Birth-Control-Contraception Books
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Awesome!Review Date: 2008-12-02
Empowers women to better understand themselvesReview Date: 2008-11-26
Great referenceReview Date: 2008-11-23
The Bible of Fertility AwarenessReview Date: 2008-11-22
To complete the journey from preconception health, to pregnancy, to birth and beyond, look to Healing Our Children: Because Your New Baby Matters! Sacred Wisdom for Preconception, Pregnancy, Birth and Parenting (ages 0-6) by Ramiel Nagel. The Fertility Awareness Method or Natural Family Planning is recommended by Ramiel as the only method of contraception safe enough to ensure the healthiest pregnancy and child possible.
Didn't know that I didn't know.Review Date: 2008-11-19


Must-have referenceReview Date: 2008-11-11
ExcellentReview Date: 2008-09-19
Easy to Read Reference for PractitionersReview Date: 2008-04-22
I recommend this text to any women's health practitioner.
Fantastic!Review Date: 2008-02-15
Will definitely use this vendor again!
Crucial Desk ReferenceReview Date: 2006-03-19

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Birth Control Can Save the WorldReview Date: 2008-08-29
This is an optimistic view and provides useful guidance for every person and every nation which is concerned about overpopulation and overstressed world resources.
More for kids, not more kidsReview Date: 2008-08-26
Today, and every other day since 9/11, about 22,000 people died of complications of hunger, most of them children, 8 million a year. In addition, violent conflicts, genocides and natural disasters come fundamentally from too many people competing for too little space. But population has almost disappeared from media and public debate. The U.S. spends less than $400 million a year on family planning programs. Before 2015, barring disaster, human population will have grown from 1 billion to 7 billion in just over two hundred years. Many ecologists think we are in "overshoot" with current population unsustainable on this small planet. Engelman's book, in this context, should be read by everyone.
Engelman's combination of a sharp reporter's eye and ear with serious depth of historical research and long population NGO experience packs this book with big ideas and fascinating stories. He paints the historical big picture--while quoting the moving words of a poor woman in Kenya. Engelman made a serious effort to listen to what women, throughout history, had to say about family planning and child bearing. He empathizes with the challenges women face in places where large families lead to higher death rates and poverty for children and women. He spent two decades observing successful and unsuccessful population control efforts.
The core message of More : "Women aren't seeking more children, but more for their children." ( p8) If every woman was free to choose family size and had access to birth control, the world's population would stabilize. And, that would be a very good thing for many reasons including reducing poverty, war, disease and environmental losses--and, by the way, terrorism. The price tag for providing birth control to every poor woman would be a fraction of the U.S. budget for the Iraq war.
This message is even more important and fundamental than Al Gore's global warming Jeremiad, in fact, the growth in human population drives global warming and most other environmental disasters. Population growth will almost certainly stop during this century. What remains to be seen is whether this pause will occur mainly by reduction in birth rates and longer lives (as in Europe) or continued high birth rates and shorter lives (as in Africa). Will humans be wise enough to stop growth or suffer growth and collapse? Engelman argues that individual women prefer fewer children with longer lives, better futures and higher incomes.
Engelman does a nice job of making population history understandable and simple. Where demographers and ecologists might talk about logistic functions, Engelman points out that population growth meant that our pre-historic ancestors, at certain times, must have been able to raise three or more children. Any surplus above replacement fertility levels leads to exponential population growth. He traces historical evidence that women practiced birth control, abortion and infanticide for thousands of years in recognition that having fewer children improved their children's lives. If everybody in the world read this book and acted on its message, the human future would be far brighter.
While agreeing with everything Engelman says, I do feel that now that human population has increased above sustainable levels, your children--or rather, the sum of the 375,000 births per day, 136 million births per year--affect outcomes for my children. The world children will inherit differs depending on population growth--with a range of possible outcomes from collapse to prosperity. "Your rights do not include the right to damage others" logic led to all kinds of regulations such as drivers' licenses, drunk driving laws, zoning and land use regulations and so on. Governments do have a role in regulating population while protecting individual's rights, in fact, to protect individual's rights (to peace and a habitable planet, for example, not to mention affordable gasoline). When our actions affect other people--including future generations for millions of years-- then governments need to help women get to the good outcomes they want for their children by promoting responsible family planning. More countries are going to need something like China's one child policy to bring population and resources back into balance. Most Chinese have accepted the one child policy as preferable to living in a country with over 4 billion people--the forecast that led to the policy.
Engelman's message is more optimistic--he says population stability will happen by individual choices where women are free to control reproduction. But if so many responsible couples choose smaller families, why should irresponsible people be allowed to make life dangerous and resources scarce and expensive for the rest of us? An ancient Babylonian flood story quoted by Engelman "depicts overpopulation... as so painful the land itself howls." (p. 97) Alas, Babylon.
An important readReview Date: 2008-07-31
The author offers the reader a pretty good thumbnail sketch of the theories of where we Homo Sapiens originally came from, and why it was that we ended up on top rather than some of our distant cousins. Many of these theories are subjective and in the field of evolutionary biology there are as many theories as there are really good scholars, pretty good scholars, amateurs and your run of the mill crackpot, so for the number of pages the author does a really nice job giving the reader a good sampling of theories without overloading the reader.
Next the author gives the reader a very interesting history of contraceptives, attitudes towards sex over human history, feminism and opposition to all of these. I was fascinated to learn parts of history I was completely ignorant about before reading this book. The author also posits some very interesting theories about humans move to agrarian societies all the way to the witch trials in Europe. The author makes a very strong argument for sex and population being very important prime movers in human events. Of course population size and sex are always important, but this book has put forth some ideas I had not considered before.
What was very compelling for me was the author's work and description of working in third world countries. Reading his interviews with these people and getting an idea of the desperation they live with and the problems they face because they do not have access to adequate contraceptives or education was distressing. I couldn't imagine a life spent either pregnant or taking care of an infant all of ones life, or having sex be similar to playing Russian roulette where every encounter could cause pregnancy or disease. Even more than that was how badly these people want access to contraceptives and family planning resources which is heartbreaking. As I was reading about all the deaths and disease attributable to abortions and births performed in unsafe conditions that could have been prevented with nothing more than a simple condom you realize how lucky we are and just how little it would take to change other peoples lives for the better.
This book has some very well thought out arguments with detailed conclusions backed up with historical data and first hand research. Not only that but the author presents the material in a very accessible way. The book is short which diminishes the intimidation factor, and will hopefully make it more palatable for a more general readership. My one main criticism is that I hate the silly little puns and some of the attempts at levity that peppers this work. The author is obviously a well educated individual who has written a well thought out scientific book that is meant to be taken seriously. These puns and metaphors in scientific works are the bane of my existence. I cannot express the depth of my loathing for this practice. They irk me to no end. With that said, I understand that the author was attempting to give this book a wider readership and perhaps these attempts at levity help to lighten a very deep and serious subject for readers helping to bring more people to the book, but my understanding that doesn't have to mean that I like it. I didn't take off for it though, but felt I still needed to vent here a little.
This is a very serious subject, and is one that needs our attention now. This book is important for the discussion that needs to be taking place now. With that said I highly recommend this work.
Finally... a compassionate AND well reasoned approach to population and environmentReview Date: 2008-06-20
Emme Edmunds is a Midwife and Women's Health Nurse Practitioner currently pursuing a PhD in Development Sociology. She is interested in connecting issues of human rights and women's autonomy with birth control and environmental susatainability.
Trusting women and respecting historyReview Date: 2008-05-07
Engelman outlines the history of women managing their fertility through the ages, from our humble beginnings as homo erectus through modern day. Throughout human history some women have prevented conception with herbs and pessaries. And some women have always backed up these methods with abortion and infanticide.
His point is that women's desire to have small families is not new and that modern contraception should be available to any woman who wants it, in order to avoid the crude methods that our ancestors were stuck with.
Engelman writes about women with great respect and humorously describes why men and women so often differ on their ideas about ideal childbearing (both timing and total number). In fact, humor is an integral part of this book. Engelman was a journalist in a past life and his catchy, accessible writing style shines through on every page.
I highly recommend this book to anyone who wants to learn more about demography, women's reproductive rights, and/or anthropology. This book should interest just about anyone and is not the dry, academic sort of textbook that you might expect of this topic. I'm even going to propose it as a selection for my monthly book club!

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Clearest NFP Book I've ReadReview Date: 2008-08-24
Great for beginners, pretty cover.
Simple, Clear InformationReview Date: 2007-10-12
The book is about using fertility awareness to avoid or promote pregnancy The book is clear and easy to follow. It contains some inaccurate breastfeeding information, which I'm very sensitive to--including such odd comments as, "sometimes, when a mother is away from her baby for an afternoon or more, her milk dries up." Huh?! This is where the overly simplistic approach does not succeed, because it is NOT correct (in this case).
I'm very interested and excited right now by fertility awareness--how coolly and magically women's bodies indicate where they are in their fertility cycle. I am regretful that I spend so many years hormonally manipulating my cycle rather than just paying attention to my own body (which clearly communicates with me). so, this book reinforced this "magic-ness." I guess I would recommend it to others. There is a certain "spark" missing because it is so basic (I think it is designed for use with low-literacy populations). That gorgeous cover makes up for a lot though! ;-)
Part of this review was originally posted to my blog, http://mollyreads.blogspot.com.
THE EASIEST WAY TO LEARN AND PRACTICE NFP/FAM!Review Date: 2007-06-26
What surprised me was the incredible job the author has done of teaching the method in a very concise and easy to understand manner. I can't emphasize enough how much easier it is to learn how to chart to prevent or to plan a pregnancy with this book than with other books.
Most exciting to me was the way the author teaches how to use NFP while breast feeding. The other books make it so complicated and when I did finally think I de-coded what they meant, it didn't work for me because my mucus was too eratic while nursing to use their methods. But, Singer does an excellent job in this book explaining how to use NFP while nursing a baby and she does it in under one page! She makes perfect sense and her method is much, much easier to use and is actually doable.
Awesome, awesome book!
perfect giftReview Date: 2008-04-08
Gentle Encouragement, Firm ConfidenceReview Date: 2008-02-26
I've been practicing Natural Family Planning (NFP) with success for several years and I know that many women hesitate to embrace NFP or Fertility Awareness because they are afraid to trust the method. With her gentle encouragement and ease of communication, Singer's confidence in the accuracy of fertility awareness transfers to the readers - at least it did for me.
It's very important to gain confidence in NFP if you are going to rely upon it. The examples helped clarify various issues and scenarios. I also learned a new technique by reading this book: the "coverline."
The cover design is so enticing that my teenage daughters were intrigued with HONORING OUR CYCLES. I highly recommend this book.
-Lynn M. Griesemer, Author of YOUR BODY, YOUR BIRTH: SECRETS FOR A SATISFYING AND SUCCESSFUL BIRTH

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Great InformationReview Date: 2008-09-23
i had sex with Dr. King!!Review Date: 2008-08-27
Good Book and Great Class!Review Date: 2005-09-27
GreatReview Date: 2005-09-19
thanks
If you think you know all about sex, think again!Review Date: 2006-05-24
Read this book, for a class or personal education or whatever reason. At the very least you'll come out with some interesting facts about human behavior, but more likely you'll change your entire perspective on human sexual behavior.

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Expertly examines the pros and cons of various methodsReview Date: 2003-08-07
Very helpful!Review Date: 2005-04-11
Wonderful informativeReview Date: 2004-09-13
This books looks closely at the Biblical and moral issues of all the methods of birth control out there. You will walk away feeling informed and empowered by this book! Very well written and easy to read, but incredibly thorough, and well researched. Very solid theological explanations througout to help you make decisions that you can feel right before God about.
Exactly what I was looking forReview Date: 2006-09-23

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What Planned Parenthood doesn't want you to knowReview Date: 2008-11-22
This book is a must-read for anyone in the pro-life movement, whether your concern is eugenics, embryonic stem-cell research, contraception, abortion, euthenasia or the death penalty.
Feminists: Read this book!Review Date: 2006-08-11
Read Lady Eugenist tooReview Date: 2005-11-16
In her 1938 autobiography, Margaret Sanger noted that "Eugenics, which started long before my time, had once been defined as including free love and the prevention of conception." Eugenics and free love was a reference to Victoria Woodhull, the first woman to run for President (1872), for a time a fierce advocate of free love, and a life-long advocate of eugenics and state-controlled child rearing. In 1927, in what was perhaps Woodhull's last public statement, she praised Buck v. Bell, a US Supreme Court decision declaring forced sterilization constitutional and, according to the New York Times, told a reporter that she had "advocated that fifty years ago."
The two books mentioned above present detailed evidence that one of the nation's leading feminists was advocating eugenics, then called stirpiculture, in the 1870s, three decades before Francis Galton took up the cause in earnest and four decades before it acquired a significant following in Margaret Sanger and others. That demolishes the argument of those who claim that feminists such as Sanger only adopted eugenic rhetoric because the movement was too powerful to ignore. When Woodhull took up eugenics, she was virtually the only public figure in the U.S. speaking on the topic. She 'mainstreamed' an issue, controlled human breeding, that had previously only been discussed by strange utopian cults on the American frontier, such as the Oneida Community.
The historical reality is that, far from being united in defending 'reproductive freedom,' certain groups of well-connected and powerful women have been some of the strongest proponents of the government limiting the birth rates of women they consider "unfit" or inferior. (You see this in their sneers at 'stay-at-home' mothers.) Newspapers noted that Woodhull attracted those sorts of women in the 1870s-90s when she advocated eugenics. They continued to do so when Charlotte Perkins Gilman promoted negative eugenics in the 1910s, and when Sanger did so with her birth control movement from 1917 on.
Woodhull's speeches and pamphlets also demonstrate that there is a close connection between those who want to control who can have children and those who want to limit the rights of parents to rear their children after they are born, as illustrated by a recent Ninth Circuit decision denying the right of parents to protect their grade-school children from sexual questions. These are most emphatically not people who believe in protecting anyone's "privacy."
--Michael W. Perry, Seattle
Editor of The Pivot of Civilization in Historical Perspective by Margaret Sanger
Editor of Eugenics and Other Evils by G. K. Chesterton
Exposing the Agenda of Planned Parenthood's FounderReview Date: 2005-04-18
In this book, Franks shows that any concern Sanger had for women's rights was secondary to her larger agenda -- helping to create a better race by controlling the fertility of those she saw as society's least "fit" members -- the poor, the disabled, the "feebleminded," the sickly, the epileptic, the alcoholic, etc. Where persuasion worked, that was fine, but as Franks points out, Sanger and her allies were prepared to use coercion when they felt it was necessary to achieve their eugenic aims.
Franks traces what she identifies as the "control movement" from its earliest days in the 1920s when sterilization programs began to spring up in Virginia, Alabama, North Carolina, and later California to the 1990s when U.N. "family planning" money helped support forced sterilizations and abortions in China. Along the way, she identifies the key players, policies, and programs that helped to mainstream many of the ideas that the world once found so abhorrent in Germany in the 1930s and 1940s.
There are those in our modern PC culture that might be tempted to dismiss such charges, but this book is thorough and well documented, with over 1,200 footnotes and a bibliography featuring about a thousand books, articles, and interviews on Sanger, her associates, and the organizations they founded and led.
The tone is academic, but the language is generally accessible, so that both scholars and activists alike will benefit from the reading of it.
Despite Sanger's celebration as a liberator of women and the feminist hagiographies that have been written of Planned Parenthood's founder, Franks argues that Sanger's eugenic ideas are antithetical to freedom and to true feminism, aiming to suppress precisely what it is that makes women women.
Sanger certainly had enormous influence, but before deciding whether that influence was good or bad, one would be well advised to read this book.

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The Hobo PhilosopherReview Date: 2007-09-05
This book The Pill by Bernard Asbell besides being full of useful and energizing information is more than interesting. It is a social as well as a religious experience. One thing is for certain - trying not to have babies has been going on for centuries; thank God.
The Pill- an extremely interesting and entertaining readReview Date: 2006-07-18
I don't think I fully appreciated how revolutionary the Pill was before I read this book. It has made me much more grateful and informed about the options I can now make. He presents the story with the gravity it deserves.
capitvating readReview Date: 1998-02-23
The review of The Pill of The BookReview Date: 2003-05-08

This was a God-sendReview Date: 2006-02-13
Great for all ages!Review Date: 2000-04-19
Great resource for a better sex lifeReview Date: 2002-09-02
together in our total marriage
Better than expectedReview Date: 2007-06-26

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Inappropriate PraiseReview Date: 2005-10-04
I also edited an edition of G. K. Chesterton's Eugenics and Other Evils, one of the few books critical of eugenics to be published in the 1920s. In nine appendices I placed articles by his English eugenic opponents, including Marie Stopes, Margaret Sanger's English counterpart. Even the most casual reading of her Birth Control News makes it clear Stopes was not a champion of reproductive freedom. The full name of her organization was the Society for Constructive Birth Control and Racial Progress.
As a feminist, Margaret Sanger did not even pioneer the idea that the solution to our social ills lies in curtailing the birthrates of the "unfit" women. Victoria Woodhull did that with a series of speeches across the U.S. in the 1870s, speeches I'm republishing in the soon-out Lady Eugenist: Feminist Eugenics in the Speeches and Writings of Victoria Woodhull. Merely listing the titles of two of her short books: The Rapid Multiplication of the Unfit (1891) and The Scientific Propagation of the Human Race (1893), makes her point of view clear. That's why a good case can be made that Woodhull--and not Francis Galton--pioneered eugenics as a movement both in the U.S. and the U.K, where she moved in in 1876. In what were perhaps her last public remarks, the New York Times described an interview in which she praised the 1927 Supreme Court decision legalizing forced sterilization, Buck v. Bell, and said she had "advocated that fifty years ago in my book Marriage of the Unfit."
This history of bigotry, mostly focused on poor immigrants, does not mean that Sanger was the personification of evil. In her private correspondence she comes across as a loyal friend, even to people such as H. G. Wells, who snubbed her in one of his novels, and Havelock Ellis, who scarcely mentioned her in his autobiography. She was also, within her personal limitations, quite supportative of her much older second husband, including in the late 1930s, when he was considering evading prosecution for tax evasion by paying off someone in government. It'll be interesting to see if that correspondence finds its way into a later book in this series.
Even Sanger's negative eugenics does not appear to have come naturally to her. The daughter of a Catholic mother and an immigrant father, her early efforts on behalf of the poor appear to be as genuine as any such activity by an affluent 'parlor pink' can be. It was only on a visit to Glasgow's public housing projects that the Fabians taught her that a progressive welfare state had, of necessity, to reduce the birthrates of the poor to below the replacment level to avoid being swamped by a prolific poor. Glasgow did that by offering marvelous public housing to the poor with small families while cruelly consigning larger families to the horrors of the city's slum lords. Sanger first protested the policy, then agreed, and then returned to the U.S. to start a birth control movement with a similar agenda.
With all that in mind, I would recommend that readers, if they can't afford this rather pricey book, at least get their local library to purchase a copy. Like many of the more radical feminists, Sanger's variety of self-asserting individualism, which I call "heroic selfishness," was the first wave of what is now our much larger "culture war" between red states and blue states. (It's why the 25 states most generous in their personal charitable giving all went for Bush, a very revealing statistic.) To understand the real Sanger, turn to the biblical book of Esther and contemplate the fact that Sanger considered Vashti the real hero of the story and Esther, risking her life to save the Jewish people, a mere "washboard." I only hope the editors have the good sense to include those early remarks in some part of this book series. As Sanger herself hinted, it's a near perfect illustration of what motivated her and it's an attitude that comes through more clearly in the shrill pages of her The Woman Rebel than in her later writings.
And if you want to grasp just how interesting a study of Sanger can be, contemplate the fact that, almost alone on the radical left, in The Woman Rebel (July 1914) she praised some terrorists who intended to blow up the Manhattan home of John Rockefeller and yet a little over a decade later was exchanging polite little notes with members of the Rockefeller family. Politics does make for strange bedfellows. The politics in that case was eugenics, the once-favorite cause of both the radical left and very wealthy. It's why today both are great fans of legalized abortion, particularly for the poor and minorities.
Soldier NurseReview Date: 2003-11-08
Papers that make a powerful biographyReview Date: 2002-12-03
FROM
THE JACKET
The Selected Papers of Margaret Sanger
Vol. 1: The Woman Rebel, 1900-1928
Edited by Esther Katz
Cathy
Moran Hajo and Peter C. Engelman, Assistant Editors
The birth control crusader, feminist, and reformer Margaret Sanger was one of the most controversial and compelling figures in the twentieth century. This first volume of The Selected Papers of Margaret Sanger documents the critical phases and influences of an American feminist icon and offers rare glimpses into her working-class childhood, burgeoning feminism, spiritual and scientific interests, sexual explorations, and diverse roles as wife, mother, nurse, journalist, radical socialist, and activist.
These letters and other writings, including diaries, journals, articles, and speeches, most of which have never before been published, have been selected and assembled with an eye to telling the story of a remarkable life, punctuated by arrests and imprisonments, exile, love affairs, and a momentous personal loss--a life consumed with the quest for women's sexual liberation. Because its narrative line is so absorbing, volume 1 may be read as a powerful biography.
Volume 1 covers a twenty-eight-year period from her nurse's training and early socialist involvement in pre- World War I bohemian Greenwich Village to her adoption of birth control (a term she helped coin in 1914) as a fundamental tenet of women's rights. It traces the intersection of her life and work with other reformers, activists and leaders of modernity on both sides of the Atlantic, including Havelock Ellis, H. G. Wells, George Bernard Shaw, Emma Goldman, Max Eastman, and Eugene Debs, as well as many leading radical artists and writers of the day. It highlights her legislative and organizational efforts, her support of the eugenics movement, and the alliances she secured with medical professionals in her crusade to make birth control legal, respectable, and accessible. This volume also includes letters from women desperately in need of fertility control who saw Sanger as their last hope. Supplemented by an introduction, brief essays providing narrative and chronological links, and substantial notes, the volume is an invaluable tool for understanding Sanger's actions and accomplishments.
The documents assembled here, more than 80 percent of them letters, were culled from the Margaret Sanger Papers Microfilm Edition, edited by Esther Katz, Cathy Moran Hajo, and Peter C. Engelman. Two subsequent volumes will address later periods in her life, and an additional volume will cover her international work in the birth control struggle.
"Mesmerizing letters from the
days when birth control was legally obscene and jail sentences were regularly given out for talking about it in public. Nearly
a century ago, Margaret Sanger was defending woman's 'ownership of her own body' and linking access to contraception to civil
liberties and personal freedom. Rights we take for granted have a long and sometimes surprising history that comes clear on
these pages. Required reading for our own time, whichever side of Roe v. Wade you are on."
-- Linda K. Kerber, author of
No Constitutional Right to Be Ladies: Women and the Obligations of Citizenship
"These wonderful letters, diary excerpts,
and essays dramatize women's long struggle for respect, self-awareness, independence, influence, and control over our bodies
and our lives. To contemplate Margaret Sanger's harsh reality and the enduring vision of this courageous pioneer--while the
war against women escalates on every front--is a heartening and galvanizing act of rebellion. Esther Katz and her splendid
team have given us all a very great gift."
-- Blanche Wiesen Cook, University Distinguished Professor, John Jay College
and the Graduate Center, CUNY, and the author of Eleanor Roosevelt, volumes 1 and 2
"This engrossing volume, meticulously
edited and selected, captures Margaret Sanger in all her complexity during a formative period in her long career. Open to
practically any page, and something will grab your historical attention."
-- Susan Ware, editor of Notable American Women,
volume 5
From the PublisherReview Date: 2002-12-09
The birth control crusader, feminist, and reformer Margaret Sanger was one of the most controversial and compelling figures in the twentieth century. This first volume of The Selected Papers of Margaret Sanger documents the critical phases and influences of an American feminist icon and offers rare glimpses into her working-class childhood, burgeoning feminism, spiritual and scientific interests, sexual explorations, and diverse roles as wife, mother, nurse, journalist, radical socialist, and activist.
These letters and other writings, including diaries, journals, articles, and speeches, most of which have never before been published, have been selected and assembled with an eye to telling the story of a remarkable life, punctuated by arrests and imprisonments, exile, love affairs, and a momentous personal loss--a life consumed with the quest for women's sexual liberation. Because its narrative line is so absorbing, volume 1 may be read as a powerful biography.
Volume 1 covers a twenty-eight-year period from nurse's training and early socialist involvement in pre- World War I bohemian Greenwich Village to Sanger's adoption of birth control (a term she helped coin in 1914) as a fundamental tenet of women's rights. It traces the intersection of her life and work with other reformers, activists and leaders of modernity on both sides of the Atlantic, including Havelock Ellis, H. G. Wells, George Bernard Shaw, Emma Goldman, Max Eastman, and Eugene Debs, as well as many leading radical artists and writers of the day. It highlights her legislative and organizational efforts, her support of the eugenics movement, and the alliances she secured with medical professionals in her crusade to make birth control legal, respectable, and accessible. This volume also includes letters from women desperately in need of fertility control who saw Sanger as their last hope. Supplemented by an introduction, brief essays providing narrative and chronological links, and substantial notes, the volume is an invaluable tool for understanding Sanger's actions and accomplishments.
The documents assembled here, more than 80 percent of them letters, were culled from the Margaret Sanger Papers Microfilm Edition, edited by Esther Katz, Cathy Moran Hajo, and Peter C. Engelman. Two subsequent volumes will address later periods in her life, and an additional volume will cover her international work in the birth control struggle.
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