Jess bookcover

Jess

Peg Tittle 

(Author)
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
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Description

Jess used to be a man. Then he found himself in a female body. It wasn't funny. (Why would anyone even think it was?)

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"There's a scene in Tootsie (1982) that is surely one of the most unacclaimed scenes of all time: Dustin Hoffman's character, Michael, as 'Dorothy', makes a suggestion on the set, and the director dismisses it out of hand. As I remember it, Hoffman's face-conveying surprise, confusion, indignation-shows perfectly Michael's reaction to the absence of (and, just maybe, awareness of) the advantage/s he's been receiving just because he's male. The entire movie should've been about that. Just that. It wasn't. And so I wrote Jess."

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"[Jess'] perspective on being a girl and woman while having memories of being a man offers an understanding I'd never thought of. Really interesting book." poolays, LibraryThing

"Very interesting book. ... Definitely worth reading." Dan, Goodreads

Product Details

PublisherMagenta
Publish DateMay 11, 2022
Pages154
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9781926891958
Dimensions8.5 X 5.5 X 0.4 inches | 0.5 pounds

About the Author

Peg Tittle is the author of several novels-Fighting Words: notes for a future we won't have, Jess, Gender Fraud: a fiction (SF Category Finalist for the Eric Hoffer Award), Impact, It Wasn't Enough (SF Category Finalist for the Eric Hoffer Award), Exile, and What Happened to Tom (on Goodreads' 'Fiction Books that Opened your Eyes to a Social or Political Issue' list). She has also written nonfiction, including Sexist Shit that Pisses Me Off (2e), Just Think About It! (2e), What If? Collected Thought Experiments in Philosophy, and Critical Reasoning: An Appeal to Reason. She was a columnist for the Ethics and Emerging Technologies website for a year (one of her columns received 35,000 hits, making it #3 of the year, and another received 34,000 hits, making it #5 of the year), The Philosopher Magazine's online philosophy café for eight years, and Philosophy Now for two years. She now blogs sporadically at pegtittle.com and hellyeahimafeminist.com.

Reviews

"[Jess'] perspective on being a girl and woman while having memories of being a man offers an understanding I'd never thought of. Really interesting book." poolays, LibraryThing

"Very interesting book. ... Definitely worth reading." Dan, Goodreads

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