Shon Faye is author of the acclaimed bestseller The Transgender Issue. Her work has been published in, among others, the Guardian, Independent, British Vogue and VICE. She writes an advice column, Dear Shon, for Vogue.com. Born in Bristol, she now lives in London.
Few books are as urgent as Shon Faye's debut ... The analysis is
thorough and heartbreaking ... it's a highly fact-based book backed
up with statistics and case studies, but she manages to write it in
a hugely emotive and powerful way ... Faye has hope for the future
- and maybe so should we.
*Independent*
Faye puts forward a powerful case not of what separates us but what
brings us together. Above all, her book is a cry for compassion for
an embattled community and a plea to be treated with dignity and
fairness. It is, surely, the very least anyone can do.
*The Guardian*
I am profoundly grateful that [this book] exists ... A book such as
this one, in which a trans person has the opportunity to speak
clearly and compellingly on their own terms, is a vitally needed
antidote ... One book cannot, of course, outweigh such a continual
outpouring of animosity. Nevertheless, as drops in the bucket go,
this book is an important and weighty one.
*The Observer*
Enter Shon Faye. The journalist and former lawyer might have
gathered a following on Twitter for her wry humor, but her first
book offers a cold, hard, and, most importantly, convincing look
into the facts surrounding trans rights both past and present, as
well as a moving and impressively comprehensive overview of trans
life in Britain today. Leavened by Faye's sharp, sparkling writing
style ... The Transgender Issue is a vital resource for readers
outside of the U.K. to understand just what is happening there in
terms of trans rights - and how to bring about a long-overdue
change to the conversation.
*Vogue*
A detailed overview of the systemic violence and discrimination
trans people face in Britain today ... [Faye is] sanguine, relaxed,
and funny while eloquently delivering complex philosophical
arguments which, as she explains them, sound so obvious that you
wonder why you've never thought of them before ... The Transgender
Issue is fundamentally not a culture-war book. It operates outside
the narrow coverage of trans people in the mainstream, and lays
bare the inarguable facts of being trans: that's it's rare, that
it's misunderstood, that society makes it dangerous.
*New Statesman*
A welcome contribution to the trans debate ... Faye has written a
clear and concise analysis of the presenting issues for trans
people today.
*Evening Standard*
Faye's language is precise and the arguments well evidenced. This
will be a challenging book for those lulled by the nonsense that
sometimes passes for journalism about trans lives ... I don't
recall a work like Shon Faye's that takes the status quo by the
lapels and gives it such a shaking.
*Times Literary Supplement*
Draws on wide-ranging research to make her arguments ... Faye is
highly intelligent and writes with compassion and clarity about
marginalised groups that suffer a lot.
*Sunday Times*
Sets the record straight on a lot of subjects, many of which are
hard to misrepresent with the facts in front of you ... Once picked
up, the book was hard to set down ... The book isn't just about
highlighting problems - there are plenty of solutions offered, many
of them radical.
*Vice*
The Transgender Issue, argues this [feminist] inheritance with
energy and clarity ... Faye writes well.
*UnHerd*
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