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Reviews tagging 'Abandonment'
Romantic Outlaws: The Extraordinary Lives of Mary Wollstonecraft and Her Daughter Mary Shelley by Charlotte Gordon
5 reviews
michayla13's review against another edition
4.5
Moderate: Suicide, Mental illness, Medical trauma, Infidelity, Animal death, Suicide attempt, Rape, Incest, Toxic relationship, Sexism, Pregnancy, Drug use, Death of parent, Animal cruelty, Terminal illness, Religious bigotry, Miscarriage, Medical content, Adult/minor relationship, Toxic friendship, Suicidal thoughts, Pedophilia, Grief, Forced institutionalization, Emotional abuse, Death, Child death, Cancer, Blood, and Abandonment
Minor: Suicide attempt, Miscarriage, Incest, Drug use, Animal cruelty, Sexual assault, Abandonment, Adult/minor relationship, Animal death, War, Terminal illness, Racism, Blood, Trafficking, Suicide, Sexual harassment, Rape, and Forced institutionalization
lindseyhall44's review
5.0
To anyone interested in the amazing lives of Mary Wollstonecraft and Mary Shelly, I would highly recommend!
Graphic: Death of parent, Religious bigotry, Abandonment, Adult/minor relationship, Animal cruelty, Animal death, Child death, Death, Grief, Infidelity, Medical content, Miscarriage, Pregnancy, Suicidal thoughts, Suicide attempt, Toxic relationship, and Violence
mariakureads's review against another edition
4.5
I'm saddened to say that before reading this book, I knew very little about either Mary Wollstonecraft and Mary Shelley, icons to me really, aside from that they were mother and daughter and both writers in their own rights, decades apart from each other. Enough but also not nearly once I got really into this book!
Gordon does a fantastic job of interweaving their histories through alternating chapters as it allowed me to see and grasp their similarities when they didn't even know each other as Wollstonecraft died after giving birth as well as keeping the reader engaged within the timeframe in which these women lived through because those additional paragraphs to the actual world events of the time really helped me see the battle that each was going through.
The similarities are so vivid and surreal as the book is presented in chronological order, starting with Wollstonecraft, allowing for a pace that I found easy to follow and before realizing seeing the differences between them as they were each their own person. It just so happens that thanks to the amount of research and documents presented by Gordon, I really couldn't escape the eeriness of their lives and how almost identical it sounded by the end. The daughter echoing back her mother is what I thought.
I can't believe that all these years later, both women are still having almost an identity crisis thanks in no part to the undoing of their own family members, society's view of them, and the amount of written work that is still being uncovered for both which is helping to shed some light on these two women. I can't imagine what Mary Shelley might have been like with her mother at her side but even more so what new ideas, radical even, that both mother and daughter could have contrived together as Wollstonecraft's words and theology impacted Shelley's work. Oh that would have been such a site.
Big thanks to Gordon for the attention to detail, not just in these women, but all the people that were included, friends and family, but also to the real world that surrounded them. Without those historical notes and nods, a lot may have fallen flat but what rights I have today as a woman are all thanks to all those women who fought and struggled before me, and here are two women that did that.
Graphic: Misogyny, Toxic relationship, Death of parent, Child death, and Death
Moderate: Chronic illness, Classism, Infidelity, Suicidal thoughts, Abandonment, and Toxic friendship
talonsontypewriters's review against another edition
4.5
Graphic: Terminal illness, Misogyny, Sexism, Grief, Mental illness, Chronic illness, Death, Death of parent, Suicidal thoughts, and Suicide attempt
Moderate: War, Classism, Miscarriage, Pedophilia, Domestic abuse, Medical content, Toxic friendship, Child abuse, Abandonment, Infidelity, Suicide, Adult/minor relationship, Cancer, Incest, Child death, Pregnancy, and Toxic relationship
Minor: Animal death, Bullying, Colonisation, Homophobia, Confinement, Racial slurs, Racism, Animal cruelty, Fatphobia, Fire/Fire injury, Xenophobia, Alcoholism, Eating disorder, Forced institutionalization, Rape, Ableism, and Sexual content
henrygravesprince's review against another edition
5.0
Graphic: Death of parent, Misogyny, Grief, Infidelity, Miscarriage, Suicide attempt, Child death, Death, Pregnancy, and Suicidal thoughts
Moderate: Suicide, Adult/minor relationship, Toxic friendship, War, Abandonment, Child abuse, Incest, Religious bigotry, and Toxic relationship
Minor: Animal death, Cancer, Homophobia, Pedophilia, and Rape
It is worth noting there’s also a moderate amount of discussion of capital punishment (particularly during the French Revolution), as well as minor discussion of graverobbing and corpse exhumation. That aside, the content warnings I’ve listed are moreso attributed to the events (& occasionally, people) the book covers than anything seeming to be endorsed by the author. There may be some things I missed, since I took a long break from reading in the middle, but I tried to mark down everything as best I could, based on how much they reoccur and how prominent they are within the biographies.