Out now from the next issue, @Debfriedell writes about the women of Roe v. Wade: Linda Coffee and Sarah Weddington, the lawyers who conceived of and argued the case; and Norma McCorvey, who later said she became Jane Roe ‘for a piece of pizza and a beer’: https://t.co/mN4c5IUbUW
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Whether your book club focuses on rom-coms, memoirs, or thrillers, we've got you covered. https://t.co/4T7fOrrYQU https://t.co/GPJESAOBCY
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In "Up in Flames," YA novelist E.R. Frank explores what it means when books (including her AMERICA and DIME, @SimonKIDS @simonschuster) are banned -- or worse: https://t.co/Ods6BEZxfk https://t.co/LRWiVoMQmW
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@DebFriedell Rather than retreat, McCorvey gave an interview to Good Housekeeping; she thought ‘the feminists weren’t giving her enough credit’. Didn’t ‘all the women who were now benefiting from the legal abortions she had been denied’ owe her something? https://t.co/7Lxb3WasJB
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In honor of Pride Month, here are 7 great books worth checking out! https://t.co/FsApmkWMcm https://t.co/xBsBRLB1zI
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Don't miss this Amazon Live Author Q&A with Jenny Mollen and Stacey Bendet. Tune in today at 4:30pm ET / 1:30pm PT and bring your questions! @jennyandteets https://t.co/cGKEPwaHRT https://t.co/bz7GUyWvHu
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"They were close fr— in fact, they were barely even that, one might say they were more like roommates." https://t.co/fBZCwpv8XG
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@DebFriedell Coffee’s Sunday school classmate introduced her to a ‘really pregnant’ Norma McCorvey, who was working as a cleaner, running a freak show, and sometimes selling drugs or sex. ‘I didn’t want a child to be born with me as a mother,’ McCorvey writes in her memoir.
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"The stigma of disease, the pain of recovery, the fear, these forces can choke us into silence." https://t.co/fgHhiOcz2F
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@DebFriedell More on the climate of Roe v. Wade, the subsequent ‘vanishing’ of its protections and rolling back to the 1970s, and what Baby Roe thought of the case, in @DebFriedell’s full piece: https://t.co/mN4c5IUbUW
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