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A review by moonyreadsbystarlight
S/He by Minnie Bruce Pratt
reflective
5.0
This is the sort of memoir that you can tell is written by a poet. Told in series of vignettes, Minnie Bruce Pratt recalls parts of her life from her childhood in a mostly white southern town, through her marriage to a man and subsequently coming out as a lesbian, and experiences with a variety of lovers until finding Leslie Feinberg. There are reflections on her experience of activism, lesbian community, her own experience of gender as a femme, sexuality and autonomy, and so much more. As much as this is about her experience and her and Leslie's relationship, it is also about the time, community, with a lot about importance of solidarity regarding race and gender. There are elements that are vulnerable and visceral, raw and erotic, and reflective and layered
Graphic: Infidelity, Misogyny, Racism, Sexual assault, Sexual content, Transphobia, Medical content, and Injury/Injury detail
Moderate: Alcoholism, Body shaming, Hate crime, Rape, and Police brutality
The author describes having her children taken away after she leaves her husband (not a long drawn out scene, but it is mentioned a lot and another person towards the end experiences something similar).
There is depiction and discussion of blackface