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Loved and Wanted: A Memoir of Choice, Children, and Womanhood

Loved and Wanted: A Memoir of Choice, Children, and Womanhood

by Christa Parravani

Henry Holt and Co. ·2020 ·224 pages ·Memoir
Maybe Someday
Maybe Someday
I Index
34/99
Maybe Someday

40/99

Critics

Maybe Someday

28/99

Readers

n/a

Scholars

27/99

Rating

52/99

Volume

23/99

Rating

32/99

Volume

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About This Book

Christa Parravani was forty years old, in a troubled marriage, and in bad financial straits when she learned she was pregnant with her third child. She and her family were living in Morgantown, West Virginia, where she had taken a professorial position at the local university. Haunted by a childhood steeped in poverty and violence and by young adult years rocked by the tragic death of her identical twin sister, Christa hoped her professor's salary and health care might set her and her young family on a safe and steady path. Instead, one year after the birth of her second child, Christa found herself pregnant again. Six weeks into the pregnancy, she requested an abortion. And in the weeks, then months, that followed, nurses obfuscated and doctors refused outright or feared being found out to the point of, ultimately, becoming unavailable to provide Christa with reproductive choice. By the time Christa understood that she would need to leave West Virginia to obtain a safe, legal abortion, she'd run out of time. She had failed to imagine that she might not have access to reproductive choice in the United States, until it was too late for her, her pregnancy too far along. So she gave birth to a beautiful baby boy named Keats. And another frightening education began: available healthcare was dangerously inadequate to her newborn son's needs; indeed, environmental degradations and poor healthcare endangered Christa's older children as well. Loved and Wanted is the passionate story of a woman's love for her children, and a poignant and bracing look at the difficult choices women in America are forced to make every day, in a nation where policies and a cultural war on women leave them without sufficient agency over their bodies, their futures, and even their hopes for their children's lives.


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Reviews

"At times, I wanted to pour Parravani a cup of tea or a third-trimester glass of wine and ask what she means, to tease out deeper analysis from the layers of emotion disguising it, dressing up half-thoughts in literary flourishes, or tossing a silk scarf of vanity over all she has so valuably bared ..."

Lauren Sandler· The New York Times Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Ultimately, Parravani is interested in how individual women make reproductive choices in the face of complex geographical, medical and financial circumstances."

Kelly Blewett· BookPage Read review ↗ Near the Top

"luminous, complex ..."

Emily Bowles· Library Journal Read review ↗ Near the Top

"This is a powerful account of what many women face in the U.S."

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Near the Top

"A candid, personal look at the political and cultural forces shaping women's lives."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Near the Top

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