I think, if I had read a book like this in middle school I might have been really impressed and inspired by it ... I might have seen it as progressive and had a fleeting, unrealistic thought that it would change minds and open hearts.
As an adult who knows better, I know that books like HMRC never end up in the hands of the people who really need to read them and that books, in general, are only appreciated by the audience that wants to read them and they don't need the lessons usually.
2/
In that sense, books like HMRC just become propaganda and "feel goods" for those that appreciate them ... and not education, thought experiments, or lessons about the dangers of powerful, vindictive, and mentally ill white women who are brainwashed by the very patriarchy that works successfully to diminish and destroy them from within and without.
It's a shame that books don't educate the ones that need it ... not that you can reach such broken minds with words anyway.