

In its financial statement for the year ended J, the statement said the National Women’s Law Center is the sole member of the National Women’s Law Center Fund LLC, which was organized in D.C. The National Women’s Law Center Action Fund was established as a 501(c)4 in D.C. in 1981, according to its financial statement. I wish everyone in this country would read it.-Melissa Febos, author of Abandon Me Explores the common experience of rape with uncommon nuance and intense tenderness.-YZ Chin, author of Though I Get Home Interrogates the terms of betrayal and the limits of redemption.-Tim Taranto, author of Ars Botanica Stunning.-Angela Pelster, author of Limber There is so much power in these pages.-Elissa Washuta, author of My Body is a Book of Rules Vanasco is a formidable talent.-Daniel Gumbiner, author of The Boatbuilder Wickedly clever and powerful.-Krystal A.The National Women’s Law Center was organized as a 501(c)3 in D.C. Creates a language for something we don't talk about.- "The Paris Review" Thought-provoking, unmooring, and haunting.- "NYLON" Utterly brilliant.- "Book Riot" Vanasco immediately makes you wonder how we can take so much about sexual assault for granted.- "The Times Literary Supplement" A literary feminist miracle.-Sophia Shalmiyev, author of Mother Winter A rigorous and nuanced investigation.-Lisa Locascio, author of Open Me About how important it is to speak about these oft-silenced experiences that cause so many to feel ashamed, scared, and alone.-NPR An essential, unforgettable work.-Erik Anderson, author of Flutter Point Astonishingly fierce.-Emily Geminder, author of Dead Girls and Other Stories Brilliant.-Megan Stielstra, author of The Wrong Way to Save Your Life Cuts through the silence of deep betrayal.-Amy Jo Burns, author of Shiner Exactly the book we need right now. Inimitable.- "Booklist, Starred Review" Striking. A work that has the potential to change the way we think and talk about rape and the people who commit it.- "Bitch" Perhaps the most important book of the season.- "Esquire" Sets the canon of #MeToo-era creative nonfiction on fire. A reckoning with injustice.-Laurie Halse Anderson "TIME" Gorgeous, harrowing, heartbreaking.-Carmen Maria Machado "Bustle" Heartfelt, painful, and essential.- "Shelf Awareness" Intrepid.


BUZZFEED CHESSY PROUT HOW TO
Vanasco's narrative pushes far past the flattened media narrative of Me Too and asks uncomfortable questions about how to talk about rape culture, toxic masculinity and gender, justice, and resilience.- "Shondaland" About violence and forgiveness, about friendship and the unwanted title of victim, about digging deeper and deeper to seek answers.- "The New York Times Book Review" An extraordinarily brave work of self- and cultural reflection.- "Kirkus, Starred Review" Bold, unsettling, and timely. A cuttingly funny meta-meditation on her own pain in the context of #MeToo.- "O, The Oprah Magazine" A gripping read and true fodder for the necessary reckoning with toxic masculinity.- "BuzzFeed" A remarkably nuanced account of the complicated and confusing emotions that surface when your rapist is someone you knew and trusted.- "The Cut" A stunning work of meta nonfiction.
