Women’s Perspectives

(In order of publication)

Letters That Breathe Fire: El Corno Emplumado / The Plumed Horn

By Margaret Randall

A revealing look at literary life in the 1960s in letters from some of its stars.

Living Toward Justice: A Time Capsule

Edited by Sonya E. Pritzker

An illustrated exploration of how practitioners and scholars in the field of embodied social justice (ESJ) seek to incorporate justice in everyday life.

"ArtMill: A Story of Sustainable Creativity in Bohemia" by Barbara Benish
ArtMill: A Story of Sustainable Creativity in Bohemia

By Barbara Benish

Barbara Benish tells her story as a female artist who found a way to build a life in a rural, post-totalitarian, foreign country, it is a testament to the resilience of the people of that small nation that was sacrificed in the tumultuous chess game of colonial superpowers dividing up Europe after the devastation of WWII.

More Letters from the Edge: Outrider Conversations

By Margaret Randall

A collection of letters exchanged between the author and four “outriders”—artists, writers, and activists who risk everything to confront censorship, injustice, and the constraints of convention.

Letters from the Edge: Outrider Conversations by Margaret Randall
Letters from the Edge: Outrider Conversations

By: Margaret Randall

By excerpting from letters she exchanged with five irreverent writers and artists, Margaret Randall constructs conversations that open windows on four pivotal moments in her life and on world events.

Inspired and Outraged: The Making of a Feminist Physician 

By: Alice Rothchild

A remarkable autobiography—written entirely in free verse—of Alice Rothchild’s journey from 1950’s good girl to irreverent, feisty, feminist obstetrician-gynecologist forging her own direction in the contradictory, sexist world of medicine.

The Women’s Revolution: How We Changed Your Life

By Muriel Fox

A comprehensive, indexed memoir about the Second Wave women’s movement by the cofounder of the National Organization for Women (NOW), Muriel Fox offers rare, firsthand stories of 29 women and one man built mainly from her own hundreds of letters, clippings, notes, and photographs that she archived in her “Feminism Files.”

I Opened the Gate Laughing Cover
I Opened the Gate Laughing: An Inner Journey — 20th Anniversary Edition

By Mayumi Oda

A tribute to the power of spiritual practice, creative expression, and true self-acceptance I

Opened the Gate Laughing is the story of one woman’s journey to creative freedom through gardening and the teachings of Zen. I Opened the Gate Laughing is a resource for anyone seeking a slower pace, a sacred space, and a garden path.

Luck

By Margaret Randall
Illustrations by Barbara Byers

Luck is a collection of essays that combines scholarly research with personal experience, producing texts both intimate and illuminating. Always attentive to the world around her and the one within, Randall has brought us her most relevant and powerful essays to date.

Stuff: Instead of a Memoir

By Lucy R. Lippard

Stuff: Instead of a Memoir is a short, abundantly illustrated autobiography of the American art writer, activist, and curator Lucy R. Lippard. Describing tchotchkes, photographs, and art in her unpretentious New Mexico home, the author informally narrates key events and relationships in her 86-year-long, highly creative life.

Divining Chaos: The Autobiography of an Idea

By Aviva Rahmani, Foreword by Lucy Lippard

Divining Chaos provides a personal memoir of eco-artist Aviva Rahmani, offering her Trigger-Point theory thesis and unparalleled exclusivity to the moments in her life that shaped her as an artist and activist. Rahmani shares intimate decisions that shaped her life’s work.

Risking a Somersault in the Air: Conversations with Nicaraguan Writers (Revised edition)

By Margaret Randall

First published in 1984, Risking a Somersault in the Air is a collection of interviews with fourteen of Nicaragua’s most important writers-revolutionaries. Filling in the gaps with new photographs and updates on the writers in the time since the original edition, the book looks at the sacrifices, conflicts, and solutions of the creative artists of Nicaragua’s revolution. Randall shows how Nicaragua, like its poetry, is an expression of great love, imagination, and liberation.

Artists in My Life

By Margaret Randall
Forewords by Mary Gabriel and Ed McCaughan

Artists in My Life is a collection of intimate and conversational accounts of the visual artists that have impacted the renowned poet-activist Margaret Randall on her own journey as an artist. Each story offers insight into the artist’s life and work, and analyses the impact it had on Randall’s own work and its impact on the larger art community. The work strives to answer bigger questions about visual art as a whole and its lasting political influence on the world stage.

Cover of My Life in 100 Objects
My Life in 100 Objects

By Margaret Randall

My Life in 100 Objects is a personal reflection on the events and moments that shaped the life and work of one extraordinary woman. With a masterful, poetic voice, Margaret Randall uses talismanic objects and photographs as launching points for her nonlinear narrative. Interwoven throughout are her most precious relationships, her growth as an artist, and her brave, revolutionary spirit.

Cover of Visitors. Ann Snitow with short hair and circular, red glasses clapping her hands, smiling
Visitors: An American Feminist in East Central Europe

By Ann Snitow
Foreword by Susan Faludi

Visitors tells the story of the well-known professor and feminist activist Ann Snitow’s adventures as an organizer in East Central Europe after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. With wit and empathy, Snitow captures change as it unfolds and presents extraordinary insight into the origins and development of an internationalist feminism that is still evolving today.

Cover of Such a Pretty Girl. A black and white picture of Nadina LaSpina as a little girl with a bow in her hair
Such a Pretty Girl: A Story of Struggle, Empowerment, and Disability Pride

By Nadina LaSpina

A disability rights activist tells the story of her liberation from oppressive standards of normalcy, showing that freedom comes not through cure, but through organizing to end exclusion from public and social life. 

Cover of Openings: A Memoir from the Women's Art Movement, New York City 1970-1992 by Sabra Moore, with a black and white picture of Sabra Moore walking down a New York sidewalk next to windows filled with images and grafitti
Openings: A Memoir from the Women’s Art Movement, New York City 1970–1992

By Sabra Moore
Forewords by Lucy R. Lippard and Margaret Randall

An account of the women’s art movement in New York City from 1970 to 1992 and how these women created politically and personally effective art works, exhibitions, actions, and institutions.

Cover of In the Company of Rebels. A black and white photograph of a young, female protestor standing against police at the shutdown of the communal People's Park in Berkeley
In the Company of Rebels: A Generational Memoir of Bohemians, Deep Heads, and History Makers

By Chellis Gledinning

A personal portrait of 46 activists, artists, radicals, and thinkers who raised issues of justice, the environment, feminism, and colonialism