage an inquisitive, hard working, bright young woman. Out of their own fear of looking bad, they react and snap at her and try to keep her down. Can you tell this is hitting a bit close to home for me?
After I read a book, I like to go online and see what reviewers thought of it. I like to compare my thoughts with those of others as it usually helps me process my own feelings a little better (man, do I miss English classes. Sigh.). Let me tell you, the internet does not have love for Citizen Girl. I find that a little sad, and I also found the criticism of this novel ironic. Most reviewers complained about the main character sounding "whiny" and "giving Feminism a bad name," which is funny considering one of the novel's main themes is literally the main character being berated for being a "whiny Feminist" as she strives to maintain her moral integrity in a world hell-bent on destroying it. Any time the corporate machine does something immoral or nonsensical, i.e. ALL THE TIME, Girl's integrity kicks in and she is destroyed for standing up for her ideals. Herein lies the eternal struggle for all professional women--if you complain, you are whiny. If you are assertive, you're a bitch. It's a constant compromise between what you know is the right thing to do, and what you can live with doing to get things done in a man's world and subvert it from within. It's the battle of camouflaging who you really and what you believe in to do the most good. The fact that so many women who read this book missed that very point is, sadly, very telling.
(Other side note -- there's a lot of hate out there for Girl being whiny and immature and materialistic. Who WASN'T like that in their early 20's, starting out at their first job?! Who didn't have that embarrassing sense of entitlement? Most of you still do, so shut up!)
This book feels REALLY timely in the era of #fakenews and gas lighting occurring on an alarmingly regular basis in the media today. It also is extremely telling that just like in our current political situation, the people hating on this book are OTHER WOMEN--this weird phenomenon of white women not wanting to support their sisters in their struggles because they have some mistaken belief that it will take away from their own lives is sad and gross and it deeply depresses me. The entire point of this novel, as I see it, is the way that women are letting other women down by pretending that Feminism is bad, when it's really because they are threatened and scared that equality for all means less for them. It's an ugly truth, but a truth nonetheless.
I'm sure, though, that this entire review will just be another 'whiny Feminist rant,' so I'll not hold my breath while awaiting a response.