Home
Rail Road Rebels: Women Who Refused To Settle
Barnes and Noble
Rail Road Rebels: Women Who Refused To Settle
Current price: $12.99
Barnes and Noble
Rail Road Rebels: Women Who Refused To Settle
Current price: $12.99
Size: Paperback
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
Exploring a part of history that remained largely untold, 'Rail Road Rebels' delves into the shadows and onto the sunny patches of the lives led astray from the mainstream by choice or by necessity. The rails called out to those whose hearts yearned for freedom beyond the white picket fences, beyond the confines of a society that dictated the path one ought to walk- or rather, the path one could walk if they conformed to their assigned roles.These women, these rebels on railways, tell a story of courage.
'Rail Road Rebels' reflects not only on the past but also considers how these pioneering women have shaped narratives of feminism and freedom that echo in contemporary times. They remain, albeit esoteric, an essential part of the dialogue surrounding the evolution of gender roles and autonomy.
As the reader traverses through these chapters and into the lives of women who made the railways their domain, they will come to recognize a shared human desire-the unquenchable thirst for liberation, for writing one's script in the face of adversity, and for living a life that's truly one's own.This book is an ode to their unbound spirit, an acknowledgment of the trails blazed and the trains jumped, of the bonds formed amidst the roar of engines, and the choice to ride into the unknown. In essence, it captures the essence of what it meant-and still means-to be a rebel on railways.
'Rail Road Rebels' reflects not only on the past but also considers how these pioneering women have shaped narratives of feminism and freedom that echo in contemporary times. They remain, albeit esoteric, an essential part of the dialogue surrounding the evolution of gender roles and autonomy.
As the reader traverses through these chapters and into the lives of women who made the railways their domain, they will come to recognize a shared human desire-the unquenchable thirst for liberation, for writing one's script in the face of adversity, and for living a life that's truly one's own.This book is an ode to their unbound spirit, an acknowledgment of the trails blazed and the trains jumped, of the bonds formed amidst the roar of engines, and the choice to ride into the unknown. In essence, it captures the essence of what it meant-and still means-to be a rebel on railways.