Lottie is an independent and confident woman who works as a biologist and has a daughter to take care of. Life for Lottie has always been difficult, starting with teenage pregnancy to misogynistic men taunting her for her interests in science and the nature of one's life. Mind you, Lottie was born in the 1940s, and so you could understand the taboo she is facing, being a single mom of her daughter, juggling between motherhood and being a female scientist.
Artifact for me personally was a celebration of a woman for what she is. She is a daughter, a single mother, a beloved wife, and everything she can be in her profession. I loved how the book acted as a catalyst in Lottie’s life through her experimentation done in her labs. The book also portrayed how even woman can successfully achieve all their dreams, despite having other responsibilities in life. The title of this book also is so apt for Lottie’s life- something she does in her lab, and something that shapes her life through her age, gender, and relationships that she carries.
However, few things didn’t go well with me in this book, especially the graphic description of animal experimentation without any trigger warning. This book also comes with teenage sex, pregnancy loss, sexual abuse, and rape, and I really wished there was a trigger warning to all these at the start of the book so that I could have been more prepared for the things that came up.
I also wished that the narrative concentrated more on Lottie’s life, instead of focusing on all the secondary characters, as that would have made it a more intense read for the topic it is conveying. It was overly detailed where it was not necessary, and that simply dragged the narration further. Overall, I would say that the book has all the potential to impact anybody who reads it but not as much to go and recommend it to somebody else.
Thank you, Bloomsbury India for the gifted copy of this book.