When Your Biological Clock Strikes Two Minutes to Midnight : A Psychologist Recounts Her Long Battle Against Infertility in New Medical Memoir
New York, New York (PRWEB) February 29, 2012
Eight babies are born in the U.S. every single minute. Conception, gestation, and birth would seem the most natural things in the world, but that may be difficult to comprehend for the 7.3 million individuals in the U.S. whose eggs and sperm aren’t quite up to the task. Infertility is an existential slap in the face. The lengths people will go to get around it is the bittersweet story of Grade A Baby Eggs: An Infertility Memoir (Epigraph Books, paper, $ 15.95), Victoria Hopewell’s perceptive new memoir of the years she spent hoping technology would come to the rescue.
Hopewell, a clinical psychologist who held academic appointments at the medical schools of both Harvard and Cornell, paints a gimlet-eyed portrait of the in-vitro fertilization industry, a wild-west baby business where women’s eggs are bought and sold over the Internet, and prices are based on everything from the donor’s SAT scores to how much you’re willing to pay to make sure your baby is technically Jewish.
“There are more than 100,000 IVF attempts each year,” says Victoria Hopewell, who went from hoping to use her own eggs at the age of forty-four, to purchasing someone else’s eggs. “Each in-vitro attempt costs, on average, more than $ 12,000. That’s a multibillion dollar-a-year infertility industry. And it’s virtually unregulated.” Which means, as Hopewell points out in her enjoyable style, that the fortune you’re paying for eggs from a Cal Tech professor might really be coming from a woman who couldn’t make it through high school. Or, as in Hopewell’s case, that Jewish egg you need to carry on your childless second-husband’s eighth-generation line may really be coming from an O’Shea or a Montebello. “Reading Grade A Baby Eggs not only taught me more than I ever knew about today’s fascinating fertility subcultures,” says author Paul De Angelis, “but brought me an entirely new insight into how commercialized even so sacred an activity as human reproduction can become. This memoir is funny, sad, touching, always human, never dull.”
As much as it shines a needed spotlight on the fertility business, Grade A Baby Eggs, is at bottom, a human story, the ups and downs and all-arounds of a forty-four-year-old woman trying to make everybody happy. Hopewell does a wonderful job of inviting the reader into her second marriage to a once-confirmed bachelor, the last in a long line of descendants of an illustrious Jewish scholar. Can Hopewell navigate the emotional shoals of giving up on your own tired eggs, and implicitly, your youth? Can she manage her two daughter’s expectations about their new step-dad? Does she even have the right to complain, given her two natural children, about the roller-coaster ride of treating infertility? Hopewell manages to address it all with insight and good humor—a testament to the keen observational skills demanded of her profession. That she also does it with style and grace—as graceful as one can be, anyway, with one’s feet up in stirrups—speaks more to her charm and her life-affirming optimism.
How did it go? Did she ever have that child? Hopewell writes so vividly that anyone who’s started reading Grade A Baby Eggs will just have to finish it to see how it all pans out.
“An exceedingly honest examination of the reality of infertility and the emotionally traumatic experiences involved. . . . Well-written and thoughtful. . . . Readers will gain a new understanding of how infertility affects one’s family, social circle, career and self-perception. A candid, valuable look at infertility.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“The author, a clinical psychologist who has held academic appointments at the medical schools of both Harvard and Cornell, reveals the truth about the in-vitro fertilization industry. . . . For anyone encountering this problem, this book must be read.”
—Bookviews
Grade A Baby Eggs: An Infertility Memoir
By Victoria Hopewell
Epigraph Books, ISBN: 9781936940110; paperback, $ 15.95
For more information, please visit http://www.gradeababyeggs.com
Biographical information
Victoria Hopewell is the pen name of a PhD clinical psychologist who interned in the psychiatry department of Harvard Medical School. An instructor in psychology at the medical schools of both Harvard and Cornell, she is now in private practice in New York, where she has counseled infertile couples.
Media contact: Victor Gulotta, Gulotta Communications, Inc.
617-630-9286, http://www.booktours.com, victor(at)booktours(dot)com
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