UNLIMITED

The Atlantic

What a Book Can Do for a Girl

A story that changes how a child sees can, in no small way, change her life: Your weekly guide to the best in books
Source: Gabriela Pesqueira / The Atlantic

Less than halfway through Hayao Miyazaki’s animated feature Spirited Away, a 10-year-old girl gets her name back. She’s lost too many things since stumbling into a supernatural world—her parents, even briefly her physical body. The retrieval of her name, followed by a friend’s kind gift of a fresh meal, loosens up all her stored grief. Chihiro cries freely for what’s been taken between bites of steamed rice balls.

For the writer Gabrielle Bellot, Miyazaki’semotionally sensitive depictions of female protagonists, such as Chihiro, offered as a transgender girl growing up closeted in the Commonwealth of Dominica. Fictional characters showed her—as they have shown countless other girls—a fuller and more nuanced path through the world than what her immediate reality would allow.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Atlantic

The Atlantic13 min read
The Joy of Reading Books in High School
Subscribe here: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube | Overcast | Pocket Casts Why should a teenager bother to read a book, when there are so many other demands on their time? In this episode of Radio Atlantic: a dispatch from a teenager’s future. We h
The Atlantic9 min read
A Diet Writer’s Regrets
My first byline in a national magazine appeared in the August 8, 1995, issue of Woman’s Day under the headline “What’s Sabotaging Your Diet?” Woman’s Day, that bastion of the checkout line, was known for unironic covers featuring decadent desserts un
The Atlantic5 min read
You Are Drinking the Wrong Eggnog
For centuries, eggnog has been a part of America’s Christmas festivities. George Washington was rumored to have his own recipe, and the concoction was the catalyst of a riot at West Point in the wee hours of Christmas morning 1826. Today, the grocery

Related