



Aggregated Discontent
Confessions of the Last Normal Woman
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- Pre-Order
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- Expected May 20, 2025
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
A searing journey through the highs and lows of twenty-first century womanhood from an award-winning journalist beloved for her unflinchingly honest and often comedic appraisals of pop culture, identity, and disillusionment
“A delicious reading experience—like hearing your smartest friend eviscerate the worst person you know.”—Sabrina Imbler, author of How Far the Light Reaches
“Such a brilliant writer, with so many surprising moves.”—Torrey Peters, author of Detransition, Baby
After a brief fling with corporate stability in her twenty-something cis era, Harron Walker has transitioned into a terminally single freelancer and part-time shopgirl. She's in the throes of her second adolescence and its requisite daily spirals. She wants it all, otherwise known as: basic human rights, a stable job with good pay and healthcare benefits, someone to love, the ability to feel safe and secure, the pursuit of satisfaction and maybe even contentment. And when she starts to acquire those things—well, as The Monkey's Paw famously asked, "What could go wrong?"
In sixteen wholly original essays that blend memoir, cultural criticism, investigative journalism, and a dash of fanfiction, Walker places her own experiences within the larger context of the pressing and underdiscussed aspects of contemporary American womanhood that make up daily life. She recounts an attempt to eviscerate a corporation's attempt at pinkwashing their way into bath bomb sales while simultaneously confronting her “pick me” impulse to do so. She interrogates her relationship to labor, from the irony of working in a transphobic workplace in order to cover gender-affirming surgery to the cruel specter of the girlboss that none of us ever think we'll become. She explores the allure and violence of assimilating into white womanhood in all its hegemonic glory, exposes the ways in which the truth of trans women's reproductive healthcare is erased in favor of reactionary narratives, and considers how our agency is stripped from us—by governments, employers, partners, and ourselves—purely on account of our bodies.
With razor-sharp, biting prose that’s as uncompromising as it is playful, Walker grapples with questions of love, sex, fertility, labor, embodiment, community, autonomy, and body fluids from her particular vantagepoint: often at the margins, conditionally at the center.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Essayist Walker debuts with a sharp collection of cultural criticism focused largely on trans issues. Combining omnivorous pop culture references, rigorous reporting, and a winning, tongue-in-cheek tone, Walker profiles such figures as artist Greer Lankton and activist Cecilia Gentili, unpacks trans women's complicated relationships to misogyny, and tells the story of her grandmother, who routinely sold ostensibly cis male clients articles of women's clothing at a department store in midcentury Connecticut. The pièce de résistance is "What's New and Different?" which covers Walker's often humiliating experiences covering trans issues for various magazines, then morphs into a hybrid of fan fiction and film criticism that pulls from The Devil Wears Prada, The Intern, and Working Girl to reflect on the limitations of so-called "girlboss feminism." A few essays struggle to wrangle Walker's wide-ranging thoughts into tidy takeaways in their final paragraphs, and a handful of her analyses feel somewhat predigested. For the most part, though, she's a remarkably lucid and arresting narrator, equally willing to joke about "the traumatized core whence all personal essay fodder springs eternal" and to lay her own insecurities bare. The result is a kaleidoscopic consideration of 21st-century trans life that announces Walker as a formidable talent.