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A middle-aged woman with a teenage son rediscovers her Quaker
faith, and quits her urban life for a homestead in the woods of
Vermont. . A Stone Bridge North is the author's own story of
"miracles found and fears allayed" in the journey out of a
confining urban existence and into a simpler, more joyous life. To
tell this story fully, she must look through changed eyes at her
past-at childhood anxieties, family disaffections, failed
marriages, late motherhood, restless boredom, and, paradoxically, a
native talent for joy. She learns that she has been guided by faith
even when she thought she had none. She begins to discern purpose
and design both in her stories and in the light by which she sees
them-a light refracted through a Quaker lens that searches for the
sacred in all people. As the four seasons turn, she celebrates the
loves of her new life-family, friends, language, silence, and the
extraordinary landscape of Vermont.
Many Americans who believe that women should be able to choose when
and whether to bear a child are also deeply disturbed by the
one-and-one-half million abortions performed each year in this
country. They regard these concerns as irreconcilable, because the
topic of abortion, until now, has been framed as a black-or-white
conflict between the rights of the mother and those of the fetus.
The very idea of compromise or common cause draws scorn among
factions. How, after all, can the political debate about abortion
permit any more options than pregnancy itself does? This
extraordinary book tells fifty stories about women from strikingly
diverse backgrounds who have had to choose whether to give birth or
to abort. About half of these women carried their pregnancies to
term the others ended them. Their decisions arose from heartfelt
struggles, expressed in terms completely different from those that
prevail in the public debate. Some women who abhor abortion ended
up choosing that option others who are prochoice opted for birth or
had abortions that, in some instances, caused them sorrow or
regret. The outcome of nearly every private dilemma hung on
practical and emotional matters - the quality of the connection
between the woman and the man, the financial resources available,
the number of children the woman already had, the state of her
self-esteem, and the health of the fetus - rather than on the
weighing of rights. These insightful and eloquent authors hold up a
mirror to our society and show us that we have pitted mother
against fetus. They ask whether we have emphasized the rights of
individuals at the expense of human responsibility and care. This
most intellectually challenging yetsensitive book transcends all
other books on this topic. The complexity and rich nuances of the
stories it tells permits us to see this controversy with new eyes.
These stories, woven together, are our nation's story - one that
has never been told by the long and angry debate. Once we learn to
hear these women, we may also learn to listen to one another and
work toward common values and moral responsibility.|This book tells
fifty stories about women from strikingly diverse backgrounds who
have had to choose whether to give birth or to abort.
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Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
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