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5+ Works 262 Members 12 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Includes the name: Joey Soloway

Image credit: Tblackburnla / CC BY-SA 4.0

Works by Joey Soloway

Associated Works

Six Feet Under: Better Living Through Death (2003) — Contributor — 177 copies, 2 reviews
The Feminist Utopia Project: Fifty-Seven Visions of a Wildly Better Future (2015) — Contributor — 171 copies, 2 reviews
Tomboyland: Essays (2020) — Introduction, some editions — 168 copies, 5 reviews
Fired! Tales of the Canned, Canceled, Downsized, and Dismissed (2006) — Contributor — 97 copies, 6 reviews
Nobody Needs to Know: A Memoir (2023) — Introduction, some editions — 74 copies, 2 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Soloway, Joey
Other names
Soloway, Jill (birth)
Soloway, Joey
Birthdate
1965-09-26
Gender
non-binary
Education
Lane Technical College Prep High School
University of Wisconsin–Madison
Occupations
film director
producer
writer
Relationships
Soloway, Faith (sibling)
Short biography
Joey Solomon announced their name change in June of 2020 via Instagram. They use singular they/them pronouns.
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Chicago, Illinois, USA
Places of residence
Silver Lake, California, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

12 reviews
I liked the book a lot, however there were two problems that I had with it: First, the skipping back and forth in time was sometimes confusing. I understand that that's often how life feels, that as you go through something you look back and say, "Oh, the seeds of this were actually planted years ago, how did I not notice them growing quietly into this thing?" All the same, it sometimes left me confused about when exactly these events took place, or how much time had elapsed between events show more (often, much more than I realized). More clarity on that front would have helped me.

Second, there was very little clarity about what was going on when the author moved from a hetero identity to a lesbian identity. We have the author living a cis female life in a hetero marriage, and then the author is at a lesbian bowling event and falling in love with a woman. I mean, why was the author there? Was there already self-recognition of their lesbianism, was this a hetero-married cis woman invading an LGBTQ space for shits and giggles, or was this somehow research for the series that the author was writing? It is not clear. After this section the author explains that since their parent came out as trans, their own problems with being femme and female had started to bubble up, but what does that mean? It's a toss-away, an interesting aside that I think is supposed to explain but fails. This issue of the author's move from identifying as straight to identifying as gay is simultaneously a small thing and a big thing. Small because the rest of the book still made sense and was good to read, but big because this is a beat change, a moment after which all becomes different, and it's not fully clear to the reader how we got here.

A final note: this book talks very little about the author's parent who is trans. To be fair this book is not her story, it's the author's story.
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This was pretty fun. It was written in 2002, before Jill Soloway became a fairly big name in entertainment for heading up Amazon's Transparent, and I'd be interested to hear how much she's changed since there. This book also made me realize I have no idea what racism looks like anymore -- I just naturally assume every comment about a person's physical appearance is racist and then wonder why it's allowed to be published. That was distracting.
Even though I haven't seen "Transparent," I'm familiar with Jill Soloway's television work and I think I read their previous book. I really enjoyed everything about this. It's slightly dishy, very honest, and doesn't skirt away from Jill's mistakes. I wonder how it will age.
I really enjoyed this book of essays by Jill Soloway. I loved the glimpses into her life and how it has turned her into the feminist that she is today. I love that it's filled with humor and quirkiness and an ability to take feminist theory and mak...more I really enjoyed this book of essays by Jill Soloway. I loved the glimpses into her life and how it has turned her into the feminist that she is today. I love that it's filled with humor and quirkiness and an ability to take feminist theory show more and make it simple. The idea that all women shouldn't be afraid to be feminist and to care about sex and themselves without horrible labels and fears.

And okay, it's amusing. Written by someone who has a dark sense of humor that I tend to enjoy.(less)
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Statistics

Works
5
Also by
10
Members
262
Popularity
#87,813
Rating
½ 3.8
Reviews
12
ISBNs
16
Languages
1
Favorited
1

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