Anything for nurturing feminism in boys?
What age boys?
I reckon it's important for boys to have books etc with girls/women as the protagonist, just as much as it is for girls.
Given that books, films, TV programs etc with female protagonist are often seen as "for girls" whereas male protagonists are often presented as the default, if boys are never given "girls things" then it could be possible for boys can grow up to adulthood without ever having been exposed to storytelling with women as the lead, and therefore never having to consider that women have an internal life with actual thoughts and feelings! Or to put themselves in our shoes and empathise with us. That can't be healthy for any of us, surely?!
I try to give my DS plenty of books, films etc with women as the protagonist, as a starting point.
We loved The Accidental Pirate by Clare Fayers when DS was 9 or 10, for example. www.amazon.co.uk/Voyage-Magical-North-Accidental-Pirates/dp/1447290607?tag=mumsnetforu03-21
Here's the blurb:
Twelve-year-old Brine Seaborne is a girl with a past . . . if only she could remember what it is. Found alone in a rowboat as a child, clutching a shard of the rare starshell needed for spell-casting, she's spent every day since housekeeping for an irritable magician and his obnoxious apprentice, Peter.
But everything changes when Brine and Peter accidentally break the magician's starshell and need to flee the island. Lost at sea, they blunder into the path of the legendary pirate ship the Onion. Before you can say 'pieces of eight,' they're up to their necks in the pirates' quest to find Magical North, a place so shrouded in secrets and myth that most people don't even think it exists.
If Brine is lucky, she may find out who her parents are and why they sent her out to sea. And if she's unlucky, everyone on the ship will be eaten by sea monsters.
It really could go either way.*
There's a second book in the series out now too I think.