Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Knocking Myself Up
Knocking Myself Up: A Memoir of My (In)Fertility | Michelle Tea
2 posts | 2 read | 1 to read
From PEN/America Award winner, 2021 Guggenheim fellow, and beloved literary and tarot icon Michelle Tea, the hilarious, powerfully written, taboo-breaking story of her journey to pregnancy and motherhood as a 40 year-old, queer, uninsured woman Written in intimate, gleefully TMI prose, Knocking Myself Up is the irreverent account of Tea’s route to parenthood—with a group of ride-or-die friends, a generous drag queen, and a whole lot of can-do pluck. Along the way she falls in love with a wholesome genderqueer a decade her junior, attempts biohacking herself a baby with black market fertility meds (and magicking herself an offspring with witch-enchanted honey), learns her eggs are busted, and enters the Fertility Industrial Complex in order to carry her younger lover’s baby. With the signature sharp wit and wild heart that have made her a favorite to so many readers, Tea guides us through the maze of medical procedures, frustrations and astonishments on the path to getting pregnant, wryly critiquing some of the systems that facilitate that choice (“a great, punk, daredevil thing to do”). In Knocking Myself Up, Tea has crafted a deeply entertaining and profound memoir, a testament to the power of love and family-making, however complex our lives may be, to transform and enrich us.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
Soubhiville
post image
Pickpick

Michelle decided at 39 that if she was going have a baby, she better get working on that!

I love the way she called on friends and family throughout her experience, from the drag Queen friend who happily donated sperm, her wide array of very enthusiastic medical helpers, to her incredible supportive partner, her sister, and her mother.

Wonderfully queer and unconventional, she describes her up and down journey.

AmyG Hey, do you need any books for your LFL? I have a little pile and thought I‘d ask you first. 1y
AmyG Do you need any books for your LFL? I have a pile@and wanted to ask you first. 1y
64 likes2 comments
review
CaseyTheCanadianLesbrarian
post image
Pickpick

A very queer and very funny delight, this memoir about Michelle Tea's years long project of getting pregnant and having a kid which she started at the ripe age of 40! From inseminating at home with her drag queen friend's sperm to doing IVF to implant her partner's egg in her uterus, the memoir is super candid, casual, and reassuring. She reads the audiobook and adds a bunch of chutzpah to it that I really enjoyed.

41 likes1 stack add