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Paperback Woman: An Intimate Geography Book

ISBN: 0385498411

ISBN13: 9780385498418

Woman: An Intimate Geography

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Book Overview

A revised and updated anniversary edition of Natalie Angier's bestselling guide to--and celebration of--the female body National Book Award finalist A New York Times notable book "A tour de force, a... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

An informative, worthwhile and entertaining read...

.. others have missed the point of Woman, that it is a book celebrating female physiology and biology in a way that it often has not been by the (typically now but almost always in years past) male science writers. This is not to say that there are no good books about the female body, simply that this once should be taken in the construct in which it was conceived.Angier certainly does convey the wonder of the female body, the absolute miracle of the biology that creates and sustains life. And she also makes a compelling case for the argument that the biology of women has traditionally been seen as 'other,' with the norm being male, and that writing, opinion and diagnoses (particularly psychological) have often sprung from this misconception - the fact that every fetus starts of as female still does nothing to convince people that woman are not the second sex. Many of the recent books I've read in evolutionary biology highlight this basic dichotomy, with the male traits still somehow the 'better,' more highly evolved ones (of course, that many female writers feel differently illustrates clearly how science, a 'rational,' 'logical' and 'intellectual' discipline is nevertheless highly subjective).I think that Woman is marvelous in its celebration of woman and her unique capacity to give birth (with the help, of course...). The myths about menstruation that have been around forever - including the current theory du jour that women don't NEED to menstruate - have made it a curse, a major pain, a source of suffering, and it cretinaly is amazingly refreshing to have it and other parts of being female actually spoken of in wonder at nature's incredible artistry to devise such cool ways of keeping a woman's body healthy. I am not a scientist, so I cannot vouch for the accuracy of her scientific data, but I did learn a lot that has been borne out in other things that I've read. Angier's wit, intelligence and incredible writing made it impossible for me to put this book down, and I have since then recommended it to many women who have loved it - and who got sick of me saying 'wanna hear something cool?' I think this book is also important in the way it approaches female biology, not as something incidental but as part of the miracle of nature. In a society in which women are encouraged to hate their bodies, I think this book has incredible significance and recommend it most highly. It is, however, as much a social commentary as anything else, so for 'pure' science you might, as others have suggested here, want to look elsewhere as well.

Woman, An Intimate Geography

This is one of those books that I am considering buying for every woman I know: young, old, of all creeds, races, and religions.... even after completing it I am STILL floored by its appropriate, humorous, scientific, lyrical, and profound words.  It is empowering without any negativism.  There is not a shread of male-bashing in this work of art.   Natalie Angier is a science writer for the New York Times and her work is infused with just enough science to make all the fascinating issues she covers comprehensible to any and everyone who reads this book.   She covers the female body like no one ever has, and I don't just mean the chapters on breasts, the uterus, and the ovaries, but the hormones, the menstrual cycles, nursing babies, menopause, exercise, chemistry, and the psychology of being a woman.  I wish so much that this amazing piece of work had been around when I was 18 and wondering what the hell was WRONG with me! (nothing. apparently.  But who can tell an 18 year old anything.... maybe if I could have read it.....).  Angiers carefully weaves together the myths, the legends, the cultures, and even the misogyny from where we ALL come and gracefully and humorously meshes them with the studies, the sciences, the theories and the facts, and gives the reader an entire body of work on all of the issues about ourselves we are curious about.   It is book that teaches you something fascinating about how and why you are and work and play and love.  One of the themes that surrepticiously repeats in this book is the completely normal, completely natural, "you are SO ok - it's laughable to think otherwise" theme.  Women are complex and complicated creatures and we owe that to this magnificent temple called the body and we now have all the evidence and joy in this book to know that.

This is one fantastic book

I read this wonderful dissertation with wonder and a certain amount of awe. I recommend this book for any man that lives with or loves any woman who he is proud of. Since no man knows everything about women, then they just might need some help in understanding them, and learning what makes them tick; and why, along the way. This book tells it all, and does it in plain english using words and phrases that everyone can understand. It is a wonderful, warm and informative educational read from the first page to the last. It just might also be useful for women who want to learn more about their own bodies and mind, and what makes them tick, for their own personal purposes. I love my mate more than anything and will go to any length to try to please her. One way to accomplish this is to read quality material that is written about how women work, and why. This wonderful book fills that need in glorious detail on every page. I would say that this book is one that delievers way more than the mere title reveals. It is worth three times the asking price. I have read it three times and will read it again soon. Each time that I read it, I learn more, and find something that I missed the time before. Thank you, Ms. author for giving us this wonderful work about women and how they work. E-mail address [email protected]

Scientific poetry of the body

Woman: An Intimate Geography is the most delightful and informative book on the physiology of women I have ever read. The range of Angier's research leaves almost no aspect of the female body unexplored or unexplained. Even, for example, such barbaric rituals as infibulation and clitorodectomy (still shockingly practiced in as many as 28 countries) are depicted for us in a rare combination of absolute fidelity to scientific detail, and with a moral outrage that is paradoxically spiritual.WOMAN, throughout its nearly four hundred pages, is exquisitely written. By brilliantly blending her scientific data with acute personal insights and by her expert use of language--exuberant and optimistic when the message is merry, solemn and meticulous when the message is most serious--Angier manages to create for her reader a kind of scientific poetry of the body.Ms. Angier's book should appeal to women of all ages: to adolescents for whom she lucidly illuminates the lovely tapestries of their bodies; to women of child-bearing age whom her encyclopedic information will help in making the difficult reproductive decisions of our era; and it will appeal to older women who have lived through so much feminist history (and turmoil)since Simone de Beauvoir first expelled us from the Garden of Ignorance. Angier's stylistic eloquence bathes us all in her affection and respect for women; she blesses us with the strength and resilience of her language; she nourishes us, evoking our most primordial response even as we absorb her intellectual richness at their source--giving us what every human needs--affection and knowledge, from our stem cells to the final Silence.

Superb writing and delicious insights.

As a neurologist, scientist, and adult, who is on the male side of the great sexual dimorphism in our species, I learned more about the anatomy/physiology of the genitalia from this book, than in all my years of medical school, research career or clinical practice. The book was filled with wit and precision. I tried to read the book slowly to savor the passages.After reading the book I both look and think about the female, and about the male, with very new perspectives. Based on my hugely expanded knowledge base of anatomy and physiology, normal and pathologic, gained from reading Woman, my dreams and fantasies have been altered and are even better, my respect and sensitivity for the female and her differences are greater, and my sense of awe still pervades these thoughts. Since so much of our brain exists to successfully copulate and to reproduce, it is no wonder that there is an intrinsic fascination with the whole subject. Neuron after neuron, billions and billions together, signalled, BRAVO, for such superb writing and for the delicious insights.Lawrence Steinman, MD Professor of Neurological Sciences Stanford University
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