And now we have everything : on motherhood before I was ready
(Book)
306.8743 OCCON
2 available
Copies
Location | Call Number | Status |
---|---|---|
Central - Adult Nonfiction | 306.8743 OCCON | Available |
Central - Adult Nonfiction | 306.8743 OCCON | Available |
Description
More Details
Notes
Table of Contents
Subjects
First pregnancy -- Psychological aspects.
Motherhood -- Anecdotes.
Mothers -- United States -- Biography.
O'Connell, Meaghan.
Parenthood.
Pregnancy.
Single mothers -- United States -- Biography.
Unplanned pregnancy -- Anecdotes.
Unwanted pregnancy -- Decision making.
Unwanted pregnancy -- Psychological aspects.
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Published Reviews
Booklist Review
I was wanting something I didn't want to want, O'Connell writes of what she felt after learning she was pregnant. And so begins a book about her tug of war between intellect and emotion in the subsequent months of pregnancy and early motherhood. O'Connell is a smart twentysomething who treats her pregnancy like a new project, researching and planning. She envisions a natural birth and a year of wholesome breast feeding. But things do not go as she expects. Life throws curveballs, and after 40 hours of contractions, she opts for a C-section. She manages to nurse for a year but resents her baby's control over her body. This is not a book about the wonders of motherhood but about the tension between culturally inherited ideals and the realities of lived, bodily experience. What if we treated pregnant women like thinking adults? What if we worried less about making a bad impression? O'Connell asks. Describing motherhood with brutal honesty and a sharp wit, And Now We Have Everything does just this. The result is a delight.--Taft, Maggie Copyright 2018 Booklist
Kirkus Book Review
Navigating the ups and downs of being a new mother.O'Connell and her partner, Dustin, were contemplating marriage, but the idea of having a child was the farthest thing from both their minds. They had careers to advance, books to write, and other things to do with their lives; there was no time for a kid. Then she got pregnant. Like many soon-to-be moms, O'Connell read everything she could find on pregnancy, childbirth, and breast-feeding, but nothing prepared her for the actual events as they unfolded. In this compact narrative, the author begins slowly, telling her backstory and working through the "wow, I'm pregnant" stage of telling her friends and adjusting to her body as it changed over the months. She incorporates humor and honesty, but this part of the story will feel overly familiar to many readers. Then the prose shifts as she recounts the birth itself. Suddenly, the writing becomes more visceral and dynamic, and she shares the very intimate details of what it was like to spend 40 hours in labor. The author's engaging tone continues with her discussions of the real feelings she had about her body after pregnancy, her trials with breast-feeding, the resentment she felt toward Dustin, who seemed to be a better parent than she was, and the lack of sexual desire she experienced for months after the birth. For current mothers, the author's story will resonate deeply. For any woman contemplating having a child, O'Connell provides an accurate depiction of what it can feel like to be a new mom, both physically and emotionally. For men who want to know and understand what being a mother is like, this book should prove useful.A well-written book that provides refreshingly candid insight into the physical and emotional changes that take place during pregnancy and early motherhood, times that are both "traumatic [and] transcendent."
Booklist Reviews
"I was wanting something I didn't want to want," O'Connell writes of what she felt after learning she was pregnant. And so begins a book about her tug of war between intellect and emotion in the subsequent months of pregnancy and early motherhood. O'Connell is a smart twentysomething who treats her pregnancy like a new project, researching and planning. She envisions a natural birth and a year of wholesome breast feeding. But things do not go as she expects. Life throws curveballs, and after 40 hours of contractions, she opts for a C-section. She manages to nurse for a year but resents her baby's control over her body. This is not a book about the wonders of motherhood but about the tension between culturally inherited ideals and the realities of lived, bodily experience. "What if we treated pregnant women like thinking adults? What if we worried less about making a bad impression?" O'Connell asks. Describing motherhood with brutal honesty and a sharp wit, And Now We Have Everything does just this. The result is a delight. Copyright 2018 Booklist Reviews.
Library Journal Reviews
(c) Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Reviews from GoodReads
Citations
O'Connell, M. (2018). And now we have everything: on motherhood before I was ready (First edition.). Little Brown and Company.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)O'Connell, Meaghan. 2018. And Now We Have Everything: On Motherhood Before I Was Ready. New York: Little Brown and Company.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)O'Connell, Meaghan. And Now We Have Everything: On Motherhood Before I Was Ready New York: Little Brown and Company, 2018.
Harvard Citation (style guide)O'Connell, M. (2018). And now we have everything: on motherhood before I was ready. First edn. New York: Little Brown and Company.
MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)O'Connell, Meaghan. And Now We Have Everything: On Motherhood Before I Was Ready First edition., Little Brown and Company, 2018.