Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
The Girls Who Went Away
The Girls Who Went Away: The Hidden History of Women Who Surrendered Children for Adoption in the Decades Before Roe V. Wade | Ann Fessler
Describes how countless single women were compelled to give up their children for adoption in the years prior to Roe v. Wade, and how their situations were compromised by limited birth control options and the unavailability of safe abortions.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
Shannon_McKinney
post image
Pickpick

I couldn‘t imagine being one of these women who were ill informed, and forced to give their child up for adoption.

review
IndoorDame
post image
Pickpick

Growing up in the 90s, the issue of coerced surrender and the fight to move towards open adoption was something that was talked about and that I was aware of from a pretty young age even though it didn‘t affect my family directly. Because of that frame, I didn‘t actually learn anything new or unexpected reading this, but I did get to see the issue in more detail, and in a new light. Fessler works hard to ⬇️⬇️⬇️

IndoorDame divorce the women she interviewed from any stigma, and the book presents this whole issue as a problem perpetuated by society, that society as a whole needs to apologize for instead of the more personal individual narratives I‘m used to hearing. #Booked2023 #AboutReproductiveRights #Pantone2023 #FieryRed (edited) 2y
Clwojick Great job! I might have to pick this one up! 2y
Cinfhen Great choice and thoughtful review!!! 2y
67 likes1 stack add3 comments
review
esurient
post image
Pickpick

Heartbreaking read. The facts and statistics recited were infuriating; the quoted stories broke me to bits. Published a dozen years ago and currently especially topical in today's political climate.

16 likes2 stack adds
blurb
OrangeMooseReads
post image

1. When it ends 😊
2. The tagged. It still gets me.
3. The bargain/clearance lol
4. Tag 🏷
@Eggs #wonderouswednesday

Eggs 😊😊 thanks for playing ❣️ 5y
25 likes1 comment
review
Ellen_C
post image
Pickpick

This book will break your heart & make you angry. Post WWII, a young woman becoming pregnant out of wedlock was such a source of shame that she was hidden away, sent to a home for unwed mothers, essentially forced to surrender her child for adoption. This is the story of these women. https://cannonballread.com/2019/07/the-girls-who-went-away-the-hidden-history-of...

Megabooks Such a good book!! 5y
7 likes1 stack add1 comment
review
OrangeMooseReads
post image
Pickpick

Equal parts heartbreak and anger. What this girls and women went through and continue to go through because of society is awful. These are stories that need to be told and need to be read.
The writing is decent you can tell that Fessler is not a writer writer. The way that the book is structured gives more impact to the stories, we are given some background to the times and societal norms that led to these women being sent away. Highly recommend

Chrissyreadit I think a lot of history from life in tenements and the fight for birth control to girls sent away has been left out of history, but perhaps this should all be part of sex Ed in every high school. It‘s appears easy to overlook women‘s rights and needs in this odd culture. 5y
OrangeMooseReads @Chrissyreadit I agree. Not only in sex Ed class but history classes as well. More women‘s history needs to be taught in general. 5y
Chrissyreadit @OrangeMooseReads I completely agree that the loss of history in education has damaged our culture. And in many places it is taught with lies and spin. I‘m blown away by the difference in how some events have been portrayed. Including economics and income disparity. The Great Depression was less than 100 years ago and people forget what led to it. The understanding of feminism has been completely muddied and skewed. 5y
41 likes2 stack adds3 comments
blurb
mrsmarch
post image

I can‘t let go of this book. I‘m rationalizing it to myself as the effect that adoption has on genealogical situations, and therefore it is pertinent to my studies. But it‘s also reinforcing to me that it has always been about policing women‘s bodies, and that if anyone tells my daughters what to do with their respective uteruses, I will fillet them alive.

JenniferEgnor Excellent wording. When searching for another book this one came up and looking through posts about it, I saw yours. Shout out to you! —from a clinic escort in SC 4y
30 likes1 stack add1 comment
blurb
OrangeMooseReads
post image

This is a great book so far, but oh my gut wrenching and heartbreaking.

mrsmarch I just started this this morning, not even out of the Foreword and I was crying. 😭 5y
OrangeMooseReads @mrsmarch this book has made me simultaneously heartbroken and furious 5y
53 likes7 stack adds2 comments
blurb
OrangeMooseReads
post image

1. Getting my #bookfitnesschallenge goals even though it was a rainy yucky week. Also volunteering Wednesday, it‘s office work but I was so happy doing it.
2. Putting real effort into getting my house clean clean and hopefully tackling my craft closet and getting it better organized and cleaned.
I do love short and sweet 😆 #friyayintro @howjessreads

wanderinglynn Yeah you got your #BFC goals this week! 🙌🏻 6y
43 likes1 comment
blurb
OrangeMooseReads
post image

This feels like a timely read.

Amiable I just read this last month. Definitely timely. 😳 6y
44 likes1 stack add1 comment
blurb
Andrea313
post image

Oh, look, time to pull this out again because we are back in 1957.

Sorry to be flip. I am furious. I am afraid. This book has been on my mind all day; it's an important read, though heartbreaking. In the wake of the horrible news from Alabama, Georgia, et al, this book and its topics- women blamed, women shamed, women with no choice in what happens to their bodies and in their lives- are haunting me. #currentlyreading

BooknerdsLife I‘m totally shocked by the decision in Alabama too! It‘s like watching humanity & human rights in backward!!! 😱😭🙏🏼 6y
Andrea313 @BooknerdsLife Exactly! I am having trouble articulating just how deeply disturbing and hypocritical these laws are. 6y
BooknerdsLife @Andrea313 while there are so many other important issues going on in the country & in the world and they pulled this stunt?! I have no words but there are still hope and knowing people won‘t give up fighting for what‘s right is the best part of it all 🙏🏼💖 6y
9 likes3 comments
review
Amiable
post image
Pickpick

Completed for the “something written by a woman” category for #nonfiction2019. It‘s a compilation of stories from women who were forced to give their babies up for adoption in the years between WWII and Roe v. Wade. Heartbreaking and sobering —especially at first, although the stories start to sound the same by the end.

@Riveted_Reader_Melissa

Riveted_Reader_Melissa That sounds heartbreaking and important! Stacked!! 6y
57 likes2 stack adds1 comment
blurb
shmreads
post image

So much to highlight. I'm an adoptee myself. And more. Reading this book is a painful experience, but oddly, a really good read.

1 stack add
review
Samplergal
post image
Pickpick

#readUsa2019

The author is from Rhode Island, but the stories of these women are from everywhere.

BarbaraBB You have covered so many states yet! 6y
Librarybelle 👍 6y
73 likes2 comments
blurb
PrezBookster
post image

My mother was adopted in 1962. Then almost right after her mother got pregnant and ended up have three biological children of her own. Leaving my mom as the odd one out. My mother was herself sent away at 17 to give birth to her daughter in 1980, and gave her up for adoption. We later found her! And I do not know my father but was adopted by my brothers father! Adoption is deeply woven in my family story! I‘m reading to understand my moms pain.

RaimeyGallant Thanks for sharing! 6y
51 likes3 stack adds1 comment
review
Megabooks
post image
Pickpick

Wow! Probably the best #nonfiction book I‘ve read this year! The author collected oral histories of women who were forced or coerced into giving up their babies in the 50s, 60s, and early 70s. For the most part the book is the women talking, but the author does also add some informative context and research. 5⭐️

Book 1 #deweys24hourreadathon #nonfiction2018

87 likes11 stack adds
blurb
Megabooks
post image

1. #Henry dug a bed in the couch cover at my parents‘ house.
2. ⬆️
3. Not much so far. I‘m going to do Dewey‘s Saturday if I can. Anyone else doing it?
4. My book sleeve!
5. 🎶 I don‘t want to wait for my life to be over/I want to know right now what will it be 🎶

#humpdaypost

wanderinglynn Love that song! 🎶 I don't want to wait for our lives to be over / Will it be yes or will it be sorry? 6y
xicanti I'm surprised so few people have mentioned the Readathon! 6y
Megabooks @wanderinglynn Me too! I hate that the reruns have a different theme. 6y
See All 6 Comments
Megabooks @xicanti Same here! I don‘t know if people aren‘t participating or if they‘re just talking about it on Goodreads. 🤷🏻‍♀️ Are you doing it? 6y
xicanti @Megabooks absolutely! It's my 21st. 6y
Megabooks @xicanti Wow! Congratulations! 🍾🎉 6y
80 likes1 stack add6 comments
review
Reviewsbylola
post image
Pickpick

Social stigma, lack of education, and the outlaw of abortion necessitated that many girls and young women found themselves in group homes for unwed mothers. This book sheds light on some of the women who found themselves #pregnant decades ago and were eventually forced to give their babies up for adoption.

#septemberdanes

Leftcoastzen It must be a vital but agonizing read 6y
Kalalalatja Stacked! Why didn‘t I know about this book before 😮 6y
mrozzz She was one of my professors in college 😊 I read her book when I took an independent study with her. Loved it. 6y
See All 7 Comments
Reviewsbylola That is so cool!! @mrozzz 6y
CareBear I loved this book. It has stayed with me for years. 6y
emilyhaldi Sounds depressing 😨 6y
Cinfhen Sounds like a tough read 😪 6y
106 likes12 stack adds7 comments
blurb
Brie
post image

I have an entire #TBR shelf dedicated to history. World history, colonial history, American history, British history, medical history, art history, war history. #itshistory #anditsaugust

batsy 😍 7y
MayJasper Fabulous 7y
rubyslippersreads Lots of those on my TBR shelf too! 😄 I really enjoyed 7y
See All 9 Comments
charissharpe Wow that's a lot of history! 7y
RealBooks4ever Nice! 😻 7y
Gezemice Oh so cool! I used to read lots of history and I am trying to get back to it. Lots of great books there! 7y
kspenmoll You have so many great books there! 7y
Brie @kspenmoll Yeah, I've been meaning to read that one for years! I've heard it's great. 7y
erzascarletbookgasm So many interesting great titles! 7y
85 likes1 stack add9 comments
review
Kathrin
post image
Pickpick

This book is incredible in so many ways. The lack of information given to young women prior to their pregnancies and how the adoption agencies treated them is unbelievable. It's a must read! Most of this book is oral history recounted, I wish I it would have had a little more beef from studies and the legal premises of the time.

(Greetings from 🇦🇹 Austria)

Laura317 Seems the flip side is true now. 😥Forced abortion in China. How horrible for the parents and children either way. 8y
29 likes1 stack add1 comment
blurb
Yamich49
post image

Ahh thank you @haileyhugsbooks for all the goodies! All of these gifts are so perfect for me it's ridiculous. Nerdy Doctor Who bookmark ✔️ Awesome #diversecomic that I have been wanting to read for sooo long ✔️ Fascinating non-fiction about reproductive-rights-related women's history with real women's stories ✔️ And delicious chocolate ✔️The card is also super cute! ❤ Thanks again soooo much! Your GR stalking paid off - I haven't read these! 😍🎉

Yamich49 And thanks again to @BookishMarginalia for organizing another wonderful gift exchange! #cupidgoespostal 8y
Yamich49 Seriously tho @haileyhugsbooks this book sounds super interesting and I hadn't even heard of it! And the comic will tide me over until the Black Panther movie comes out!!! ❤❤❤ 8y
haileybean I'm glad you like these! I was worried that you were going to buy (or already had) the Black Panther graphic novel. I want to read that particular series of the Black Panther because I want to support Ta'Nehisi Coates. 8y
See All 10 Comments
Yamich49 @haileyhugsbooks Yes I love them!! It's been on my TBR forever but I hadn't purchased it yet! Or even read it! And I 💯 support you supporting Ta'Nehosi Coates! He rocks! ❤ 8y
LeahBergen 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 8y
Reviewsbylola The Girls Who Went Away is so good. 8y
Zelma @Reviewsbylola agreed. Very interesting, both sad and infuriating. 8y
Megabooks 👍🏻👍🏻🎉🎉💛💛 8y
Yamich49 @Reviewsbylola @Zelma Good to hear! It sounds like a great, but sad, book which I love so it's perfect. 8y
Yamich49 @LeahBergen @Ebooksandcooks Right?? ❤ all of these thoughtful gifts! 8y
89 likes6 stack adds10 comments
review
BillKathyWms
post image
Pickpick

Nonfiction. Wow! Powerful! Between 1950-1973; prior to (Roe v Wade) 1.5 million babies were put up for adoption mainly due to pressure from families & society. Fessler presents commentary on the times as well as oral histories from over 100 birth mothers & their stories. Tragic & heartbreaking...On a personal level it stirred up a lot of emotions in me since I have both a sister & a daughter who are adopted.

9 likes2 stack adds
review
BillKathyWms
Pickpick

Nonfiction. Wow! Powerful! Between 1950-1973; prior to (Roe v Wade) 1.5 million babies were put up for adoption mainly due to pressure from families & society. Fessler presents commentary on the times as well as oral histories from over 100 birth mothers & their stories. Tragic & heartbreaking...On a personal level it stirred up a lot of emotions in me since I have both a sister & a daughter who are adopted.

review
alisahar
post image
Pickpick

For the #augustphotochallenge on #politicsandbooks I'm highlighting two books that shaped my thoughts on abortion rights. I return to PRO again & again as I think about how to argue for abortion rights. It has stayed with me. The Girls Who Went Away tells the stories of unwed mothers forced to surrender their babies for adoptions before Roe. It's a heart-wrenching and largely untold part of the pre-Roe story. #augustofpages

BookishFeminist These are such great books! Such great work on destigmatizing abortion. 8y
catieohjoy I LOVE The Girls Who Went Away. So powerful. 8y
alisahar @catieohjoy It was profound for me. Adoption is such an important facet of the abortion conversation. 8y
See All 10 Comments
catieohjoy @alisahar I had the super weird experience of reading it for a class the same month I got into contact with my biological mother (I'm adopted)—so I was reading about the experiences of women pre-Roe, and hearing about her experience a couple decades later. Phew! 8y
BookishMarginalia Thanks for the review. I look forward to reading it 🤓 8y
alisahar @catieohjoy That must have been an emotional read.. 8y
alisahar @BookishMarginalia it's so worth it. Let me know what you think. 8y
BookishMarginalia Will do! 8y
TheSpinecrackersBookClub I would love to read this! 8y
23 likes5 stack adds10 comments