A Termination
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Not my lover, not my parents, and they said I couldn't tell a friend. . .
In 1969, Honor Moore was twenty-three, a theater student yearning for love and working for radical change, but studying administration and keeping secret, even from herself, her wish to imagine the world by becoming a poet. There was an older lover, a professor, and, with another man, an unwanted sexual encounter. That spring, she had an abortion.
A Termination is the story of the young woman who made that decision, and of how that act of resistance, then shrouded in fear and silence, has reverberated throughout her life since. Angry, nostalgic, questioning, and romantic, the memoir pursues the associations of memory, moving from the New Haven of Yale Drama School, the Living Theatre and the Black Panthers; to the New York City of theater, jazz, and the Chelsea Hotel; the Berkshires of rock and roll at Tanglewood, and Chicago in the wake of the 1968 Democratic Convention.
Framing the story is a self-portrait of the author fifty-five years later, a woman with a sexual past, a poet who has made her own way. A lyric, searching memoir, A Termination asks what it means to write with full honesty about one's life—to explore who we were, and how our choices shape and allow who we become.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Poet Moore (Our Revolution) meditates on the emotional consequences of her 1969 abortion in this exquisite memoir. After she became pregnant at 23—either by her older lover or a photographer she "unwillingly had sex with"—Moore was embarrassed to tell her parents, her lover, or most of her friends. She ultimately decided to terminate the pregnancy, obtaining a letter of approval from a psychiatrist after convincing him she'd "go crazy if I had a baby." Following the Supreme Court's 2022 decision overturning Roe v. Wade, Moore was moved to revisit the experience and put "a mirror to the past." In fragmentary, lyrical chapters, she examines the feelings of liberation and fear her choice stirred in her, and imagines how her life may have unfolded if had she chosen differently. Piercing imagery ("Run fast, little girl, outrun rabbits and doctors, outwit them thoroughly") and ruthless concision characterize Moore's prose, resulting in an artful battle cry against backsliding into the secrecy of previous generations. Marked by Moore's stunning balance of compassion and rage, this is a triumph.