Description
Book Synopsis*WINNER OF THE UK BLACK PRIDE LITERARY PRIZE FOR NON-FICTION DIVA AWARDS 2017*
*AS SEEN ON TRANSFORMATION STREET*
''Opens minds, breaks down myths and vaporises prejudice - I loved it!'' Rebecca Root, star of Boy Meets Girl
''Funny, thoughtful and honest'' Stylist
''It''s a boy!'' or ''It''s a girl!'' are the first words almost all of us hear when we enter the world. Before our names, before we have likes and dislikes - before we, or anyone else, has any idea who we are. And two years ago, as Juno Dawson went to tell her mother she was (and actually, always had been) a woman, she started to realise just how wrong we''ve been getting it.
Gender isn''t just screwing over trans people, it''s messing with everyone. From little girls who think they can''t be doctors to teenagers who come to expect street harassment. From exclusionist feminists to ''alt-right'' young men. From men who can''t cry to the wo
Trade Review
One of the bravest, freshest voices -- Laura Dockrill * Observer *
This memoir ... got me underlining, and texting friends, frequently. -- Stephanie Burt * TLS *
Part memoir, part manifesto, The Gender Games is filled with the type of funny, thoughtful and honest writing that has made Dawson a multi-award winning YA author...Frank, witty, and educational' * Stylist *
If you want to be well informed about what it menas to be trans, I can highly recommend Juno's book The Gender Games. It's a funny, honest read and clears up a lot of confusion and misinformation -- Lorraine Kelly * The Sun *
This book is incredible, I loved it so much -- Emma Gannon * CTRL ALT DELETE podcast *
A saucy, sassy, sweary look at gender, and how it trips and entraps us. -- Suzanne Harrington * Irish Examiner *
Funny, thoughtful and honest writing ... It's soberingly relevant and makes you want to #smashthepatriarchy * Stylist *
Opens minds, breaks down myths and vaporises prejudice - I loved it! * Rebecca Root *
Not only is this book incredibly informative, it's also very funny. * Zoe, Readabilitea *
It's not often as a grown-up that someone makes you sit up and re-examine not only your own identity, but your attitudes to an entire social group. But that's the effect this thoughtful, articulate woman had on me. ... Dawson's book is eminently readable and often very funny. * Marianne Taylor, The Herald *
Informative and entertaining. I'd recommend it to anyone and everyone: we all have something to learn about gender. * Chloe Scaling, Palatinate *