Choosing Naia - A Family's Journey
Choosing Naia: A Family's Journey
Author: Mitchell Zuckoff
Product Code: 2817
ISBN: 978-080702817-9
Pages: 312
Binding Information: Paperback
Size: 6" X 9" Inches
Illustrated: No
Trade Code: 00T
Price: $16.00 In stock.
"This mesmerizing and insightful book reveals the power of hope and hard work, and reminds us to see the world not only as it is, but how it could be."
-Eunice Kennedy Shriver, founder, Special Olympics
A dramatic and carefully detailed account of one family's journey through the maze of genetic counseling, medical technology, and disability rights; destined to become required reading for anyone touched by any of these issues.
"Choosing Naia . . . is a refreshing tale in an age in which medical technology encourages us to strive for perfection in ourselves and in our children. It is, of course, a loss to learn that your child won't be perfectly healthy. But, as Choosing Naia makes clear, few of us understand how much we may gain."
-Maggie Jones, New York Times Book Review
"Choosing Naia skillfully recounts how the Fairchilds' initial shock and fear for the future of their unborn child gradually morphed into a determination to have the child and help her thrive after birth."
-Hartford Courant
"The story of the Fairchilds' emotional and spiritual struggles is gripping-and relevant to everyone who's ever cared for a child. Choosing Naia is a powerful and important book."
-Michael Bérubé, author of Life As We Know It: A Father, a Family, and an Exceptional Child
"Choosing Naia is an accurate and courageous book, a chronicle with a joyous outcome. For all readers it will enhance understanding of family building and of human values. I recommend it earnestly."
-Dr. Allen Crocker, director, Down Syndrome Program, Children's Hospital, Boston
Mitchell Zuckoff spent more than a decade as an award-winning writer for the Boston Globe and now teaches journalism at Boston University. He is the coauthor of Judgment Ridge: The True Story Behind the
Dartmouth Murders. Zuckoff lives near Boston with his wife, Boston Globe photographer Suzanne Kreiter, and their two daughters.
|