Showing posts with label Immigration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Immigration. Show all posts

Friday, March 14, 2025

Counting Backwards by Jacqueline Friedland (Austenprose PR Book Tour)

 


Title: Counting Backwards

Author:  Jacqueline Friedland

Narrated by:  Amanda Stribling, Carolyn Jania

Publisher: Harper Muse

Length: Approximately 10 hours and 45 minutes

Source: Audiobook review Copy from NetGalley and physical book review copy from @jackiefriedland @harpermusebooks @austenprose.  Thank you!

What's a book that you think has a stunning cover design?  I love the pomegranate on the cover of this novel, and it works so well with the theme of the novel.

Jessa Gidney is a Manhattan lawyer and has recently been passed over for partner.  She miscarried a year before and has been having problems getting pregnant again which has been causing friction with her husband, Vance.  When she meets Isobel Perez as part of her firm’s pro bono work, she realizes that there is much more to the case than just a deportation order.  Why are the women at the deportation center being sterilized?

In 1920s Virginia, Carrie Buch has lived a hard life. She was separated from her mother and raised by a foster family who just wanted free labor.  After she is raped, the system continues to let her down. What is her connection to Jessa?

My thoughts on this novel:

·       This novel had a rough start with a couple arguing about fertility as they try to get pregnant, Luckily, the story picked up after that and became a compelling story that I couldn’t put down.

·       The look into our countries history with eugenics was both horrifying and thought provoking.  It’s important and timely now as unfortunately these types of cases persist.  Who gets to decide whether a woman is allowed to bear children?

·       This is a dual timeline novel which spends equal time with Jessa and Carrie.  They are both interesting characters.

·       The author is a lawyer which gives the novel an authentic feel.

·       I couldn’t stop listening to the audiobook.  It was a fascinating story with great narrators.

·       There is a great list of additional reading at the end of the novel.

·       There is also a fascinating author’s note on how the author first read about the real-life Carrie Buck and her case while she was a high school senior.  I am horrified on how Carrie Buck was treated.

Overall, Counting Backwards by Jacqueline Friedland is a compelling dual narrative novel that examines a dark time in our country’s history that also is seeping into current events surrounding women’s rights and immigration.

BOOK DESCRIPTION

A routine immigration case, a shocking legacy. Jessa Gidney's quest for justice draws her into the heart of an abhorrent conspiracy. As she uncovers her personal ties to a heartbreaking past, her life takes a dramatic turn, in this emotionally riveting novel inspired by true events.

New York, 2022. Jessa Gidney is trying to have it all--a high-powered legal career, a meaningful marriage, and hopefully, one day, a child. But when her professional ambitions come up short and Jessa finds herself at a turning point, she leans into her family's history of activism by taking on pro bono work at a nearby ICE detention center. There she meets Isobel Pérez--a young mother fighting to stay with her daughter--but as she gets to know Isobel, an unsettling revelation about Isobel's health leads Jessa to uncover a horrifying pattern of medical malpractice within the detention facility. One that shockingly has ties to her own family.

Virginia, 1927. Carrie Buck is an ordinary young woman in the center of an extraordinary legal battle at the forefront of the American eugenics conversation. From a poor family, she was only six years old when she first became a ward of the state. Uneducated and without any support, she spends her youth dreaming about a different future--one separate from her exploitative foster family--unknowing of the ripples her small, country life will have on an entire nation.

As Jessa works to assemble a case against the prison and the crimes she believes are being committed there, she discovers the landmark Supreme Court case involving Carrie Buck. Her connection to the case, however, is deeper and much more personal than she ever knew--sending her down new paths that will leave her forever changed and determined to fight for these women, no matter the cost.

Alternating between the past and present, and deftly tackling timely-yet-timeless issues such as reproductive rights, incarceration, and society's expectations of women and mothers, Counting Backwards is a compelling reminder that progress is rarely a straight line and always hard-won. A moving story of two remarkable women that you'll remember for years to come.

ADVANCE PRAISE

"Jacqueline Friedland's ripped-from-the-headlines story is an Erin Brockovich for our times."— Jill Santopolo, New York Times bestselling author of The Light We Lost

". . . a riveting, compelling story--but it's also an important one, reminding us that history's darkest aspects can echo forward into our present day and that there is so much work left to do in the fight for freedom and equality."— Kelly Rimmer, New York Times bestselling author of The German Wife

AUTHOR BIO

Jacqueline Friedland is a USA Today and Amazon bestselling author of historical and contemporary women's fiction. After graduating from the University of Pennsylvania, she earned a law degree from NYU and a Master of Fine Arts from Sarah Lawrence College. Jackie regularly reviews fiction for trade publications and appears at schools and other locations as a guest lecturer. She lives just outside New York City with her husband, four children, and two dogs. Connect with her online at JacquelineFriedland.com


Wednesday, February 21, 2018

In the Midst of Winter by Isabel Allende

In the Midst of Winter by Isabel Allende
Title: In the Midst of Winter
Author: Isabel Allende
Read by:  Dennis Boutsikaris, Jasmine Cephas Jones & Alma Cuervo
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Audio
Length: Approximately 9 hour and 47 minutes
 Source: Simon & Schuster Audio Digital Review Copy – Thank-you!

Richard is a professor in his 60’s who is set in his ways and is patiently riding out a large blizzard in New York City.  When he is involved in a minor car accident with a young woman, Evelyn, who he believes only speaks Spanish, he brings his tenant Lucia up from her apartment to help.  They both discover that Evelyn can speak English . . . and that she has a dead body in her trunk.  Evelyn is an undocumented migrant who left brutal violence in her native Guatemala for a better life in the United States.  If they call the police, Evelyn may be deported.  What will the three do?  Who is the dead body and why were they killed?

I like that the story involved is at its heart a love story between Richard and Lucia.  They are both in their 60’s and in the “midst of winter.”  They have both had romantic disappointments in life, are they ready for a new spring?

I also really enjoyed the background story of each character.  In particular I was intrigued by the story of Evelyn’s journey to America and escape from the brutality in Guatemala.  It really made me appreciate what young immigrants have to go through to survive.  Lucia’s story in Chile and the history of brutality in that country was fascinating and disturbing as well.  Richard had an interesting back story involving tragedy and his own ill behavior.  I’ll admit to liking him less once I knew his story.

In this book all three characters are narrators of different sections.  I enjoy that the audiobook uses three different narrators to read these sections and give a unique voice to each of the characters.  It made the book a very enjoyable listening experience.

I also really loved how the book delved into the hot topic of immigration and gave face and story to an illegal immigrant.  Besides showing why Evelyn would want to migrate here, it also showed what a mess the immigration system is for anyone trying to get into the country. The story gave a lot of food for thought on current political topic.

Favorite Quotes:

“He was so unfamiliar with this peaceful sense of happiness he did not even recognize it.”

“Her body was growing old, but inside she still kept intact the adolescent she once was.”

 
Overall, In the Midst of Winter is a mystery, romance, and story of three unlikely people coming together to help each other and change their futures.