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Herland, The Yellow Wall-Paper, and Selected Writings

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This Halcyon Classics anthology contains seven works by feminist writer and social reformer Charlotte Perkins Gilman, including her utopian novel HERLAND and her semi-autobiographical short story THE YELLOW WALLPAPER. Gilman (1860-1935) spent an impoverished youth in Rhode Island. After marriage and divorce, she became involved in several feminist and reformist organizations while living in California in the 1890s. She supported herself through writing and editing. Her utopian novel, HERLAND, appeared in serialized form in 1915. It was not published in book form until 1979.In HERLAND, Gilman describes an isolated society composed entirely of women who reproduce via parthenogenesis. The result is an ideal social order, free of war, conflict and domination.This ebook is DRM free and includes an active table of contents for easy navigation.ContentsHerlandThe Yellow WallpaperIf I Were a ManThe Giant WistariaOur Androcentric CultureThe CruxWhat Diantha DidThis unexpurgated edition contains the complete text, with minor errors and omissions corrected.

150 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1915

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About the author

Charlotte Perkins Gilman

1,047 books2,236 followers
Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1860-1935), also known as Charlotte Perkins Stetson, was a prominent American sociologist, novelist, writer of short stories, poetry, and nonfiction, and a lecturer for social reform. She was a utopian feminist during a time when her accomplishments were exceptional for women, and she served as a role model for future generations of feminists because of her unorthodox concepts and lifestyle. Her best remembered work today is her semi-autobiographical short story, "The Yellow Wallpaper", which she wrote after a severe bout of post-partum depression.

She was the daughter of Frederic B. Perkins.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 179 reviews
Profile Image for Leonard Gaya.
Author 1 book1,177 followers
January 28, 2022
In 1884, Charlotte Perkins Gilman gave birth to her only daughter, Katharine, and suffered severe postnatal depression. She was treated by a physician renowned for his expertise in women’s mental health: the infamous Dr Mitchell. He subjected her to forced bed rest, forbidding her any mental activity, including reading and writing. As a result, Gilman’s mental condition quickly deteriorated.

Several years later, The Yellow Wallpaper, a masterpiece of short fiction, followed from this traumatic experience. It tells the story of a woman, on the edge of postpartum blues, confined by her husband to a prison-like nursery. Having nothing else to do in this claustrophobic setting, she soon becomes obsessed with the horrid wallpaper in her room. Eventually, she sinks into a state of delusion and utter psychosis.

The content of The Yellow Wallpaper is quite fascinating and disturbing in itself. But the narrative device Gilman uses to convey the woman’s mental states makes it even more impactful. The story is told in journal entries, written by a character banned from reading or writing—this is a secret, hidden diary. Yet, the entries seem to be addressing a specific but unknown reader. It could be us, the actual readers of the story, and this would imply a peculiar way of breaking the third wall—a sort of call for help.

Indeed, The Yellow Wallpaper has often been construed as an unmasking of female oppression, a denunciation of male domination and a stark criticism of the medical establishment. As such, this story had a tremendous impact on the flourishing feminist movement. Its influence on more recent novels, such as Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid's Tale, is quite manifest.

The Yellow Wallpaper is also a staple of the gothic/psychological horror genre. It can be compared to, for instance, Henry James’s The Turn of the Screw, or even Stefan Zweig’s Schachnovelle. But, in this case, Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s literary next of kin is probably H.P. Lovecraft (see, for example, The Rats in the Walls).

Gilman wrote many more stories, yet not as famous as The Yellow Wallpaper. The Rocking-Chair uses, as it were, the same canvas and narrative devices and is a sort of ghost story, but less effective than the former one. Old Water is a strange little tale that mixes romance with murder in a sarcastic way; the feminist undertones are even more pronounced in that case.
Profile Image for Liz.
604 reviews23 followers
January 4, 2017
Do not buy, read, or even think too long about this book. The only story in it worth seeking out is "The Yellow Wall-Paper," which itself deserves attention more for its historical context than its literary merits, and which you can find for free online anyway. Whatever positive things there may be to say about "The Yellow Wall-Paper" (and perhaps, if I'm generous, the mediocre ghost story "The Giant Wistaria"), they don't extend to this book as a whole. It fronts with "Herland," a patience-trying novella, buries "Wall-Paper" in a hodgepodge of short stories (some of which are brutally low-quality), and then ends with about 20 (almost uniformly wretched) poems.

I read through every last ridiculously terrible story and poem in this book. The aggressive agenda evident throughout doesn't necessarily bother me-- Millay had a message too, and a much less vogue one at that-- but just saying politically provocative things about female equality doesn't really do it for me if the stories aren't otherwise interesting (particularly now that Gilman's agenda is no longer all that provocative). And unfortunately, these stories must've relied on the provocative effect of their political message, because without it they're dull as lead. Certain pieces managed to both bore and irritate me because they contain such palpable scorn for homemaking and belittle the women who willingly choose that life ("An Extinct Angel" was a particularly unbearable example of this, explicitly saying that such women are "not very bright"). Gilman's only sympathy appears to be for the big, strong, actively athletic women she makes her heroines. The most enjoyment I got from the short stories and poems was the grim satisfaction of crossing each one off in the table of contents as I finished it, like keeping score in a high-stakes competition against an odious enemy.

But "Herland," the longest story in the lot, easily won the prize for unreadability. Slogging through it, I flipped toward the end probably 7000 times, only to be deeply dismayed that every time the 144-page end point seemed to loom so far distant. "Herland" tells the story of three men who stumble across an idyllic nation of women, all occupied with capital-M Motherhood, who have figured out how to reproduce without men by a "The Secret"-style method of wanting babies enough. It reads like an especially lazy and lame riff on More's Utopia, and seems little more than the flimsiest fictional setup for Gilman to complain about a wide variety of things she doesn't like, however petty (e.g. taking milk from cows, dresses without pockets, dogs as pets). The birth control methods proposed (playing with other people's kids to stop your desire for a baby from building up) seemed even more ludicrous than the motherhood-by-willpower reproduction method itself, and Gilman was unabashed about the eugenics her society employed to keep inferior women from replicating their unworthy genes. "Herland" depicts a depressingly sexless approach to romantic love, in which clear-eyed female paragon Ellador rejects sexual ardor from her own husband because she doesn't think it's "right." One of the other women refuses to share a bed with her husband-- both in the euphemistic sense and literally, apparently, as she maintains a separate house-- and he sneaks into her room and attempts to rape her in a scene of climactic male badness that just left me feeling kind of sad for all parties involved.

In every story-- almost every sentence, in fact-- Gilman writes with oppressive sarcasm and snideness. I tried to contextualize her writings to minimize the impact of this tone, but at the end of the day it made this book stiflingly unpleasant to read-- rather like going on a trip with someone who complains throughout about the food and the bathrooms and the temperature in the car. Even if she's right, she's still excruciating to be around. Add to its unpleasantness the fact that sarcasm doesn't really effectively persuade anyone of anything, and you have a recipe for a deeply pointless collection of writings. I wondered more than once why this was ever published. From what I can tell, Penguin identified Gilman as a historically significant feminist writer, and figured that people would buy this book from a feeling of duty to that cause, indifferent to the quality of the work inside it. Feminism can do (has done!) better than this, and Gilman herself would've been better served by a much smaller selection, probably in an anthology of multiple women's writings. As it is, this collection is truly awful, and my relief at finishing it was so strong that I felt the heady excitement I guess an ultra-marathoner does when she sees the finish line after running for 36 hours straight.
Profile Image for Lily.
9 reviews
June 21, 2020
Herland is a progressive feminist piece which deals with the differences between the sexes with a wit and charm that makes for a thought provoking and entertaining read. It follows three men who find an all female society secluded from the rest of the world. They have no men, conflict or ideas of marriage or our conventional ‘home’. Gilman’s imagination and narrative style are quite remarkable and you slip into the world of Herland as a researcher, someone there to learn and even though this story was published in 1915, modern readers will also learn or at least have feelings put into words by her writing. ‘The Yellow Wallpaper’ is a short story that everyone should encounter. It depicts mental illness and the treatment of women in such a way that is disturbing but also applicable beyond the scope of the main characters own personal difficulties. I can think of many instances where I can relate to both the speaker and the woman in the wallpaper- both of them becoming metaphors for the readers own struggles, Gilman truly wrote this for both herself and everyone that may encounter it. Couldn’t recommend either enough, two stories that deserve time, attention and thought for anyone who reads them.
941 reviews2 followers
November 12, 2016
The author was a feminist social reformer who is considered quite progressive for her time, the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The lead story, Herland, is a short novel about a utopian society made up entirely of women. It's told from the perspective of a male explorer who visits with two other men, all of whom have their views on femininity challenged by their visit, particularly the idea that women are naturally competitive with each other. The women are able to give birth without the need of men, and childcare is a collective enterprise rather than an individual one. It ends with the narrator and one of his male friends having to leave the country after the friend makes sexist insults. The volume also includes short stories and poetry, the former of which often have the theme of women improving their lives by taking matters into their own hands. The title story is a more depressing one that's actually partly autobiographical, about a woman who is confined to a single room with no real activity when suffering from postpartum depression, and she eventually descends into total psychosis. The same basic thing happened to Gilman herself after she had her first child, although she managed to get out and separate from her husband before she could reach the depths that her character did.
Profile Image for Thais Warren.
166 reviews14 followers
May 27, 2024
Sign me up for herland plssss and boo to the explorer male narrative!!! Yellow wallpaper was pretty haunting stuff too for such a short story.. deffo a 3.5 stars tbh
22 reviews
December 23, 2024
hard to look past that herland is gilman’s eugenics fantasy but otherwise the book is a fascinating take on agency
Profile Image for Roger Brunyate.
946 reviews741 followers
May 23, 2017
More Than The Yellow Wallpaper

Charlotte Perkins Gilman is best known for the story "The Yellow Wallpaper" (1892), about a married female writer who goes mad after being confined to her room as a cure for post-partum depression, and deprived of all creative outlets. To a certain extent, it is autobiographical, although Charlotte succeeded in escaping her first marriage, moved to California, flourished as a writer, and married her cousin Houghton Gilman in 1900. She continued writing and lecturing for several decades, publishing her last article, "The Right to Die," in 1935, shortly before ending her own life in the face of an inoperable cancer.

"The Yellow Wallpaper" takes up only 15 of the 343 pages in this splendid volume. It also includes 18 other stories, 18 poems, and the 140-page novella Herland, together with a very full (even too full) introduction and copious notes. In a sense, you could say that if you have read her most famous story, you have got the essence of Gilman, but little of her range. While almost all the other stories in this collection are also about the imbalance of the sexes, few of the others are as tormented and Gothic, and many end with the woman finding some way to reclaim her independence. I especially liked "Turned" (1911) for its arresting opening and the way its heroine makes common cause with her exploited servant, "The Chair of English" (1913) for how its heroine turns campus politics against a man who would use it to further his own ends, and "The Vintage" (1916) for its tragic exploration of the long-term effects of syphilis.

Gilman's poems were a real find. Yes, the subjects tend to be very similar, and her language is by no means in tune with her modernist contemporaries and is often even deliberately archaic. But the verse form lends itself to more subtle allusion than the prose, as in the ending of "In Duty Bound":
And they are few indeed but stoop at length
To something less than best,
And find, in stooping, rest.
or the very short poem entitled "A Moonrise":
The heavy mountains, lying huge and dim,
With uncouth outline breaking heaven's rim;
And while I watched and waited, o'er them soon
Cloudy, enormous, spectral, rose the moon.
So searing is the anger of "The Yellow Wallpaper," that it was a joy to encounter many of the more positive stories, and epecially to enter Herland, an Utopian country inhabited entirely by women, somewhere between Gulliver's Travels and Lost Horizon.. Much of the pleasure comes in the skill with which Gilman paints the brash cameraderie of the three male explorers, ranging from the chauvinist Terry ("I have never met a woman yet that did not enjoy being mastered!") to the chivalrous Jeff. Through their eyes, she reveals a singularly attractive society: pacifist, democratic, ecologically aware, and communally involved in the shared tasks of food preparation, child-rearing, and education. There is even room for a little humor, as when one of the women, learning that American couples do not confine their sexual activities to the necessities of procreation, assumes that they must be doing this for higher ends:
This climactic expression, which, in all the other life-forms, has but the one purpose, has with you become specialized to higher, purer, nobler uses. It has—I judge from what you tell me—the most ennobling effect on character.
Just so.
Profile Image for carol.
55 reviews5 followers
February 24, 2022
herland 3/5
this is a utopian novel, depicting a land where there are no men. here, we follow the story of three men and their journey into discovering this land and it’s civilizations.
in this novel, charlotte perkins gilman decides to criticize our societies through the ‘innocent’ and curious questions of the women as the men attempt to explain their lands to them. by having them question everything, the reader themselves begins to question our world too, and as we follow along with the narrator (one of the men) as he grows more and more conscious of the defects of our world and how unfair and inhumane it actually is, we begin to create the same conclusions. however, Charlotte offers us an additional two perspectives on it; one from an extremely misogynistic man and the other a man who idealizes women. through such extreme views, it’s as if she attempts to communicate to us that balace is essential and that neither sex should be glorified or demonized in such extremities.

the yellow wallpaper 5/5
this is one of Charlotte’s most famous short stories, following some short enetries written by an unnamed woman struggling with mental illness while she stays at some ancestral halls for the summer time with her husband, child and maid.
this story was absolutely amazing and i loved it. it felt like this woman’s fascination and obsession with furniture was simply a reflection of her own mental state. she refers to ‘plain’ and ‘blank’ furtinure being mesmerizing to her as a child, and now this intricate and deteriorating wallpaper being her main focus in life, as she herself deteriorates from mental health issues. it’s a really interesting piece because it’s very short and leaves you with so many questions.
Profile Image for ⭒☆tiredbee☆⭒.
152 reviews12 followers
March 14, 2021
I decided to read this book out of sheer curiosity (and quite suddenly) and I am glad I did
My faves are the short stories The Yellow Wall-paper, Old Water and Turned
Profile Image for Nancy Motto.
341 reviews30 followers
June 19, 2025
Though Charlotte Perkins Gilman has fallen into obscurity, she was definitely a woman ahead of her time often writing about women gaining or regaining their power. Definitely worth reading
Profile Image for Zezee.
704 reviews45 followers
July 15, 2024
Overall, a great read and worthy of its classic status. “The Yellow Wall-Paper” is short and can be done in a few minutes. And it’s perfect for a mild horror/psychological thriller venture. It is not boring in the least, and Gillman is quite funny. I highly recommend it and have already suggested it to many friends. Can’t wait to sample her other works.

Visit my blog to read more.
Profile Image for Damini.
199 reviews11 followers
February 18, 2022
Some stories in this collection were good (including the titular novella, and the short story). The poetry was largely unimpactful (plus I'm not big on poetry in general). I found myself rating everything individually, then took an average, and landed at an exact 3/5.

Naturally, the book is classic first-wave feminist - scorning at more "womanly" traits like housework, shyness, etc. Ignoring this, I found that most of the stories were indirect ways of encouraging women to take more control of their lives - financially or socially; to leave their abusive husbands, to find meaningful employment outside of being just mothers to their children and house-slaves to their husbands; to seek happiness and equality in their marriages as well as in professions. Perkins Gilman was also a socialist, so her encouragements and examples don't just limit themselves to the upper class. For instance, in 'Herland', there is a discussion around how poor women, who need more help with housework, end up having more children (while naturally having fewer-to-none house helps), which is both a financial and a mental burden to them; while rich women, who have all the help in the world, face no such barriers, and can have as many kids as they like. She also speaks of the logical fallacies behind gender roles, some of which are relevant and imposed respectively, even today.

Speaking of her writing, I thought that she was a good writer. Her sentences are well structured, and flow smoothly. I never had trouble understanding what she meant, nor did I ever read the same sentence twice. Plot-wise, however, in many stories, she takes a lot of time setting up the background/foundation, then either grows bored of the story and wishes to finish it as soon as possible, or rushes to finish it within a limit - the ends aren't as satisfactory or well drawn as the set ups. Many of them are like Greek tragedies - the main action is off-stage and then narrated towards the end, in a grand reveal.

Lastly, one cannot ignore her racist past. However, I found that the stories in this collection (maybe done so intentionally by the editor) were largely racism-free. There were a couple of negatives here and there, like referring to white skinned people as "of the Aryan stock". Besides this, thankfully, there were no slurs, or implications of one race being supreme. The stories stuck to their message of wanting equality for women of all classes, in all areas of life.
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
92 reviews
February 27, 2025
A nice collection of early feminist fiction and a throwback to my main area of study in college, which focused on women’s struggle for agency, autonomy and identity in Victorian and turn-of-the-century British and American literature.

Gillman’s characters are strong, industrious, smart and capable, and any misfortunes that befall them are shown to be the result of patriarchy and social structures which do not allow them to thrive. Given the right conditions she believed, women will rise to high levels of achievement and quite often don’t need men, who usually exist only to interfere or thwart their success. Where men are present in her stories, they are bumbling fools at best and dangerous brutes, abusers, exploiters, rapists and sex traffickers at worst. In “Herland,” she envisions a utopia populated exclusively by women who reproduce asexually and only produce daughters, much to the chagrin and frustration of three male invaders who attempt to convert the women to traditional views of sex and marriage. While some of her ideals were extreme, Charlotte Perkins Gilman lived in a time where women lacked basic rights, where they were systematically diminished and dismissed, a time many would now like us to fully revert to, and her voice is an important one to remember. The collection ends with this little poem:

Matriatism

Small is the thought of “Fatherland,”
With all its pride and worth;
With all its history of death;
Of fire and sword and wasted breath—
By the great new thought which quickeneth—
The thought of “Mother Earth.”
Man fights for wealth and rule and pride,
For the “name” that is his alone;
Comes woman, wakening to her power,
Comes woman, opening the hour
That sees life as one growing flower,
All children as her own.

Fathers have fought for their Fatherland
With slaughter and death and dearth,
But mothers, in service and love's increase,
Will labor together for our release,
From a war-stained past to a world at peace,
Our fair, sweet Mother Earth.
105 reviews2 followers
August 6, 2020
Extremely thought provoking, this follows the lost-world utopian style. But the prototypical hyper-masculine Indiana Jones and Allan Quatermain types become small shallow beings in the face of a truly developed, completely feminized society. It's fascinating and metaphorically pointed. It's worth a good deal of commentary from professional gender scholars, while at the same time being perfectly successful as science fiction in the classical sense of meeting the BIG SF questions

Herland represents what Jungian-female energy could become were it not forced to reflect back the male gaze. The result is the complete development of Human-rights as Women's rights, a healing of what is pathological in the psyche of human society. Herland is not a simple statement that the problem with society is men. Instead it's a statement that the patriarchy is sort of societal original sin, manifesting itself in perversions of religion, distribution of resources and education.

The virtues of Herland go beyond gender and explore the possibilities of a society which really put some resources into the development of a rich science of mental health and childhood development. It's really science fiction as social-psychotherapy: Let's use the power of speculative fiction to diagnose and treat these ills. The greatest weakness and strength of the novella is that
Profile Image for Kam.
79 reviews56 followers
December 22, 2020
Herland es una obra independiente que comparte temas con el resto de obras más cortas de este libro: el enaltecimiento de la mujer como madre, la crítica a los roles de género, la superioridad sexual de la mujer, los derechos reproductivos de la mujer, la eugenesia, el control social, el racismo, la xenofobia, la heteronormatividad y una variante bastante única de animalismo.

En Herland, tres hombres blancos americanos llegan a un paraíso en el que las mujeres viven sin necesidad de hombres. En esta utopía, en la que el libro indica que todas las mujeres son superiores por ser de raza aria y en la que se asume que al ser todo mujeres no conocen el amor romántico, las mujeres lo hacen todo: son fuertes, inteligentes, bellas, pacientes, buenas, perfectas. La obra también está llena de comentarios machistas realizados por los tres hombres protagonistas, menciones a la necesidad de mantener relaciones heterosexuales y opiniones sociológicas centradas en el nativismo, el orientalismo y otras corrientes relacionadas con el racismo y la xenofobia. Además, la obra incluye un intento de violación.

Lo cierto es que, en su momento, Gilman ya fue altamente criticada por su contenido racista, y si bien fue considerada una feminista importante por su activismo y por su relato "El papel amarillo", Herland no fue recibida con la misma opinión, que se extiende a más de sus obras más tardías.

Reseña completa de Herland en: https://palabrasvioletasyletrascriticas.blogspot.com/2020/12/resena-herland-de-charlotte-perkins.html
Profile Image for Tanner Conroyd.
21 reviews
Read
July 23, 2023
Charlotte Perkins Gilman's collection of work was ahead of its time and is still incredibly relevant today, over 100 years since her writing was published. The Yellow Wall-Paper is a remarkable short story. I found myself rereading it several times. Excellent, but eerie.

I'm unsure if Herland would be considered science-fiction, but I thoroughly enjoyed the satiric short novel chronicling the all-female society that had prospered in the absence of men for 2,000 years: until three men from the outside world find themselves captives (in a peaceful sense) in the hidden country. The novel is told from one man's perspective. The following quotes brought a wry smile to my face while reading:

"As I learned more and more to appreciate what these women had accomplished, the less proud I was of what we, with all our manhood, had done."

"Their religion, you see, was maternal; and their ethics, based on the full perception of evolution, showed the principle of growth and the beauty of wise culture. They had no theory of the essential opposition of good and evil; life to them was Growth; their pleasure was in growing, and their duty also."

"Be that as it might, they certainly presented a higher level of active intelligence, and of behavior, than we had so far really grasped."

It was written in 1915, but it would be wonderful if some of the realizations of this male narrator were made by males of the present day.
Profile Image for Anna.
126 reviews6 followers
January 29, 2022
Très intéressante découverte que ces récits courts au propos féministes très en avance sur son temps (réflexion sur les pièges du mariage et de la maternité, sur les préjugés concernant les hommes et les femmes)... Les nouvelles sont cependant assez inégales, même si "The Yellow wall-paper" sort clairement du lot, ainsi que d'autres qui flirtent avec le fantastique et quelques récits bien sentis d'émancipation féminine. "Herland", la fiction la plus longue présentée ici, est un récit de science-fiction assez original (trois hommes découvrent une utopie peuplée uniquement de femmes) mais trop théorique. Les poèmes inclus à la fin sont peu intéressants.
Profile Image for Leah Joob.
40 reviews
September 26, 2025
Yellow wallpaper - 4 stars
Herland - 2 stars
Assorted short stories - 1 to 3 stars
Poems - 2 stars
Total: 2 stars

Gilman is heralded as a groundbreaking feminist and socialist writer. Sadly, her passion for women did not extend to all women, which is a common problem with many "feminists" in history. Herland and another short story in the book both write about a utopia made up of all women. Through strict admission criteria and "selective breeding," they create a wonderful paradise where everyone is white and no one is disabled or mentally unwell. If you think that this sounds like eugenics, you would be right! Feminism will never move forward until feminism includes ALL women.
Profile Image for Tim.
160 reviews8 followers
December 23, 2023
Herland is a wonderful feminist Utopia, featuring a still-relevant challenge to concepts of gender, plus a fairly anarchic ideal of a society, and progressive views of education that are also relevant even today. And the women’s clothing is festooned with pockets. Five stars for all that.

And then there’s the matter of no same-sex attraction amongst the all-female nation, which, maybe that’s the author repressing her own queerness. But then there’s the really blatant racism and eugenicism. So…3 stars? Impossible to really say.
Profile Image for bowiesbooks.
439 reviews98 followers
August 4, 2022
Perkins incredible grasp on society and gender in the late 1800’s makes for a powerful and thoughtful read.
324 reviews4 followers
November 18, 2025
this was honestly so fascinating...i'm obsessed. can someone PLZ prescribe me with a rest-cure
Profile Image for brynn.
16 reviews
March 19, 2025
the yellow wallpaper was really good, but everything else was lowk mid
Profile Image for Julia.
5 reviews3 followers
January 11, 2023
The Yellow Wallpaper was my favorite of all the stories. Also enjoyed Old Water & Herland.

I was told to jump into this book without any context & would recommend doing the same for those who do not already know about the author. Reading about Charlotte Perkins Gilman after finishing the book was just as interesting as reading the book itself.
Profile Image for rushi.
16 reviews
October 10, 2024
This was most definitely an entertaining read, the world crafted by Gilman brought forth questions on what the world would look like without men or gendered distinctions and also a realisation of how deeply rooted these gendered distinctions are in so many facets of life. The creative and extremely logical practices that were introduced in this book seemed so intuitive and felt as though they should be adopted immediately. However, I also doubt the ability of such a world to ever exist, or ever have existed, with these same practices that are celebrated as utopian can easily be written and characterised for a dystopia. I would still love for so many of these practices to be implemented and can see their fruition in society if properly implemented. Aside from the realistic and almost scientific part of the novel, I found the first person narrative really restricted this piece of fiction, as it wasn't until the latter half of the story that the narrative started to explore the voices and thoughts of the women. Before this point, it was so heavily based on the perception of women through a man's perspective (a most definitely unheard perspective!!) which exhaustingly relied on irony that "in fact women can do what the men thought they couldn't!". This irony humorous at first became tired quickly. Additionally the novel held some racist views and had no exploration of same sex attraction, which while understandable given Gilman's context was still annoying and soured the experience of the novel. Being written by a woman was the only reasons some of its flaws were acceptable because if a man had written such derivative female characters I would have hated this even more. (2.5 Stars)
Profile Image for Acacia.
19 reviews1 follower
September 21, 2022
Katie Bolick’s introduction in the book encapsulates Gilman work and her own essence of being best “ (Gilman) serve the rare function of not only inspiring our best selves, but also keeping us in contact with our own weaknesses, without which we wouldn’t be human at all”.
The works are great reflection pieces in which one can find relevance to the feminism movements. I think it is important as a reader’s due diligence to know the background the Author is coming from. As her political sentiments (outdated and harmful) can be found woven into her works. Interesting indeed.
Profile Image for Olivia.
81 reviews
April 16, 2018
I’m giving it 4-stars mainly for “The Yellow Wallpaper”. I did not enjoy her poetry and just couldn’t get into “Herland”.

I originally read “The Yellow Wallpaper” in college and it’s one of those stories that sticks with you. It was weird when I read it as an 18-20 year old. It wasn’t much less weird this time, but I now have the perspective of motherhood and postpartum depression survival. I can absolutely sympathize with the main character far more now than 25 years ago. Well-written from the mind of someone who survived postpartum depression.
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