![]() ![]() “This nightmare-inducing collection is short but powerful, each tale as brilliant and absorbing as the one before…brilliant storytelling.” “This new collection will intrigue, awe, frighten, and inspire both stalwart fans and new readers looking for a heady spoonful of fantasy.” ![]() “Those who seem innocent are shown to be guilty, one-dimensional characters become more complicated, and mothers who once were absent are given presence and power.” “Gorgeous, cruel and almost wistful windows onto the dreamscapes and hard lessons of alternate universe…fairly tales with all the darkness intact.” ![]() “Gorgeously otherworldly…Any lover of retellings or original fairy tales will enjoy.” – The Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books, STARRED REVIEW ★ “Elegantly crafted…stylishly intricate illustrations…all fans of the darker side of folktales and folktale-like stories will find the stories satisfyingly full of pain, danger, and vengeance.” ![]() “Beautiful imagery conceived from precise, beautiful prose beautiful cover image and interior illustrations that creep across each page toward beautiful consummation beautiful lands inhabited by beautiful hearts.” – School Library Journal, STARRED REVIEW ★ “Strong writing, compelling stories, and gorgeous illustrations make this collection a must-have.” “Lushly designed and wonderfully rendered…Bardugo doesn’t twist familiar tales so much as rip them open.” ![]()
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![]() ![]() This time she heard the cracking and saw the small tears forming near its core. One of its blades grazed her but she moved in and delivered yet another punch. Immediately her vision sharpened again, her body moving to dodge the attacks from the damaged Centurion Ripper. Her mind barely understood just how damaged she was but a thousand felt like a good amount. Ilea heard the steel hitting the floor when she sacrificed a thousand points of mana to boost her healing. She stumbled back, using her arms to rip out the blades, blood quickly seeping out as her vision blurred. She only noticed a moment later that a blade was stuck in her skull and a second one had embedded itself into her neck. ![]() Screaming, Ilea focused on the previously dented part and delivered a fully powered punch, her arm clad in fire and ash as the machine was sent skidding back, falling down even. Her mana was slowly dwindling but with it being so defensive, she was still at two thirds. The machine was damaged already, its core not glowing but two of its legs were merely dragged along. When she had again reached the maximum buff from her Form of Ash and Ember, Ilea blinked in, focusing on her target alone while she ignored the blades rushing at her. ![]() ![]() (Also, if you're not one of those someones, I really think you should read Hood Feminism.)Īs the subtitle makes clear, Kendall's central thesis is that mainstream feminism in the United States has been anything but inclusive, despite being "a movement that draws much of its strength from the claim that it represents over half of the world's population." In prose that is clean, crisp, and cutting, Kendall reveals how feminism has both failed to take into account populations too often excluded from the banner of feminism and failed to consider the breadth of issues affecting the daily lives of millions of women. ![]() If you're someone who claims the mantel of feminism, who believes in the innate equality of all genders, who thinks that solidarity among communities of women is a core component of the world you want to live in, I strongly encourage you to read Mikki Kendall's debut essay collection, Hood Feminism: Notes from the Women That a Movement Forgot. Your purchase helps support NPR programming. Close overlay Buy Featured Book Title Hood Feminism Subtitle Notes from the Women That a Movement Forgot Author Mikki Kendall ![]() |