“Valiant and audacious. . . . Through reflections on parenthood, LGBTQ+ historical context, and biting reprovals of American culture, Fairyington’s concerns for her impressionable offspring are valid, sharp, and urgent, yet eloquently conveyed in this hybrid of maternal love letter and cautionary counsel.”—Kirkus, starred review
“Ugly is beautiful, a rigorous ladyballs-out polemic that also tells the most raw, tender, against-all-odds story of parenthood that I’ve ever read. Steph Fairyington and her family are quietly heroic in their will to have what most people are able to take for granted, a warm and loving family unmolested by the blithe incomprehension and cruelty of social norms—particularly the often random norms regarding beauty. Reading it made me sad and outraged anew at the damage that can be done to women, starting in childhood, when they don’t conform to what we decree is beauty, no matter how beautiful they actually are.”—Mary Gaitskill
“What I love about the way Stephanie Fairyington takes ownership of ugliness is the freedom it opens up for uncertainty, unlearning, and reinventing—everything from the family and mother-child knots, to cruelty, femininity, anxiety, and normality. She has a talent for vulnerability and a stunning, startling voice.”—Laura Kipniss, author of Against Love: A Polemic
“Stephanie Fairyington displays a keen intellect and a warm inclusive heart as she takes on the looks-based oppression of women and girls in this endearing letter to her young daughter. Although we are all still plagued by the idea of female imperfection, Ugly brings some hope that there are ways to resist lookism—and is a story and analysis sorely needed.”—Joan Jacobs Brumberg, author of Fasting Girls: The Emergence of Anorexia Nervosa as A Modern Disease