Monday, September 23, 2024

My Body, My Choice: Book Review of Looking for Jane

 

Looking for Jane: A NovelLooking for Jane: A Novel by Heather Marshall


Description

In Looking for Jane, Heather Marshall takes on the history of reproductive rights in Canada. The book alternates between the stories of three women:

Evelyn did not choose to be in a home for pregnant, unwed women. When her fiancé died before they were married, neither of them knew that Evelyn was already pregnant. Without any discussion with her, Evelyn's parents abandon her at the maternity home, where she has no rights and no way to protect herself. Or her baby.

Angela wants a baby. She has been undergoing fertility treatments and recently miscarried, a devastating loss from which she is trying to come back from so that she can try again. With each cycle, she tells herself that this will be the one.

Nancy goes with her cousin to support her as she has a back alley abortion, an experience that will change the course of her life.

As their stories unfold, the complexities of women being prevented from making choices about their own bodies is illuminated. Marshall has clearly spent time researching the subject in order to discover the various ways in which people protested the previous ban on abortion in Canada.



 

A Relevant Story 

Of course, the subject in the United States feels especially relevant, as women in several states currently lack reproductive rights. How surreal it is to think about how many years backward we have traveled with the repealing of Roe V. Wade. Looking for Jane is the October read for my book club, and I look forward to discussing it. The issues involved set up the possibility of good conversation, as most women will identify with at least some part of the story.



Would I Teach This Book?

Would I teach Looking for Jane? It would be a good pick for a contemporary fiction class, reading politics in literature, or a gender or queer studies literature course. It would fit right in with a Women’s Lit course I took in college that included books like The Accidental Tourist by Anne Tyler and Wit by Margaret Edson. I remember that course fondly, and the rousing discussions we had. One of the great values of a literature course or a book club is that to the readers, one book becomes a conversation with another. And you know what? Readers love that kind of talk.

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