Transmisogynist and biphobic as the author-editor may be, once I ignored her essays, the other contributors had some great things to say.
The anthology is set up as purely for cisgender lesbians, but Eli Clare sneaks in and so do one or two folks who might be bi (but obviously can't say so on the pages).
It does a fair job of including mental illness, chronic illness, and physical disability, better than most things I've read. However, none of the contributors are autistic or intellectually or developmentally disabled, as far as I can remember being stated.
It's a big task, bringing together such a wide spread of experiences, and the book does a decent job. There's talk about caregiver and institutional abuse, about medical neglect, about the friction between LG(bt) and disability movements/communities, about activist history, about personal successes and failures, about relapse and recovery and dreams.
Overall, it was definitely worth my time, but I wish the author-editor was less of a second-wave feminist, and I am shopping around for a trans and bi inclusive alternative. Recommendation? Skip everything by the editor.