I'm cheating a little, posting this, because it's still a read-in-progress, but so far it is a great and informative read, one of these books where I ask myself why I didn't know about it before. It's an oral history of the Canadian Second Wave and after, from the 1960s to the 1990s, compiled from interviews with activists recounting key campaigns: legalization of abortion (and distribution of contraceptive information, which was illegal in Canada until 1969), the Royal Commission for the Status of Women, the Quebec women's movement, fighting sex discrimination in the Indian Act, activism from women of colour, pornography, sex discrimination in employment and pay equity, and so on.
Amazon link. https://www.amazon.ca/Ten-Thousand-Roses-Feminist-Revolution/dp/0143015443 It's also on Archive.org.
A review, with more details and namechecking: https://cws.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/cws/article/view/5997/5186