On Strike Against God
Joanna Russ's On Strike Against God is remarkable for its deft intertwining of many themes: not only the overt one of coming out, but many intricately (and inevitably) interlaced stories of alienation, a search for community and rebellion against how our society defines women.
Reviews

Elena Kuran@elenakatherine
Highlights

lily lily @lilyanyways
There’s this club, you see. But they won’t let you in. So you cry in a corner for the rest of your life or you change your ways and feel rotten because it isn’t you, or you go looking for another club. But this club is the world. There’s only one

lily lily @lilyanyways
Why did Ellen forget the classic exchange? I mean the one where they say But aren’t you for human liberation? and you say Women’s liberation is for women, not men, and they say You’re selfish. First you have to liberate the children (because they’re the future) and then you have to liberate the men (because they’ve been so deformed by the system) and then if there’s any liberation left you can take it into the kitchen and eat it