Leanne Shapton is an artist, author and publisher and recipient of the 2012 National Book Critic's Circle Award for autobiography. Her most recent book, Women in Clothes, was a collaboration with Sheila Heti and Heidi Julavits. She lives in New York with her family.
Like the very best non-fiction, Women in Clothes leaves you
convinced that its subject might, in fact, be a way of
understanding everything worth trying to understand. More
extraordinarily, it also manages, through the cumulative power of
all these individuals' words, to do what the best and most honest
fiction does: it makes you feel less alone
*Guardian*
I can't put Women in Clothes down. Like a cross between Edie, Our
Bodies Ourselves + The Gentlewoman: ADDICTIVE.
*Miranda July*
Offers extraordinary, and unusual, insights into our relationship
with clothes ... the collection of experiences is broad and
unfiltered ... so many voices might have been overwhelming but
together they make a surprisingly consistent and companionable
chorus
*Financial Times*
If you buy one book about personal style, make it this one. Women
in Clothes... is an admirable and earnest attempt to unravel the
snarled thread that runs between the way women look and how they
feel about it... The cathartic urgency with which the book's
contributors write suggests they themselves didn't realize they had
so much to say about clothes. Maybe it was just that nobody ever
asked
*Elle*
From an initial conversation between three girl crush-worthy
authors, a book appeared: Women in Clothes is a look at why and how
we wear what we wear, in 600+ meticulously and beautifully designed
pages of essays and conversation, with every possible permutation
of women exploring their personal history through their clothing
choices.
*Flavorwire, 25 Must-Read Books*
Rich with detail, the must-read anthology shows how daily sartorial
decisions speak volumes
*Lucky magazine*
A gloriously eclectic account of fashion choices
*Sunday Telegraph*
A refreshingly honest and often complex look at how we present
ourselves visually to the outside world. And at a time when fashion
and feminism frequently appear in the same sentence, it's an
important book for women
*Style.com*
Women in Clothes looks like a novel, reads like a passed note from
your best friend...Seeing the breadth of answers in the aggregate
is fascinating, and comforting...It's nice to know how many people
live as I do: with piles of clothes on the floor but nothing, ever,
to wear
*Grantland*
A thoughtful, droll and often moving tome ... amusing, enlightening
and often startlingly honest
*Interview*
Poems, interviews, pieces that read like diary or journal
entries-all these responses help the editors fulfill their aims: to
liberate readers from the idea that women have to fit a certain
image or ideal, to show the connection between dress and "habits of
mind," and to offer readers "a new way of interpreting their
outsides."
"What are my values?" one woman asks. "What do I want to express?"
Those questions inform the multitude of eclectic responses gathered
in this delightfully idiosyncratic book
*Kirkus*
The book feels like a community - a support group, even - for women
who want to talk about family, and gender politics, and art -
anything really - through the lens of fashion
*Bustle*
Our digital age makes artistic collaboration easier than ever - and
Women in Clothes is one of the great outcomes. Women in Clothes is
your new style encyclopedia
*Time Out New York*
In Women in Clothes, the artful, often elitist language of fashion
is stripped away, leaving behind a conversation that is funny,
painful, certainly vulnerable and ultimately empowering
*NPR*
This charming patchwork expands the scope of fashion writing by
looking not at forerunners of style but at how those outside the
industry think about what they wear...The range of women involved -
642 according to the editors - is dazzling
*Boston Globe*
This vast field study asks not what we wear, but why we wear. It
unites hundreds of voices in a sartorial conversation that is
blissfully free of angst, refreshingly unfashiony, and spiced
throughout with terrific illustrations and visual projects.
*Financial Times, Books of the Year*
Unlike many books about style and fashion, Women in Clothes doesn't
cast judgement and it isn't prescriptive... Across its diverse set
of contributors, the book maintains a refreshingly confessional,
vulnerable, intimate, and compassionate tone
*Quartz*
I am jealous of the editors of Women in Clothes not because they
have cool clothes or great hair, or perfect bodies. I am jealous,
and admire, that they found a way to work together to create
something a little bit revolutionary
*The Millions*
Endlessly fascinating
*Psychologies*
Down-to-earth and visually exquisite ... a thing of beauty, five
stars
*Telegraph, Books of the Year*
Women in Clothes is a book I've been waiting for - a chronicle not
only of what women really wear, but why they do so. The emotional
attachment to our clothes is fascinating...This is one to be
unpicked slowly and savoured.
*The Independent, Books of the Year*
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