• Vagina Obscura

  • An Anatomical Voyage
  • By: Rachel E. Gross
  • Narrated by: Siho Ellsmore
  • Length: 10 hrs and 50 mins
  • 4.6 out of 5 stars (152 ratings)

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Vagina Obscura  By  cover art

Vagina Obscura

By: Rachel E. Gross
Narrated by: Siho Ellsmore
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Publisher's summary

A scientific journey to the center of the new female body.

The Latin term for the female genitalia, pudendum, means “parts for which you should be ashamed”. Until 1651, ovaries were called female testicles. The fallopian tubes are named for a man. Named, claimed, and shamed: Welcome to the story of the female body, as penned by men.

Today, a new generation of (mostly) women scientists is finally redrawing the map. With modern tools and fresh perspectives, they’re looking at the organs traditionally bound up in reproduction—the uterus, ovaries, vagina—and seeing within them a new biology of change and resilience. Through their eyes, journalist Rachel E. Gross takes listeners on an anatomical odyssey to the center of this new world—a world where the uterus regrows itself, ovaries pump out fresh eggs, and the clitoris pulses beneath the surface like a shimmering pyramid of nerves. Full of wit and wonder, Vagina Obscura is a celebratory testament to how the landscape of knowledge can be rewritten to better serve everyone.

©2022 Rachel E. Gross (P)2022 Spotify Audiobooks
  • Unabridged Audiobook
  • Categories: History

Critic reviews

"Through her seamless storytelling and meticulous research, Rachel Gross shows how long we have misunderstood the bodies of half the people who have ever lived, how much we still have to learn, and how wondrous and rewarding that quest can be. Vagina Obscura is science writing at its finest—revelatory, wry, consequential, necessary, and incredibly hard to put down." (Ed Yong, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author of I Contain Multitudes)

"Vagina Obscura is a marvel of a book—lyrical, compassionate, infuriating, insightful, and wise. Rachel E. Gross's exploration of the history, science and politics of female anatomy should be read by women, men, and everybody seeking to be smarter about who we really are." (Deborah Blum, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author of The Poison Squad)

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What listeners say about Vagina Obscura

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Read this book even if you don’t have ovaries!

So good I bought 10 copies for friends. Highly recommend to everyone regardless of gender.

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Fascinating

This book is fascinating as well as disturbing. The fascinating part is how amazing the body is and how much we didn't even know that we didn't know! The disturbing part revolves around the almost total lack of respect paid to the female body by medicine as well as by society. No wonder the US has one of the world's highest rates of maternal death!
This book is well-written, engaging, and filled with well-researched information.
The Audible version was excellent.
I started the audiobook and immediately ordered the hard copy so I could refer back to it. And as soon as I finished the audiobook my husband started it!
Everyone should read this.

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A must read/listen for all gender ! Wow!

First, the narration was superbly done by Siho Ellsmore. She was phenomenal at articulating the various accents and made the listen intriguing . The topic was so fascinating to me as a woman and also opened up my mind to all the genders that have experienced some sort of need to seek types of gender affirmation procedures. It also made me understand my body as a female and also brought reflection of how men historically think women as a reproductive species. Worth a listen and should be a must read/listen to every woman.

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Informative, well written and presented

A well written overview of the history and understanding of the vagina. Can feel depressing at times realizing how badly reaserched and understood it was. learnt things I didn't know. Must read for all women and people who know women.

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An enlightening history!

This was a great book documenting the layers of understanding, and lack thereof, around what are traditionally considered female presenting reproductive organs, the ways they work, and how they have formed and are formed by society.

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Excellent content, awful narration

The reader mispronounces words and reads quotes by voice acting as the speaker. It is distracting from the content, which is accessible and engaging

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Vagina Obscura

Fascinating and illuminating. Every woman should be more aware of her feminine parts. Literally Rachel Gross takes us beyond the surface.

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A whole new view of the world

My mind is blown! I absolutely loved this book and want everyone to read it! Why? Because we have to understand the history of medicine and how that has effected women and how far we have come and how amazing we are!

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Strange narration

I've never encountered an audiobook with so many mispronunciations. The author also goes in and out of a very thick accent, which is extremely distracting. The lack of attention to detail in the recording, took away from the book sadly.

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    5 out of 5 stars

Performance distracted from fascinating content

I read this because it was part of NPR’s Science Friday book club, and because I had an Audible credit, I chose the audiobook. In retrospect, I wish I had read the ebook instead. First, I question the reader’s decision to read quotes by the scientists and subjects with an accented English based on their country of origin. It made no sense especially when many of these people were not writing in English. (Sigmund Freud, for example, comes off as a caricature.)

Then, there were many mispronunciations. I chocked some of it up to the fact that the reader is an Australian actress now based in New York, and perhaps things are pronounced differently. But the weird pronunciations were so numerous, that can’t be the only explanation. Here are some examples:

Plock for plaque
Sty-meyed (long i in the second syllable) for stymied (twice)
Pat (short a) for pate (meaning head)
Summerarily for summarily
Endocrineologist with a long i and a long e (and an extra syllable)
Extestential for existential

And then after going to all the trouble to put on a fake French accent for many paragraphs, reading the writing of a French woman in the ‘20s, she pronounces the sculptor Rodin’s name “Row-dun” (accent on the first syllable.)

Her reading got worse toward the end. Maybe she was tired? Perhaps this reader was not the right choice. Or she could have used a much better director or producer.

I read articles from Smithsonian magazine for people who are blind or are otherwise visually impaired. I am very conscientious about looking up how place names are pronounced, historian’s names, etc. (For example, if I didn’t know how to pronounce Valdosta, Georgia, you can be sure I’d do some research - especially if this was a book thousands of people will listen to.)

The book itself was fascinating. I learned a great deal in spite of the distracting performance.

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