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Read advance reader review of Yale Needs Women by Anne Gardiner Perkins, page 3 of 4

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Yale Needs Women by Anne Gardiner Perkins

Yale Needs Women

How the First Group of Girls Rewrote the Rules of an Ivy League Giant

by Anne Gardiner Perkins
  • BookBrowse Review:
  • Critics' Consensus (6):
  • Readers' Rating (26):
  • First Published:
  • Sep 10, 2019, 400 pages
  • Paperback:
  • Jul 2021, 400 pages
  • Rate this book

About This Book

Reviews


Page 3 of 4
There are currently 24 member reviews
for Yale Needs Women
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  • Shelley C. (Eastport, NY)
    Boo to Yale, Not Boola, Boola!
    In the fall of 1969, I was finishing my senior year at Hunter College in NYC, a school that had admitted men for the first time only a few years before. I was totally unaware of the drama taking place in Yale or Princeton or any other private college. I had no clue about the traumas those women faced as I enjoyed my studies and the social life afforded me because of my choice of school. But I do know now!

    What an eye opener "Yale Needs Women" is! It is informative. It is beautifully written. And it is a must read for anyone with a heart and a conscience, male or female.

    Ms. Perkins has written a compelling narrative that brings to life the trials and tribulations of some of those brave women who endured their untenable situation with as much dignity as possible, and actually fought back!

    This book is so relevant today, when the, "MeToo" movement, has forced everyone to take note, and in many cases, take ownership of the misogyny that has gripped this nation for far too long. Bravo Ms. Perkins and bravo to those women who endured Yale during the early years of the women's movement for equality.
  • Gaye R. (Coupeville, WA)
    Women and Equality
    As one reads Yale Needs Women, you are struck by the courage and perseverance of the first women students of Yale. Then you ask yourself, where is that courage and perseverance today to continue the work toward equality for all. As this book portrays, the journey of equality is never easy, never quick and is still needed today. As Yale women celebrate 50 years of coeducation, their stories also prove to be inspiration for today.
  • Lorri S. (Pompton Lakes, NJ)
    Scaling those ivy covered walls
    Interesting look at the women reluctantly admitted to Yale in the late 60's, early 70's. Perkins introduces you to a sample of women from that class and gives you a sense of the potential of so many women that went virtually unrecognized.

    Yale was meant to produce leaders and it was incomprehensible that women could be leaders. They could be bussed in for parties and assessed for their beauty and wifely qualities, but at Yale women were meant to support leaders, not to be them. But they times they were a-changing, and in order to stay financially viable (it often comes down to money, doesn't it) Yale had to change with the times. Very interesting to witness the transition through the stories told in this book.

    Would be a good book group selection with a lot of meat to discuss.
  • Barbara C. (Riverside, CA)
    We are still disadvantaged!
    Thinking of current US news, women continue to suffer as second class citizens in many ways. Yes, we attend Yale and Harvard with men, but we make less money in general after we graduate. This book reads like a well written history book which it really is. I enjoyed the weaving of US history into the narrative. A good dissertation. The book included the complete list of references for her well-written life's work.
  • Ruth H. (Sebring, FL)
    Finally, Women at Yale
    Illustrious Yale University! For males it was the college of choice and prestigious to be admitted. But for women prior to 1969, it was untouchable. The author writes an enlightening story not only of discrimination but the beginning of woman's lib and the feminist movement. It is shocking to imagine how difficult it was to be a female at Yale, especially since the civil rights movement was long over. This book is a nice smooth read with lots of facts and even pictures of the ladies who fought so hard to make Yale a reality for women. A very interesting glimpse of unknown history brought to light!
  • Julie P. (Spring Lake, MI)
    More than about Yale
    The author started writing this as a PhD dissertation, but it reads as anything but! This is a very engaging account of the first group of women students at Yale in 1969, but this book encompasses so much more - the struggle for women's rights in the 1970s, campus safety in the early days of coeducation, campus civil rights, sex education, sexual harassment, protesting against the Vietnam war, and more. Some fascinating history swirling around the country during this time, with Yale University in its midst. My favorite parts? The personal stories of the individual coeds - their struggles with making friends, fending off male advances, fitting in, and advancing their causes, such as protesting police brutality against blacks, starting the first field hockey team for women, and forming an all-women rock band. Yale Needs Women is an excellent example of narrative nonfiction that reads like fiction - not something I would normally have picked up but so glad I did.
  • Peggy A. (Morton Grove, IL)
    The Fight is Not Over!
    Anne Perkins has written a scholarly narrative of Yale before and after women were admitted in 1969. Basically, their acceptance was a default position. No one really wanted them including the President, Kingman Brewster, and board members...all male, of course! Due to declining enrollment and Yale men needing " a prized piece of chattel", the establishment acquiesced. What a warm welcome these 575 women received!!

    Although this is a well researched book with over 70 pages of footnotes, the author managed to expand what could have been a narrowly engaging story into an engrossing one that follows the personal narratives of five women. Socially isolated, unwelcome, used as spokesmen for their entire gender in class, they were truly PIONEERS. These were women with true grit who blazed a trail for themselves and those that followed.

    It makes one realize the empowerment of women has a long trajectory with gains slow in the making. I am glad that such a fine writer and indefatigable researchers as Anne Perkins took on the job of telling their story!

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