|
Basic InformationMore InformationLatest NewsParents Unaware of Scope of Teens' Use of 'Study Drugs'Bed-Sharing Raises SIDS Risk Fivefold, Study FindsHealth Tip: Help Keep Teen Drivers SafeHealth Tip: Taking a Birthing ClassMany Parents Texting, Phoning While Driving Their Kids: SurveyBlind Cords Pose Danger to Toddlers, Doctors WarnHealth Tip: Manage Visitors After Bringing Home BabyPoor Parenting Styles Linked to Bullying Behavior in Kids'Clean Your Plate' Orders From Parents May Backfire for KidsPopular Cinnamon Stunt Can Have Serious Lung EffectsMany Parents Text, Phone With Kids in Car: SurveySocial Networks Affect Parents' Vaccination Decision-MakingParenting Magazines Give Little Attention to Sun ProtectionParents Will Push for Medication, Even If Doc Says Not NeededParent-Focused Classes May Help Tots at Risk for ADHDKids of Better-Educated Parents Have Healthier Diets: StudyPre-College Parental Chat May Reduce Freshman DrinkingSame-Sex Parents May Face Harsher Criticism Than OthersCertain Parents Less Likely to Follow Doctors' Advice: PollFamily Meals Nourish Teens' Mental Health: StudyFour in 10 Babies Given Solid Foods Too Early, Study FindsPicky Eating in Youngsters Might Be Largely Caused by GenesReady-to-Eat Foods for Toddlers Often Too Salty: StudyChild Health Experts Come Out in Favor of Same-Sex MarriageReasons for Refusal of HPV Differ From Other VaccinesParents' Worries About HPV Vaccine on the Rise: StudyKnow What's in Your Child's Medications, FDA WarnsAvoiding Scary Situations May Leave Kids More Anxious: StudyERs Need to Do More to Inform Parents on Child Seat SafetySports Help Dads, Daughters Bond, Study SaysHeart-Healthy Habits in Childhood May Prevent Future DiseaseSports, Other Shared Activity Aids Father-Daughter BondingAAAAI: EpiPens Should Be Given in Lower Thigh in Heavy KidsHealth Tip: Serve Up a Healthy After-School SnackPoll: Many Americans Don't See Their Kids as OverweightPediatricians Say No to Expulsions, Suspensions at SchoolsPediatrics Group Issues New Ear Infection GuidelinesExperts Dispute Value of Checking Kids' Blood PressureHealth Tip: When Your Child Has a HeadacheParents: Revealing Your Past Smoking, Pot Use May Not Help Your KidsCodeine Risky for Kids After Certain Surgeries, FDA SaysChildhood Bullying Can Leave Lifelong ScarsMany Younger Parents Weigh Online Doctor Reviews: PollOnline Bullying Just As Harmful for Children As OfflineSwitching Kids Away From Violent TV May Lower AggressionHealth Tip: Sled Safely'Hovering' Moms May Take Fun Out of Play'Cyberbullying' as Harmful as Physical Threats, Study FindsGirls' Peers, Not Media, May Exert Most Pressure to Be ThinSchool Bullies Often Popular, Survey Finds Questions and AnswersLinksBook Reviews |
| |
by Linda Carbone and Ed Decker Grove/Atlantic, 1999 Review by Susan Stark, Ph.D on Jul 31st 2000 
Many of us know, or think we know, a thing or two about infertility. Perhaps we have known someone who has experienced infertility, or read about it in the newspapers, or seen stories on TV news magazines. Or perhaps we are among those who study infertility in a more systematic way as physicians, nurses, or medical ethicists. Whatever ones background or interest in infertility, A Little Pregnant: Our Memoir of Fertility, Infertility, and a Marriage is an informative and thoughtful memoir that gives the reader a detailed look into the lives of two people affected by infertility. It is, thus, a good book both for the lay person interested in infertility and for the medical ethicist (or other health care professional) investigating the ethical aspects of new (and old) reproductive technologies. While it may or may not change any views about infertility treatments, it will certainly make those views more well informed. A Little Pregnant is a memoir that chronicles nearly a decade in the lives of Linda Carbone and Ed Decker, as they try to conceive a fetus and complete a pregnancy, and then when these efforts fail, to adopt a child. Both Carbone and Decker recount their story in alternating chapters. This alternation is effective and refreshing for a couple of reasons. First, their narrative style clearly conveys an important truth about infertility, namely that it is caused both by problems in the male reproductive system as well as problems in the female reproductive system. Second, the structure of the book makes clear the honest reality that infertility affects the lives not just of a couple, but of two separate and autonomous beings. It often affects those lives very differently and affects their ability to communicate and be in a close relationship with one another. So as a memoir about a marriage, A Little Pregnant is honest and three-dimensional. It depicts two people in love struggling to support and care for each other through a protracted stressful period during which they are not always equally committed to the final goal (Ed had always badly wanted children, while Linda had never been sure she did). A Little Pregnant is refreshingly honest in other ways as well. Both Carbone and Decker describe their many medical procedures and surgeries in a straightforward way. The reader sees the procedures from the perspective of a patient replete with anxiety, curiosity, hope that the procedure will bring a "cure" for the infertility, and dread that some terrible disease is lurking as the cause of the infertility. The memoir also provides an honest portrayal of the psychological aspects of Carbones and Deckers struggle to get and stay pregnant (and then later to adopt). Decker, in particular, must face issues and obsessions from his past, and both must face coping mechanisms that have simply become effete from overuse. A Little Pregnant is not without its faults, however. At times, but especially in the opening chapter, the tone of the book is extremely emotional, bordering on melodramatic. This is unfortunate because it leaves the reader with a hint of cynicism about the authors experiences. This cynicism dissipates and is eventually overcome as the reader comes to understand the authors more, and as their presentation of the emotional aspects of infertility (certainly serious in their own right) is tempered by the medical and psychological aspects of their experience and by their (especially Carbones) thoughtful, self-reflective analysis of this long ordeal. In all, A Little Pregnant is important and well worth reading because it contains two subjective, first-person accounts of fertility, infertility, the struggle to have a child, and the strain that this can put on ones life and marriage. This book reads quickly and easily and would be useful for anyone thinking about infertility from an academic perspective and also for anyone confronting his or her own fertility and infertility. Susan Stark is an assistant professor of philosophy at Bates College in Lewiston, Maine. Her teaching and research is focused around issues in ethics, feminism, and the philosophy of psychology. |