“Who was the woman trying to convince a jury in a tiny courthouse in Nova Scotia that it was self-defense when she killed her partner; and who was the young woman walking into the palais de justice in small-town Quebec arguing that it was her choice, not his, to have an abortion? What was it that pushed these women on, even when the lawyers said it was hopeless?”
From the award-winning author of The Abortion Caravan and More Than a Footnote, Karin Wells once again pulls us into the lives—and this time, the legal trials—of a group of women integral to the advancement of women’s rights in Canada. Eliza Campbell, Chantale Daigle, Jeannette Corbiere Lavell—these Women Who Woke Up the Law often had no idea what they were facing in the courts, or the price they would have to pay. Some never saw justice themselves, but they left a legal legacy. Their bold determination is something we need now more than ever to guard the hard-won gains in women’s rights.
“Terrific…. Grips the reader with the power of a novel.”
“Chilling stories of adultery, abuse, and abortion that came at great cost to the women whose personal cases became public causes. We owe them our gratitude.”
“Each gem is about an ordinary woman who achieved something extraordinary.”
“An unflinching reminder of women’s long and fierce fight for justice under the law.”
“We have faced these moments before and have come out victorious. Let this book inspire you.”
“I didn’t read this book as a work of history but as a call to arms.”
"Wells explores the impact a variety of women have had on defending rights and sometimes creating rights…Her latest book should make for inspiring reading."
"Wells is skilled at pulling threads and making connections, weaving these wide-ranging tales into a fascinating tapestry."
"The courage and determination of many people are documented in this incredible history. Wells has amplified the voices of those brave individuals whose advocacy reshaped the narrative for women’s rights in Canada. This is a significant case history that belongs in every library."
"The cruelty faced by Jane Hurshman and the desperate measures it drove her to were once famous in this country; evidence at her 1983 trial shocked Canadians and helped change attitudes about self-defence and spousal abuse. In this excerpt from the new book Women Who Woke up the Law: Inside the Cases That Changed Women’s Rights in Canada we are reminded of Hurshman’s fight for her rights — and, before that, her fight to survive."
“The book is timely considering today’s global political climate…. A message Wells has for readers is to ‘not take your eye off the ball.’”