Baby at the Farm

Baby at the Farm
Author: Karen Katz
Publisher: Little Simon
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2009-12-29
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 9781416985686

Little ones will love touching and feeling farm animals in this novelty board book that's perfect for spring from bestselling author, Karen Katz! 6 5/8 X 7 3/8 board book has touch-and-feel elements on each spread.

Baby Farm

Baby Farm
Author: Robert A. Norman
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 197
Release: 2003-01-22
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1403344620

I love to read, as do many other women in this life, especially fiction. Turning the pages of a good novel is like chocolate for the mind, each page filled with sweet, creamy adventure. Wrap some music around the words and I'm hooked twice. The novel Can't Wait to Dance concerns three very different/alike women (one white, two black) and their complicated friendship with each other and their search for meaningful relationships with other people in their lives. The story is set against the lush, interesting, sparkling world of Denver, Colorado. Astra, a cherub-like blonde from Minnesota, feigns independence, but all the while is searching for some man to take care of her. Simi, a short, graceful dark woman, is bored with nude modeling and most men. She needs a change and a chance to find the one thing she wants to do with her life. Icey, an attractive fair-skinned tall thin woman, has a PR job and a hustler mortician boyfriend who are interfering with her desire to close her door and write romance novels. These three women experience joy, pain, pregnancy, rape and changing times and relationships, played out against the beat of the pulsating music that loudly runs through their lives, to reach a desired conclusion.

The Baby Farm

The Baby Farm
Author: Carol J Larson
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 206
Release: 2013-11-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1611606535

Seventeen-year-old Hannah Winter is seven months pregnant and married... to the wrong man. When it appears that her true love has abandoned her, she is forced to marry a brutal man, for it's 1885, and her only choice is to marry someone, anyone, or give up her baby. But once her daughter is born, her cruel husband sells the child to a baby farm. Outraged, Hannah attacks him only to be beaten and imprisoned. Now it is up to Claire Sargent and the girls of the Secret Society of Sugar and Spice to plan a daring escape and spirit Hannah away to safety. But once rescued, Hannah won't leave... without her daughter. Claire and the girls of the Secret Society face their most daunting mission yet, for not only must they find the baby girl, they must steal her away.

The World's Greatest Baby Farm Animals Poster Book

The World's Greatest Baby Farm Animals Poster Book
Author: Daniel Johnson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 88
Release:
Genre: Domestic animals
ISBN: 9781610605441

There is nothing cuter than a baby animal--except perhaps a whole book full of them! With 43 pull-out posters of farm animal babies at their most adorable, this book is as sure to prompt a smile as a trip to grandpas farm in the spring. Here are the unsteady calves and colts and fillies, the little pink piglets and wide-eyed kids, the chicks, kittens, puppies, and more, all in big, spectacular pictures accompanied by fascinating fun facts and lots of information on what these animals are like as babies and adults.

The Edward Street Baby Farm

The Edward Street Baby Farm
Author: Stella Budrikis
Publisher: Fremantle Press
Total Pages: 307
Release: 2020-10-01
Genre: True Crime
ISBN: 1925816109

In 1907, Perth woman Alice Mitchell was arrested for the murder of five-month-old Ethel Booth. During the inquest and subsequent trial, the state's citizens were horrified to learn that at least 37 infants had died in Mitchell's care in the previous six years. It became clear that she had been running a 'baby farm', making a profit out of caring for the children of single mothers and other 'unfortunate women'.The Alice Mitchell murder trial gripped the city of Perth and the nation. This book retraces this infamous 'baby farm' tragedy, which led to legislative changes to protect children's welfare.

Motherhood, Respectability and Baby-Farming in Victorian and Edwardian London

Motherhood, Respectability and Baby-Farming in Victorian and Edwardian London
Author: Joshua G. Stuart-Bennett
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 167
Release: 2022-11-10
Genre: History
ISBN: 1000642445

Motherhood, Respectability and Baby-Farming in Victorian and Edwardian London explores a largely obscured marketplace of motherhood that provided ways for women to manage the stigma of illegitimacy and their respectable identities within Victorian and Edwardian society. It focuses on the extent of women’s ‘dirty work’, when maternal problem management was fundamental to the general maintenance of respectability and, by extension, to Empire and Civilisation. Despite its intrigue, history has struggled to understand and represent an uncomfortable but significant artefact of Western modernising society: ‘baby-farming’. During a period when ideologies of respectability and civilisation arguably mattered most, the ‘right’ kind of parenthood – especially motherhood – became paramount. As the ‘wrong’ offspring could jeopardise a woman’s chances of being respectable, a wholesale, informal, and somewhat clandestine marketplace emerged that catered to various maternal difficulties. Within this marketplace, a pregnancy or newborn child who may have compromised a woman’s respectability could be ‘disposed’ of through different means, for a fee. From the Victorian period to the present, the commercialised maternal practices associated with baby-farming have become firmly established within collective consciousness as being synonymous with child murder, female pathology, and ‘infanticide for hire’. This book provides a revised, far more complex, and nuanced narrative history which reveals all that was associated with baby-farming – including all possible outcomes – to be entirely natural, rational, and even necessary products of their time; an understandable outcome of the period’s ‘civilising offensive’. Motherhood, Respectability and Baby-Farming in Victorian and Edwardian London will be of great interest to students and scholars of criminology, sociology, history, and gender studies.

Pricing the Priceless Child

Pricing the Priceless Child
Author: Viviana A. Zelizer
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 298
Release: 1994-08-28
Genre: Family & Relationships
ISBN: 9780691034591

This study traces the emergence of changing attitudes about the child, at once economically "useless" and emotionally "priceless", from the late 1800s to the 1930s. It describes how turn-of-the-century America discovered new, sentimental ways to determine a child's monetary worth.

Bright Baby On the Farm

Bright Baby On the Farm
Author: Roger Priddy
Publisher: Priddy Books US
Total Pages: 12
Release: 2006-12-26
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 1429917849

This charming book from Roger Priddy features adorable farm animals--perfect for the youngest readers! Featuring a different texture on each page, Bright Baby On the Farm is an adorable book that will stimulate your child's senses and encourage their imagination. Learn all about animals on the farm, from bestselling children's book author Roger Priddy. With clear photography, bright colors, and simple text labels, Bright Baby books help babies and toddlers to develop and build early vocabulary through the introduction of first words and pictures.

Kinship by Design

Kinship by Design
Author: Ellen Herman
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 394
Release: 2009-08-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0226328074

What constitutes a family? Tracing the dramatic evolution of Americans’ answer to this question over the past century, Kinship by Design provides the fullest account to date of modern adoption’s history. Beginning in the early 1900s, when children were still transferred between households by a variety of unregulated private arrangements, Ellen Herman details efforts by the U.S. Children’s Bureau and the Child Welfare League of America to establish adoption standards in law and practice. She goes on to trace Americans’ shifting ideas about matching children with physically or intellectually similar parents, revealing how research in developmental science and technology shaped adoption as it navigated the nature-nurture debate. Concluding with an insightful analysis of the revolution that ushered in special needs, transracial, and international adoptions, Kinship by Design ultimately situates the practice as both a different way to make a family and a universal story about love, loss, identity, and belonging. In doing so, this volume provides a new vantage point from which to view twentieth-century America, revealing as much about social welfare, statecraft, and science as it does about childhood, family, and private life.