#ReadWomen: 8 Books to Read This Month (March 2025)

Some of My Favorite IVP Academic Women Scholars

Engaging Scripture (with Dr. Nijay K. Gupta)
Question of the Day: It's #WomensHistoryMonth. What books on women's history, about women, or even by women are you reading? #readwomen
Oh no, Alice Munro has died 🖤
Our half-Canadian household has many of her books and I'm glad to have introduced my mom to her wonderful short stories, even shortly before she was awarded the Nobel Prize. I'll go re-read some of her stuff now #readWomen
Trying to find some time while striking to do more leisure reading. I hardly ever have the mental capacity or desire for non fiction outside work so it is a joy to be able to slot some in between the fiction for once #Books #ToReadPile #ReadWomen

Hmmm. Qiu Miaojin's Last Words from Montmartre is probably *not* the perfect book to welcome the Year of the Rabbit with now is it? (iykyk)

#QiuMiaojin #LesbianLiterature #ChineseLiterature #TaiwaneseLiterature #LiteratureInTranslation #readwomen #WomenInTranslation

December 2022 Reads for the Rest of Us

Each month, we provide Ms. readers with a list of new books being published by writers from historically excluded groups. I want to do my part in the disruption of the “norm” in the book world for far too long—white, cis, heterosexual, male—and to amplify indie publishers and amazing works by writers who are women, Black, Indigenous, Latinx, APIA/AAPI, international, queer, trans, nonbinary, disabled, fat, immigrant, Muslim, neurodivergent, sex-positive or of other historically marginalized identities. You know ... the rest of us.

Ms. Magazine