I think that part of the reason that I didn't love this book as much as I had hoped is because it's a bit outdated. It was published in 1998, and certainly the queer and gender equality movements have changed dramatically over the past decade. Had I read this book closer to when it had been written, it may have resonated with me more.
Female Masculinity is incredibly well-researched and includes a lot of fascinating information about the history of female masculinity. Several chapters focus on pre-twentieth century female masculinity, which I found particularly interesting, as most of the information in those chapters were completely new to me.
My favorite chapter is the second to last chapter, which explores masculinity as performance and the drag king culture. Halberstam did an excellent job of highlighting the differences between the ways that masculinity and femininity are performed and how these performances are illustrated in drag culture. I've always been a fan of drag, but I am much less familiar with the drag king world than I am with the drag queen world, and reading about "kinging," as Halberstam calls it, has made me very interested in learning more.
It's also important to mention that Halberstam's writing is very approachable, and, as a whole, Female Masculinity is one of the most accessible academic texts I've ever read. It's very theoretical, of course, but it contains much less jargon than other books I've read on similar topics.
My biggest problem with Female Masculinity is that it exclusively explored masculinity in queer women. While the relationship between female masculinity and lesbianism is critical and worthy of extensive examination, I was hoping to read about a more diverse assortment of female masculine identities. One of my biggest pet peeves is when gender identity and sexual orientation are conflated, and I felt that the exclusive focus on lesbianism perpetuated that kind of conflation. The implication that only queer women are masculine is incredibly problematic, and though I don't think Halberstam meant to imply that, it does come across that way at points.
I was also troubled by the way Halberstam compared butch female identity with trans male identity. Again, I don't think Halberstam meant to imply that masculine-presenting women and transgender men have the same identities and struggles, but there are moments where the arguments come across that way. Since trans men are men, and not masculine women, I felt the comparisons between trans men and butch women to be oversimplified and not entirely accurate.
Overall, I enjoyed Female Masculinity, but it is not the definitive text on the subject I was hoping it would be. I am curious to see what else has been written on the subject since this book's release.