Women Without Kids: The Revolutionary Rise of an Unsung Sisterhood

Women Without Kids: The Revolutionary Rise of an Unsung Sisterhood

Ruby Warrington

Enjoyment: 5.0Quality: 5.0Characters: Plot:

What is “woman” if not “mother”? Anything she wants to be. Foregoing motherhood has traditionally marked a woman as “other.” With no official place setting for her in our society, she has hovered on the sidelines: the quirky girl, the neurotic career obsessive, the “eccentric” aunt. Instead of continuing to paint women without kids as sad, self-obsessed, or somehow dysfunctional, what if we saw them as boldly forging a first-in-a-civilization vision for a fully autonomous womankind? Or as journalist and thought leader Ruby Warrington asks, What if being a woman without kids were in fact its own kind of legacy? Taking in themes from intergenerational healing to feminism to environmentalism, this personal look and anthropological dig into a stubbornly taboo topic is a timely and brave reframing of what it means not to be a mom. Our experiences and discourse around non-motherhood are central to women’s ongoing fight for gender equality. And whether we are childless by design or circumstance, we can live without regret, shame, or compromise. Bold and tenderhearted, Women Without Kids seeks first and foremost to help valorize a path that is the natural consequence of women having more say about the choices we make and how our lives play out. Within this, it unites the unsung sisterhood of non-mothers―no longer pariahs or misfits, but as a vital part of our evolution and collective healing as women, as humans, and as a global family.


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  • laurengrims5021
    Mar 30, 2025
    Enjoyment: 5.0Quality: 5.0Characters: Plot:

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    Apr 02, 2025
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  • CindyC
    Mar 09, 2025
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    I was so disappointed with this book! I'm not sure what I expected, but this was not for me. I appreciated the sections highlighting how motherhood is still glorified in our pronatalist society and how childfree women are seen as "other" or selfish, as I certainly have been made to feel this way in the past. But there's far too much on how being childfree can stem from trauma or your childhood (really not true for a lot of women) and too little on the joys of being childfree. Maybe it's intended for people who are still struggling with their decision to be childfree, or who feel bad about it. Sadly, I was hoping for something more celebratory.

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