November 2024
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    17 Comments

    1. Reading-In-Serenity on

      Anything for a hit by Dorothy Carvello

      Edit : Also goodreads has a list about feminism and music with about 120 books. Might be good to explore.

    2. LankySasquatchma on

      That’s a confirmation bias if I’ve seen one. Hope you pass the time while not expanding your horizons!

    3. Reading-In-Serenity on

      Can’t stop the girls by Lily E Hirsch (haven’t read this one just heard about it)

    4. latinnameluna on

      maybe not exactly what you’re looking for, but *the final revival of opal & nev* by dawnie walton is a novel about a black woman and the white man she makes music with and the fallout of their career. it delves into the racism and misogyny/misogynoir opal faces.

    5. SecretLoathing on

      “Boring Girls”, Sara Taylor.

      > A visceral story of friendship, music, and bloody revenge Rachel feels like she doesn’t fit in ― until she finds heavy metal and meets Fern, a kindred spirit. The two form their own band, but the metal scene turns out to be no different than the misogynist world they want to change. Violent encounters escalate, and the friends decide there’s only one way forward . . . A bloodstained journey into the dark heart of the music industry, Boring Girls traces Rachel’s deadly coming of age, Fern at her side. As the madness deepens, their band’s success heightens, and their taste for revenge grows ravenous.

    6. She Bop: The Definitive History of Women in Pop Music by Lucy O’Brien. It is much more engaging than the title makes it sound and covers the good and the bad going all the way back to the blues era.

      I haven’t read it, but I bet Lita Ford’s book would also cover this pretty well. She rocked just as hard as the dudes in the 80s but they only wanted women as sex objects.

    7. victorianwench on

      Daisy jones and the Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid. This one’s a fictional take on (I’m pretty sure?) Fleetwood Mac/Stevie Nicks. I remember enjoying it, honestly probably one of my favorites of her books.

    8. Publius_Romanus on

      Two autobiographies come to mind: the one by Pat Benatar, and the one written by Ann and Nancy Wilson of Heart.

    9. Jeanette Mccurdy’s I’m Glad My Mom Died touches on this, but it is mostly about child acting.

    10. Electric Ladyland by Lisa Renee Rhodes on women in rock

      Woman Walk the Line by Holly Gleason on women in country

      and might be older than what you’re looking for but Sounds and Sweet Airs by Anna Beer on early women composers who have been ignored or forgotten

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