Making Babies: the Sunday Times bestselling memoir of stumbling into motherhood
By (Author) Anne Enright
Vintage Publishing
Vintage
3rd March 2022
4th August 2005
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Sociology: family and relationships
306.8743
Paperback
208
Width 130mm, Height 197mm, Spine 13mm
149g
'Fizzingly entertaining. Reading it is like having a conversation with your funniest friend. Enright has pulled off that rarest of tricks: writing brilliantly about happiness.' Anne Enright, one of Ireland's most remarkable writers, has just had two babies: a girl and a boy. Her new book, 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.
1000 kilometres away from baby whisperer books, and one every petrified parent-to-be should read. * Image *
1000 kilometres away from baby whisperer books, and one every petrified parent-to-be should read. * Image *
Fizzingly entertaining. Reading it is like having a conversation with your funniest friend. Enright has pulled off that rarest of tricks: writing brilliantly about happiness * Sunday Times *
Making Babies is an absolute joy, the perfect, intelligent antidote to poisonous books on the subject
An unadulterated delight...suffused with a sense of love and very, very funny * Daily Telegraph *
Anne Enright was born in Dublin, where she now lives and works. She has published two collection of stories, collected as Yesterday's Weather, one book of non-fiction, Making Babies, and five novels, including The Gathering, which was the Irish Novel of the Year, and won the Irish Fiction Award and the 2007 Man Booker Prize, and The Forgotten Waltz, which was awarded the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction. She is the inaugural Laureate for Irish Fiction.