Cheryl Strayed - Life Lessons From 29 Heroines Who Dared to Break the Rules
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In Praise of DIFFICULT WOMEN
In 29 takes, Karen Karbo catalogs the ways in which a woman rankles: She can be independent, exacting, impatient, persistent, opinionated, angry, ambitious, confident, or just plain visible. Youll need two copies!
STACY SCHIFF , best-selling author of The Witches
Part biography, part inspiration, all parts fascinating, In Praise of Difficult Women is a wise and hilarious reminder of the importance of being a pain in the ass. Keep it by your bedside.
MEGHAN DAUM , best-selling author of The Unspeakable
Difficult seems absolutely delightful in these absorbing, inspiring, and often surprising portraits that raise important questions about femininity and culture, power and bravery. Though Karbo masterfully covers a wide range of exceptional women, what unites them is how they make difficult a quality not to avoidbut to aspire to with gusto.
LORI GOTTLIEB , best-selling author of Marry Him
Give me difficult women or give me death! In this marvelous book, Karen Karbo illuminates the paths of women who refused to shut up, sit down, hold still, behave, or smile on anyones terms but their own. A perfect manifesto as to why now is the time to get loud, unflinching, and brazen, exactly as we are.
LIDIA YUKNAVITCH , author of The Misfits Manifesto
Published by National Geographic Partners, LLC
1145 17th Street NW Washington, DC 20036
Copyright 2018 Karen Karbo. All rights reserved. Reproduction of the whole or any part of the contents without written permission from the publisher is prohibited.
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC and Yellow Border Design are trademarks of the National Geographic Society, used under license.
ISBN9781426217746
Ebook ISBN9781426217951
Since 1888, the National Geographic Society has funded more than 12,000 research, exploration, and preservation projects around the world. National Geographic Partners distributes a portion of the funds it receives from your purchase to National Geographic Society to support programs including the conservation of animals and their habitats.
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Interior design: Nicole Miller
18/QGF/1
v5.2
a
This book is dedicated to Fiona and Stephanie,
and to daughters everywhere:
Be difficult.
Whatever you choose, however many roads you travel, I hope that you choose not to be a lady. I hope you will find some way to break the rules and make a little trouble out there. And I also hope that you will choose to make some of that trouble on behalf of women.
NORA EPHRON,
Wellesley Commencement Speech, 1996
FOREWORD
THE FIRST DIFFICULT WOMAN I KNEW was named Myrtle. Elderly and white haired, single and childless, she lived next door to my family when I was five. A spinster, my father told me one day, his tone so disparaging it sparked my interest. She thinks she can do whatever she wants to do, he said. Even at five, I knew this to be in violation of a cardinal rule in the unwritten but widely known rule book of what it means to be female.
Intrigued, I studied Myrtle from afar, deeply curious about what a woman who thought she could do whatever she wanted to do might actually do. But my findings were a disappointment. Doing whatever she wanted to do, at least in this particular case, turned out to be nothing more than to play her piano in the early eveningsthe melodic thunder of it spilling from her windows into our yard, where I did gymnastics with my sister while pretending not to be a spy. I dont recall a single conversation with Myrtle, and yet the fact of her existence stuck to me like a burr. Perhaps because even all those years ago, I knew that I, too, wanted to be the kind of woman who did what she wanted to do.
In my 20s, I named my truck after Myrtle. Im not generally one to assign human qualities to automobiles, but this truck was different, and the name fit. A 1979 Chevy LUV pickup, Myrtle was more companion than vehicle, more confidante than mass of metal and machinery. In her I could go anywhere, and did. From New York to Alabama to Minnesota to Wyoming to Arizona to California to Oregon and points in between, that truck was my home away from home on countless weeks-long, low-budget road trips. I slept alone amid the vast darkness of national forests on a futon Id laid out in the trucks long bed, cooking dinner solo in small-town parks on a camp stove propped on the tailgate. In Myrtles rusted bodyonto which Id plastered bumper stickers that said things like Feminism Is the Radical Notion That Women Are People and Question Authority and Well-Behaved Women Seldom Make HistoryI had my first taste of what it felt like to do what the original Myrtle had done. I too had defied one of the cardinal rules in the unwritten but widely known rule book of what it means to be female: Into the wildest places, Id ventured alone.
I thought of those two Myrtles and the two younger versions of myself as I read this book, which is chock-full of people who remind us, by the example of their lives, that rules are powerful only if we obey them. These 29 fascinating, moving, entertaining, and inspiring essays explore the many facets of what it means to be female and difficultwhich is really another way of saying female and brave enough to express the full range of ones humanity. Instead of carrying out the wishes of others, the accomplished women in these pages did what they wanted to do, the way they wanted to do it. Without apology, they decided to be ambitious and bold, adventurous and emotional, brainy and defiant, incorrigible and outlandish, determined and badass.
They said no in a world that expects women to say yes, and yes in a world that doesnt even bother to ask them the question.
Their stories matter because they teach us how to live, much in the same way that old, outdated-from-the-start rule book of what it means to be female tried to do. Each story offers us another version, another path, another way of seeing women and being one.
Theyre also a lot of fun to read. Each chapter felt to me like I finally had the goods on the mysterious woman who lived next door. We are led to vividly imagine the young Jane Goodall doing her first research while camping in the central African bush with her mother, as well as the unflinching pain that informed Frida Kahlos most exquisite paintings. We contemplate Laverne Coxs undaunted courage as a trans woman and the nerve it took for Lena Dunham to flaunt what most perceive as imperfection. We delve into the essence of Elizabeth Warrens persistence and Billie Jean Kings competitive drive and Eva Perns fanaticism, among so much more.
And, through these perceptive and personal portraits, we get a portrait of Karen Karbo herself. I happen to know shes also a woman who threw out the rule book of what it means to be female. She replaced it with this book instead.
Cheryl Strayed
Author of Wild and Tiny Beautiful Things
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