🎉   Please check out our new website over at books-etc.com.

Seller
Your price
£19.95
Out of Stock

The Facts of Life

Graphic Medicine 9

By (author) Paula Knight
Format: Paperback / softback
Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, United States
Published: 15th Mar 2017
Dimensions: w 171mm h 229mm d 17mm
Weight: 590g
ISBN-10: 0271078464
ISBN-13: 9780271078465
Barcode No: 9780271078465
Trade or Institutional customer? Contact us about large order quotes.
Synopsis
In the 1970s, best friends Polly and April collect hazy knowledge about the "facts of life"-sex, reproduction, and gender norms-through the gossip of older girls, magazines and books, and the everyday behavior of their families and teachers. What they learn reinforces their assumption that they will grow up to become mothers. As the years pass, they each choose paths that they believe will enable them to "have it all." April's dreams of motherhood come true before too long, but as Polly enthusiastically builds a career, her desire and hope to start a family become less firmly ingrained. Her struggles with chronic illness also have an effect on her choices and relationships, and she wonders whether motherhood will be in the cards for her at all. Soon she meets Jack, and together they start a fraught journey, first debating whether parenthood is right for them and then facing the heartbreak of repeated miscarriages and the effects of illness on their ability to have a child. Through it all, Polly is forced to reexamine what family can mean in a society that so often associates family-and womanhood-with children. Beautifully drawn and poignantly honest, The Facts of Life is a funny, sometimes painful graphic memoir that explores what it takes to be a woman, a partner, and a mother . . . or not.

New & Used

Seller Information Condition Price
-New
Out of Stock

What Reviewers Are Saying

Submit your review
Newspapers & Magazines
"A funny, affecting and highly poignant graphic memoir. . . In this Mother's Day month, it's rather wonderful to have an alternative and comforting book gift or self-purchase at the ready for those who have experienced miscarriage, are unable to have children, or who have decided not to have them."-The Bookseller "Funny, poignant, and philosophical, this elegant graphic novel challenges cultural pronatalism and examines the experience of living with a chronic, yet poorly understood, illness. I learned a lot from this visually sophisticated and tremendously informative work, which is a must-read for anyone interested in reproductive politics."-Ian Williams, author of The Bad Doctor "This is an intensely honest and personal book. . . . Even though I eventually (after six rounds of IVF and with the use of egg donation) did have a baby, I will never quite get over what it took to get there. And if there is a woman (and men, too) going through this, read this book. I wish I could think of a less trite way of saying this, but it makes you feel less alone."-Victoria Macdonald, health and social care correspondent, Channel 4 News (UK) "This is a wonderfully honest, moving, emotional, human story about what we were brought up to expect in life and what hand we actually get dealt, what we want and what others expect of us, or how we're seen if we don't fit the 'normal' view of how things are, but how we need to see round that and see ourselves instead."-Joe Gordon, Forbidden Planet "The artwork is full of close-ups and two-shots that nicely convey the conflicting emotions felt by the characters, allowing the reader to understand the depth of their hurt, confusion, and exasperation. An interesting examination of the idea that, to have it all, a woman must have a child."-Eva Volin, Booklist "Knight's ambivalence about becoming a parent while balancing that desire with other aspects of her identity is fresh and astutely reported."-Emilia Packard, Library Journal "With humor, penetrating intelligence, and an eye for human details, Knight chronicles her life of being prepared for motherhood and her eventual efforts to get pregnant. . . . Prying near-universal questions about female identity from her singular experience, she explores a difficult subject with compassion."-Publishers Weekly