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512 pages, Hardcover
First published March 31, 2022
Imagine if all men took women seriously . . .
"Sometimes I think," she said slowly, "that if a man were to spend a day being a woman in America, he wouldn't make it past noon."We follow Elizabeth Zott - a brilliant scientist in the 1960s who is constantly encumbered and hobbled by the men and the rules they put into place. They all can agree her work is brilliant...if it was done by a man.
But then tragedy strikes - a partner gone and a child developing - and Elizabeth Zott's barely blossoming career is immediately shattered by everyone around her.
"...her grudges were mainly reserved for a patriarchal society founded on the idea that women were less. Less capable. Less intelligent. Less inventive. A society that believed men went to work and did important things—discovered planets, developed products, created laws—and women stayed at home and raised children."
This was a hard review for me to write. For those who don't know, I was in grad school for quite a few years of my life and ultimately graduated with a PhD in the science field.
"...wasn't that the very definitely of life? Constant adaptations brought about by a series of never-ending mistakes?"