Take My Hand

Paperback, 384 pages

Published April 4, 2023 by Berkley.

ISBN:
978-0-593-33771-4
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(9 reviews)

6 editions

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Another unflinching look at the history of US crimes against black people (an other minorities) through the lens of historical fiction.

Sensitive and heartfelt, full of living breathing characters, and also unflinching in its portrayal of the forced/coerced sterilization campaigns in the 1970s. I was deeply touched by the protagonists efforts to improve the lives of others, and her relationship with the family she tried to help. It also paints a sensitive and realistic picture of the challenges of poverty, and highlights the deep violation of trust committed in the name of "medicine".

I work in the biomedical field, and I studied physics before that. Most of my friends are in scientific or medical professions. So I know from experience the beauty, value, and nuance of the scientific method, and the good and the bad of academia and medicine as a whole. It can do a lot of good, and …

Review of 'Take My Hand' on 'Goodreads'

Haunting. A powerful beginning; so good that the first thing I did upon finishing the book was reread the first few chapters. Effective first-person narration, ostensibly epistolary but inobtrusively so. Dual timelines worked beautifully: about 80% was 1973, tense, dramatic, distinctly uncomfortable; the rest, in 2016, tempered the heat with mature reflection. Getting to know the narrator like that—first as an interesting, conflicted adult, then as the hotheaded but caring young person she was— ... well, I found myself crushing hard on her. The book is much more than about her, of course, but it’s so enjoyable to have the author devote care to every aspect. That’s why we read.

The story is fiction, the events behind it are not, and near the one-third mark I felt compelled to read up on the historical basis. Waiting that long worked well for me, and I recommend it. Or perhaps even waiting …

Review of 'Take My Hand' on 'Goodreads'

It is a good book and covers a lot of history and issues around reproductive justice, but you get the feeling the author is more ambivalent about abortion than they let on. Also, if you are adopted and are sick of adoption being a plot point with no connection to reproductive justice and the adoptee not being an actual character, then you should probably skip it.

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