Review of Power Glass
Posted: 01 Nov 2022, 04:53
[Following is an official OnlineBookClub.org review of "Power Glass" by Katherine Cooper.]
Everyone wants to feel more powerful, but there lies a challenge in figuring out what power even means. It doesn’t help that in the world, women are set back ten paces from their male counterparts, especially in the workplace. Power Glass: Personal Essays by Katherine Cooper explores the concept of power and how it affects women. Through her own experiences, starting from the time her rape drastically changed her life to being an adult in nuclear engineering, Cooper shares what it means to be a woman in her position and how both external and internal forces have affected her journey, both as a woman and as a nuclear engineer.
This book is a collection of essays where the author reveals uncomfortable truths about power. According to Cooper, power has a mirror side: fragility. And until we explore the components of fragility, we cannot truly understand power. I liked that she divided the book into four chapters that represent the most important frames through which we can examine the concept of power and its effects on people’s lives, and they are sex, service, society, and self; this helped her to explore how power has affected women extensively.
The author’s sharp tongue and interesting wit made for a fulfilling read. As a woman, I could relate to so many issues she dissected. Having to deal with sexual innuendos, even in the workplace, is rife for many women. But in a field like nuclear engineering, it is even more startling. But the author did a great job of navigating all those uncomfortable situations, both on paper and in real life. Her crisp writing and biting remarks about gender power imbalance were so hilarious that they uplifted the sober mood her darker experiences induced. The author’s qualifications and achievements as a nuclear engineer are impressive, but what's more impressive is her ability to reveal vulnerability (or fragility, as she calls it) while showcasing strength.
The author was very expressive in this book and wrote about things that may make some readers squirm. She included a visual sexual scene from her sexual abuse experience and other considerations about sex. So this book is only for mature readers who want to understand how the world affects women and how to play their part in smoothing out the power imbalance between the sexes. The author explained that men must meet women in the middle of the pursuit of equality, and I couldn’t agree more. At the start of each essay, she included insightful quotes that I also couldn’t get enough of.
On the flip side, when I opted to read this book, I expected something akin to Sun Tzu’s The Art of War, Robert Greene’s The 48 Laws of Power, and so on. However, this book is not a book on strategy nor a true understanding of power. It read to me like a memoir that explored the difficulties of being a woman in a male-dominated field. In addition to this, the author also analyzed women’s rights and how oppression has affected them. While these topics, including the author’s personal experiences, are relevant and engaging, I found it a little misleading to call Power Glass a book about power. Additionally, sometimes, Cooper veered off course and gave lengthy explanations about the technicalities of her work, which I found educative but irrelevant. My rating is 3 out of 4 as a result of these issues.
******
Power Glass
View: on Bookshelves
Everyone wants to feel more powerful, but there lies a challenge in figuring out what power even means. It doesn’t help that in the world, women are set back ten paces from their male counterparts, especially in the workplace. Power Glass: Personal Essays by Katherine Cooper explores the concept of power and how it affects women. Through her own experiences, starting from the time her rape drastically changed her life to being an adult in nuclear engineering, Cooper shares what it means to be a woman in her position and how both external and internal forces have affected her journey, both as a woman and as a nuclear engineer.
This book is a collection of essays where the author reveals uncomfortable truths about power. According to Cooper, power has a mirror side: fragility. And until we explore the components of fragility, we cannot truly understand power. I liked that she divided the book into four chapters that represent the most important frames through which we can examine the concept of power and its effects on people’s lives, and they are sex, service, society, and self; this helped her to explore how power has affected women extensively.
The author’s sharp tongue and interesting wit made for a fulfilling read. As a woman, I could relate to so many issues she dissected. Having to deal with sexual innuendos, even in the workplace, is rife for many women. But in a field like nuclear engineering, it is even more startling. But the author did a great job of navigating all those uncomfortable situations, both on paper and in real life. Her crisp writing and biting remarks about gender power imbalance were so hilarious that they uplifted the sober mood her darker experiences induced. The author’s qualifications and achievements as a nuclear engineer are impressive, but what's more impressive is her ability to reveal vulnerability (or fragility, as she calls it) while showcasing strength.
The author was very expressive in this book and wrote about things that may make some readers squirm. She included a visual sexual scene from her sexual abuse experience and other considerations about sex. So this book is only for mature readers who want to understand how the world affects women and how to play their part in smoothing out the power imbalance between the sexes. The author explained that men must meet women in the middle of the pursuit of equality, and I couldn’t agree more. At the start of each essay, she included insightful quotes that I also couldn’t get enough of.
On the flip side, when I opted to read this book, I expected something akin to Sun Tzu’s The Art of War, Robert Greene’s The 48 Laws of Power, and so on. However, this book is not a book on strategy nor a true understanding of power. It read to me like a memoir that explored the difficulties of being a woman in a male-dominated field. In addition to this, the author also analyzed women’s rights and how oppression has affected them. While these topics, including the author’s personal experiences, are relevant and engaging, I found it a little misleading to call Power Glass a book about power. Additionally, sometimes, Cooper veered off course and gave lengthy explanations about the technicalities of her work, which I found educative but irrelevant. My rating is 3 out of 4 as a result of these issues.
******
Power Glass
View: on Bookshelves