Making Babies, Making Families

Making Babies, Making Families
Author: Mary Lyndon Shanley
Publisher: Beacon Press (MA)
Total Pages: 144
Release: 1925
Genre: Family & Relationships
ISBN:

Considers the current state of parenting in the United States and offers a new definition of family and a new approach to family law.

Making a Baby

Making a Baby
Author: Rachel Greener
Publisher: Penguin
Total Pages: 32
Release: 2021-06-22
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 0593324862

This inclusive guide to how every family begins is an honest, cheerful tool for conversations between parents and their young ones. To make a baby you need one egg, one sperm, and one womb. But every family starts in its own special way. This book answers the "Where did I come from?" question no matter who the reader is and how their life began. From all different kinds of conception through pregnancy to the birth itself, this candid and cozy guide is just right for the first conversations that parents will have with their children about how babies are made.

Making Babies

Making Babies
Author: Sara Bonnett Stein
Publisher: Walker & Company
Total Pages: 47
Release: 1974
Genre: Human reproduction
ISBN: 9780802761712

Photographs and brief text introduce general concepts of human reproduction. A separate text for adults provides more specific detail and suggestions for discussing the subject with children.

What Makes a Baby

What Makes a Baby
Author: Cory Silverberg
Publisher: Seven Stories Press
Total Pages: 36
Release: 2013-05-07
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 9781609804862

Geared to readers from preschool to age eight, What Makes a Baby is a book for every kind of family and every kind of kid. It is a twenty-first century children’s picture book about conception, gestation, and birth, which reflects the reality of our modern time by being inclusive of all kinds of kids, adults, and families, regardless of how many people were involved, their orientation, gender and other identity, or family composition. Just as important, the story doesn’t gender people or body parts, so most parents and families will find that it leaves room for them to educate their child without having to erase their own experience. Written by a certified sexuality educator, Cory Silverberg, and illustrated by award-winning Canadian artist Fiona Smyth, What Makes a Baby is as fun to look at as it is useful to read.

Making Babies

Making Babies
Author: Anne Enright
Publisher: Random House
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2010-12-23
Genre: Health & Fitness
ISBN: 1409017281

A SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLER 'An unadulterated delight...suffused with a sense of love and very, very funny' Maggie O'Farrell It's 2004 and Anne Enright, one of Ireland's most remarkable writers, has just had two babies: a girl and a boy. Making Babies, is the intimate, engaging, and very funny record of the journey from early pregnancy to age two. Written in dispatches, typed with a sleeping baby in the room, it has the rush of good news - full of the mess, the glory, and the raw shock of it all. An antidote to the high-minded, polemical 'How-to' baby manuals, Making Babies also bears a visceral and dreamlike witness to the first years of parenthood. Anne Enright wrote the truth of it as it happened, because, for these months and years, it is impossible for a woman to lie.

Making Babies, Making Families

Making Babies, Making Families
Author: Mary L. Shanley
Publisher: Beacon Press
Total Pages: 222
Release: 2002-04-16
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9780807044094

Thanks to new reproductive technologies and new ways of forming families, the world of parenting is opening up as never before. What defines a legal family? Should there be any restrictions on buying and selling eggs and sperm, or hiring "surrogate mothers"? How many parents can a child have? While there's no going back to the traditional family, Mary Lyndon Shanley shows us that we don't have to live in moral chaos. She offers a new vision of family law that puts each child's right to be cared for at its center, while also taking into account the complex needs of every family member.

Making Babies

Making Babies
Author: Sami S. David
Publisher: Little Brown
Total Pages:
Release: 2014-07-31
Genre: HEALTH & FITNESS
ISBN: 9780316148917

Fertility medicine today is all about aggressive surgical, chemical, and technological intervention, but Dr. David and Blakeway, a licensed acupuncturist, know a better way. "Making Babies" is a must-have for every woman trying to conceive, whether naturally or through medical intervention.

Making Babies the Hard Way

Making Babies the Hard Way
Author: Caroline Gallup
Publisher: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
Total Pages: 242
Release: 2007
Genre: Health & Fitness
ISBN: 1843104636

What lengths would you go to have a baby? This work describes at times devastating social, emotional, spiritual and physical impact of infertility on the author and her husband, including feelings of bereavement and inadequacy as well as financial pressure.

Making Babies

Making Babies
Author: Wendy Warren
Publisher: Harlequin
Total Pages: 282
Release: 2012-01-17
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1459229533

MAKING PLANS, MAKING FRIENDS…MAKING A BABY? Elaine Lowry is a divorcée with a plan: to have a baby on her own. Why shouldn’t she have the child she always dreamed of—the child her ex-husband is now having with his new wife! As if it’s not enough that he’s taken the house and, with it, her social standing. Enter sinfully handsome lawyer-for-the-opposing side Mitch Ryder. Feeling guilty about the part he played in Elaine’s divorce, he takes over as landlord on her apartment before it’s sold right from under her. Mitch offers himself as a daddy candidate on one condition: their marriage needs to be all business. But Mitch can’t help the tender protective feelings he has for Elaine, especially when they make love for the first time. And besides, who says business comes before pleasure?

Making Babies

Making Babies
Author: Sandra Sabatini
Publisher: Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press
Total Pages: 264
Release: 2006-01-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 088920621X

Although the infant has been a consistent figure in literature (and, for many people, a significant figure in personal life), there’s been little attention focused on infants, or on their place in Canadian fiction, until now. In this book, Sandra Sabatini examines Canadian fiction to trace the ideological charge behind the represented infant. Examining writers from L.M. Montgomery and Frederick Philip Grove to Thomas King and Terry Griggs, Sabatini compares women’s writing about babies with the way infants appear in texts by men over the course of a century. She discovers a range of changing attitudes toward babies. After being seen as a source of financial burden, social shame, or sentimental fantasy, infants have increasingly become a source of value and meaning. The book challenges the perception of babies as passive objects of care and argues for a reading of the infant as a subject in itself. It also reflects upon how the representations of infancy in Canadian literature offer an intriguing portrait of how we imagine ourselves.