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My Caesarean

Twenty-One Mothers on the C-Section Experience and After

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Twenty-one vivid, moving essays on caesarean birth.
"No one talks about C-sections as surgery," writes SooJin Pate. "They talk about it as if it's just another way—albeit more convenient way—of giving birth." The twenty-one essays in My Caesarean add back to the conversation the missing voices of a vast, invisible sisterhood.
Robin Schoenthaler reflects: "A C-section for us meant life." And yet, women who don't give birth vaginally—by choice or necessity—often feel stigmatized. "My son's birth was not a test I needed to pass," writes Sara Bates. "As if growing a human inside another human for nine months then caring for it the rest of its life isn't enough," adds Mary Pan, herself a physician.
Alongside their personal stories, the writers—decorated novelists, poets, and essayists—address the history of the C-section as well as its risks, social inequities, impact on the body, and psychological aftermath. My Caesarean is a heartfelt meditation, offering much-needed comfort through shared experience.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 15, 2019
      Editor Fields (Toward, Around, and Away from Tahrir, coeditor) and poet Moritz (Sweet Velocity), present a collection of thoughtful essays from women who, like themselves, gave birth via caesarean section, seeking to address what they perceive as a lack of literature dealing with the process. Some contributors still reckon with the unplanned, unwelcome necessity of their C-sections (“It took me just over a year to fully understand that my son’s birth was not a test I needed to pass,” Sara Bates writes); others chose the surgery (“I am confident that I would’ve gotten over the pain of a vaginal birth. But why should I have to?” Tyrese Coleman states). The unpleasant details are all here—unkind doctors, scars, and judgmental “natural-birth” advocates among them. But while regrets and questions remain for the contributors, most have made peace with their C-sections, with Jacinda Townsend finding that “birth is one moment in a lifetime of parenting, and might even be the least of all the moments.” The cumulative sum of these stories is an enlightening reading experience for both those who’ve had C-sections and those who may. Agent: Jennifer Thompson, Nordleyset Literary Agency.

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  • English

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