Giving Up Baby: Safe Haven Laws, Motherhood, and Reproductive Justice
Book
"Baby safe haven" laws, which allow a parent to relinquish a newborn baby legally and anonymously at...
ClareR (6074 KP) rated The Pull of the Stars in Books
Nov 8, 2020
Nurse Julia Power is unmarried at 30 and seems to be happy with that, as she sees women whose bodies are worn out from giving birth so many times and so closely together, women who have been abused by their fathers and forced to bear their children, women who have conceived their babies outside of marriage and will be forced to give them up - as well as young women who have been institutionalised from birth and forced to give up their lives to repay the nuns who raised them through free labour (Magdalene laundries). Like I said, this was no time to be a woman. The abuse and poor treatment of the women on the ward is alluded to, but never explicit.
Whilst most of the story takes place on the quarantined labour ward, we do get a glimpse in to the home life of Nurse Power, and it was interesting to see how the war had impacted on and affected her brother.
This is a beautifully told story packed full of heart. It may not have been my best move to read it during a pandemic, but nevertheless, I absolutely loved it.
Touched by Death
Book
What if Death was more tempting than you had ever imagined? With Grams's recent passing and a...
New_Adult Paranormal Romance
Handsome Death
Book
I’m not hunting him; I’m protecting him. At least, that’s what I tell myself. In New...
Contemporary Adult Paranormal MM Romance Dark
Salvaged (Releasing the Magic #2)
Book
What do you do when you find out you’re the thing you fear most?Seven months ago, the Void Virus...
Monster: A Novel of Extreme Horror and Gore
Book
There are scenes of domestic abuse. But hidden underneath it all is also a chilling story. Please do...
There There
Book
Fierce, angry, funny, heartbreaking—Tommy Orange’s first novel is a wondrous and shattering...
Dopesick : Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company that Addicted America
Book
In this masterful work, Beth Macy takes us into the epicenter of America’s twenty-plus year...
A Match Made in London (Twice Shy Series)
Book
Miss Rosalind Merriweather’s life has been one of hardship and servitude since her late sister’s...
historical romance regency romance British England fiction adult
Miranda Reynolds is left to fend for herself and her teenage daughter when her husband literally drives himself off a cliff. She realises her only safe space is with the mother she hasn’t spoken to in a very long time, and the community that she has set up: Femlandia. It’s her last resort.
Now, if I were Miranda, I wouldn’t have prevaricated for so long - I would have turned up on Femlandia’s doorstep pretty fast. This is regardless of the fact that it’s nothing like the safe haven it has always sold itself as.
As I’ve said, this frustrated and gripped me in equal measure. There are plenty of things in this, that as a feminist, made my toes curl. But let’s face it: who wants to read a dystopian novel where everything is lovely, there are no problems, and everyone lives happily ever after? That’s like NO dystopia I’ve ever read about!
This looks at human nature in all it’s glory and ignominy. It looks at some uncomfortable subjects: abuse, control and prejudice (especially misandry and anti-trans). But do you know what? I raced through this, it gave me a lot to think about, and I think it’s well worth a read.


