Feminism & feminist theory

  • Reading Lolita In Tehran

    £9.99

    This is the inspirational tale of eight women who defied the confines of life in revolutionary Iran through the joy and power of literature.

  • Moranthology

    £18.99

    In ‘How to Be a Woman’, the author was limited to a single topic: women. In ‘Moranthology’ the author was free to tackle the rest of the world: Ghostbusters, Twitter, caffeine, panic attacks, Michael Jackson’s memorial service, being a middle-class majijuana addict, and binge-drinking.

  • Shattered

    £9.99

    Rebecca Asher draws on the experiences of mothers and fathers in the UK and around the world in setting out a manifesto for a new model of family life. Engaging and provocative, ‘Shattered’ is a call to arms for a revolution in parenting.

  • How To Be A Woman

    £8.99

    Part memoir, part rant, ‘How To Be A Woman’ follows Caitlin Moran from her terrible 13th birthday, through adolescence, the workplace, strip-clubs, love, fat, abortion, TopShop, motherhood and beyond.

  • Handmaid’s Tale

    £9.99

    The Republic of Gilead offers Offred only one function – to breed. If she deviates, she will be killed. But even an oppressive state cannot obliterate desire – neither Offred’s nor that of the two men on which her future hangs.

  • Introducing Feminism

    £7.99

    This is a guide to the struggle for women’s rights – a stormy history of conservative male opposition from the outside and disagreements within the movement.

  • Bell Jar

    £9.99

    The Bell Jar is Sylvia Plath’s account of a young woman’s breakdown. Renowned for its intensity and its vivid prose, the novel follows her attempted suicide, hospitilisation and recovery.

Nomad Books