Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: A Must Read for Every Thinking Person on the Planet Review: An avid reader and expectant mom, I can honestly say this book is the best I've read in a long time (especially among the mostly run-of-the-mill pregnancy and childbirth genre). The writing is beautiful, the story simultaneously heart-warming and compelling, and the science thorough and thought-provoking. Perhaps the most gripping part of the book is when Steingraber explains that unborn babies and nursing infants are at the top of the food chain, so toxins and pollutants reach them in greater quantities than any other species on the planet! While her language is not the least bit alarmest, the information she shares serves as a call to action to anyone who truly believes that "children are our future."
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Truely eye-opening Review: I loved Sandra's book. I wish I had read it before in my early twenties, and not now AFTER the birth of my first child. I would have taken more steps on making sure to reduce the amount of toxins environmentally. However, her way she weaves thru the facts and her own story was brillant. A great read. Highly recommanded.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Having Faith: An Ecologist's Journey to Motherhood Review: I read all sorts of pregnancy books and Sandra's is my favorite by a long shot. No other book available has such vital information about fetal development. Most importantly, she doesn't scare women about all the horrible things that might go wrong during a pregnancy - but why we need to take more action as a society to protect the most delicate among us: our children.Her personal reflections on pregnancy, childbirth and motherhood are among the most poignant and beautiful words I've read. I'm nursing my four-month-old daughter. While breastfeeding can be challenging at times, one only needs to review her writing on the subject for encouragement to keep going! This isn't just a book for women - but a very important resource for men. I can't write enough positive things about this book. A must read!!!
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: So empowering Review: I'm a breastfeeding counsellor here in the UK and do my best to keep up to date with research pertaining to anything to do with breastfeeding. This book, which I came upon purely by accident, opened my eyes to a whole new problem. I found the book so informing and so well written. I have a whole new avenue of personal research to investigate now and, I have information to share with parents who want it. I feel empowered because, as the last chapter offers, I have ideas now as to how I can play my part in making the world of breastfed babies, my own and others, a safer place to live. With grateful thanks to Sandra for opening my eyes.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Beautiful and Necessary Review: Sandra Steingraber is my new heroine. Her writing is magnificent, and her concerns very much my own. She manages to explain the inexplicable (we are poisoning our babies, and don't stop even when we see the evidence) in a way that does not frighten as much as persuade. She indeed has faith, and I am so grateful to her for facing these fearful realities during her pregnancy -- as she points out, if pregnant women don't face these things, who will? Her refrain "We shall not abstain" -- asking why it is pregnant women who must restrict themselves, not producers of toxics -- is common-sense political brilliance and unmasks the hypocrisy of a society that pretends to protect the vulnerable with technological might, but is really not interested when facts run counter to the fantasy of omnipotence. Her writing is so vivid that I burst into tears at the end of her labor-and-delivery story, as I do at any filmed depiction of birth. Thank you, Sandra.I'm giving it to all my friends, and sending it to some politicians!
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Beautiful and Necessary Review: Sandra Steingraber is my new heroine. Her writing is magnificent, and her concerns very much my own. She manages to explain the inexplicable (we are poisoning our babies, and don't stop even when we see the evidence) in a way that does not frighten as much as persuade. She indeed has faith, and I am so grateful to her for facing these fearful realities during her pregnancy -- as she points out, if pregnant women don't face these things, who will? Her refrain "We shall not abstain" -- asking why it is pregnant women who must restrict themselves, not producers of toxics -- is common-sense political brilliance and unmasks the hypocrisy of a society that pretends to protect the vulnerable with technological might, but is really not interested when facts run counter to the fantasy of omnipotence. Her writing is so vivid that I burst into tears at the end of her labor-and-delivery story, as I do at any filmed depiction of birth. Thank you, Sandra.I'm giving it to all my friends, and sending it to some politicians!
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: Having Faith- a two sided story Review: Sandra Steingraber's book, Having Faith- An Ecologist's Journey To Motherhood is a memoir of poignant insight backed by ecological conscience. Pregnant for the first time at the later age of thirty-eight, Streingraber grapples with the idea of her own growing child within the context of, and intermingled with, the life of the world outside of herself that she has studied for years as an Ecologist. Extraordinarily honest in both her scientific backing of her own personal passage from scientist in the most colloquial sense of the word, to governor of the very habitat in which her baby is growing, Steingraber's writes with candor and sincerity.
Steingraber chronicles the pregnancy and birth of her daughter Faith, and throughout the memoir provokes the reader to always remember the direct and immediate connection between humans and their environments by descriptions of the very fragility of her own developing baby. The very name of her child connotes, too, the faith that Steingraber, and truly all expectant mothers, have to possess within themselves amidst a modern world of both spectacular technology, but also chaos and disorder.
Infusing the reader with both a deep hope for change, and a new awareness of the changes that we need to begin making now, Steingraber's memoir is essential for not only women to read, but any citizen with any environmental and ecological conscience or concern, to read as well.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Top priority Review: Sandra Steingraber, a trained scientist, tells the story of her pregnancy at age 38, weaving it into very readable science. She describes the day-to-day development of the fetus and how we KNOW at exactly what point birth defects are caused and, in many cases, which chemicals cause them. I was horrified to learn how many chemicals are being passed to our children through mothers' milk. And I can't stop telling my friends how the waters of the Arctic are the MOST polluted in the world, just the opposite of what you might think. This may be one of the most important books you will ever read. Like Rachel Carson's "Silent Spring", it should wake us up to the damage we are doing to our environment and to ourselves. The book is fascinating...and very, very scary. Every American, AND EVERY LEGISLATOR, should read it.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Top priority Review: Sandra Steingraber, a trained scientist, tells the story of her pregnancy at age 38, weaving it into very readable science. She describes the day-to-day development of the fetus and how we KNOW at exactly what point birth defects are caused and, in many cases, which chemicals cause them. I was horrified to learn how many chemicals are being passed to our children through mothers' milk. And I can't stop telling my friends how the waters of the Arctic are the MOST polluted in the world, just the opposite of what you might think. This may be one of the most important books you will ever read. Like Rachel Carson's "Silent Spring", it should wake us up to the damage we are doing to our environment and to ourselves. The book is fascinating...and very, very scary. Every American, AND EVERY LEGISLATOR, should read it.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Mothers Will Remember, Fathers Will At Last Understand Review: The descriptions and analyses of her experiences of pregnancy, childbirth, and motherhood are gripping, yet hilarious and deeply touching, all within the context of a serious book. I could not put it down. Beautifully written. All expecting couples should read this book, and pass it on to their children when they eventually start a family. .... .... .... .... .... .... Buy it at Amazon.com Amazon.co.uk
|