
Regulating Creation: The Law, Ethics, and Policy of Assisted Human Reproduction
Trudo Lemmens, Andrew Flavell Martin, Cheryl Milne and Ian B. Lee
Book
In 2004, the Assisted Human Reproduction Act was passed by the Parliament of Canada. Fully in force...

This Common Secret
Susan Wicklund and Alex Kesselheim
Book Watch
In This Common Secret Dr. Susan Wicklund chronicles her emotional and dramatic twenty-year career on...
abortion women's rights healthcare reproductive rights

John Sladek SF Gateway Omnibus: The Reproductive System, The Muller-fokker Effect, Tik-Tok
Book
From the vaults of The SF Gateway, the most comprehensive digital library of classic SFF titles ever...

More Than Medicine: A History of the Feminist Women's Health Movement
Book
In 1948, the Constitution of the World Health Organization declared, "Health is a state of complete...

The Oxford Handbook of U.S. Women's Social Movement Activism
Holly J. McCammon, Verta Taylor, Jo Reger and Rachel L. Einwohner
Book
Over the course of thirty-seven chapters, including an editorial introduction, The Oxford Handbook...

From Intercountry Adoption to Global Surrogacy: A Human Rights History and New Fertility Frontiers
Karen Smith Rotabi and Nicole F. Bromfield
Book
Intercountry adoption has undergone a radical decline since 2004 when it reached a peak of...
Funding Feminism: Monied Women, Philanthropy, and the Women's Movement, 1870-1967
Book
Joan Marie Johnson examines an understudied dimension women's history in the United States: how a...

S/He: Sex & Gender in Hispanic Cultures
Book
Hierarchies and disparities based on sex and gender have characterised nearly all hominid societies...

Goddess in the Stacks (553 KP) rated Red Clocks in Books
Jul 31, 2018
I think the cover description oversells the book a little. I wouldn't call Gin's trial "frenzied" nor the drama exactly "riveting" but it did keep my attention throughout the book. I really enjoyed the relationships between the characters, and the point that none of them really know what is going on in each other's personal lives. One moment I particularly liked is slightly spoilery, but I loved how Ro was able to put her personal feelings aside to help Mattie, her student. That was really, really hard for her, but she recognized how much damage it would do to Mattie to not help her.
I think I found Gin the most interesting - given all the reading I've been doing lately about autism, her entire personality screams autism to me, but she was never labeled as autistic. So I'm marking her as a possibly autistic character. (I'd love if any of my autistic readers could weigh in on that, if you've read the book!) Between preferring to live in the woods with animals and NOT around people, specifically, and the way she reacts to the textures and smells in the jail when she's arrested (shoving the bleach-scented blankets as far away in the cell as possible, and refusing to eat the food), and how she stumbles over her answers in the courtroom when she's interrogated - it seems likely.
My only actual complaint about this book had nothing to do with the writing or plot! But it refers to the ghost pepper as "the hottest pepper known to man" which the Carolina Reaper growing in my backyard would have an issue with!
Other than that very minor quibble, I thought this dystopia was pretty good. I'm always interested in Reproductive Rights-related dystopias. This isn't as good as The Handmaid's Tale, but it's MILES better than Future Home of the Living God. It's good at showing the lengths women will go to, to ensure their own reproductive freedom. Outlawing abortion doesn't eliminate abortion. It just makes it less safe.
You can find all my reviews at http://goddessinthestacks.wordpress.com

What Women Want: An Agenda for the Women's Movement
Book
What Women Want is a trenchant examination of the struggle for women's equality, and a prescription...