BookFrontier
Hannah's Children by Catherine Pakaluk

Book

Hannah's Children

The Women Quietly Defying the Birth Dearth

Catherine Pakaluk

Skyhorse Publishing · Print & ebook · March 19, 2024

Reading lane: Single Parenting

A portrait of America's most interesting yet overlooked women.

At a Glance

Why This Clicks

Family Under Pressure

A thoughtful look at family, faith, and the odd pressure points around choosing more children.

Come here for

  • Quietly counterintuitive take on family life
  • A sober, discussion-ready angle

Expect

  • Measured, idea-forward prose
  • Plenty to talk over later

Book Details

Authors
Catherine Pakaluk
Publisher
Skyhorse Publishing
Published
March 19, 2024
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Single Parenting · Co-Parenting
Reading lane
Single Parenting

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Family & Relationships

  • Religion & Philosophy

  • Conservatism & Liberalism

About This Book

A portrait of America's most interesting yet overlooked women. In the midst of a historic "birth dearth," why do some 5 percent of American women choose to defy the demographic norm by bearing five or more children? Hannah’s Children is a compelling portrait of these overlooked but fascinating mothers who, like the biblical Hannah, see their children as their purpose, their contribution, and their greatest blessing. The social scientist Catherine Pakaluk, herself the mother...

Read full description

A portrait of America's most interesting yet overlooked women. In the midst of a historic "birth dearth," why do some 5 percent of American women choose to defy the demographic norm by bearing five or more children? Hannah’s Children is a compelling portrait of these overlooked but fascinating mothers who, like the biblical Hannah, see their children as their purpose, their contribution, and their greatest blessing. The social scientist Catherine Pakaluk, herself the mother of eight, traveled across the United States and interviewed fifty-five college-educated women who were raising five or more children. Through open-ended questions, she sought to understand who these women are, why and when they chose to have a large family, and what this choice means for them, their families, and the nation. Hannah’s Children is more than interesting stories of extraordinary women. It presents information that is urgently relevant for the future of American prosperity. Many countries have experimented with aggressively pro-natalist public policies, and all of them have failed. Pakaluk finds that the quantitative methods to which the social sciences limit themselves overlook important questions of meaning and identity in their inquiries into fertility rates. Her book is a pathbreaking foray into questions of purpose, religion, transcendence, healing, and growth—questions that ought to inform economic inquiry in the future.

Similar Books