Anne Enright was married for eighteen years before she and her husband started having children. Already a confident, successful novelist, Enright continued to work after each of her two children was born; while each baby slept, those first two years of life, Enright wrote in dispatches about the mess, the glory, and the raw shock of motherhood. Supremely observant and endlessly quizzical, Enright "has pulled off that rarest of tricks: writing brilliantly about happiness" (Sunday Times).
Industry Reviews
"Keenly observed and gorgeously written... one of the best books ever on the experience of being a mother. Because it's an experience so many of us share, Enright's fearless and funny inquiry into why motherhood feels the way it does is not only entertaining, it's deeply consoling." -- Boston Sunday Globe "Winning and witty." -- Kirkus Reviews "[Enright's] first work of nonfiction, Making Babies is a collection of short essays, some of them stream of consciousness, that move chronologically through the landmarks of motherhood. She writes with brutal candor and irreverence about the things that the feel-good baby books don't tell you...." -- Moira Hodgson - Wall Street Journal "At once a memoir, a reference manual and a cautionary tale about the conflicting emotions of parenthood.... For those who've grown weary of hyped-up superparents and their relentless positivity, [Enright's] candor is welcome." -- More "Anne Enright's style is as sharp and brilliant as Joan Didion's; the scope of her understanding is as wide as Alice Munro's; her sympathy for her characters is as tender and subtle as Alice McDermott's; her vision of Ireland is as brave and original as Edna O'Brien's." -- Colm Toibin "[A] field guide to both the romance and reality of what it means to create and care for other humans, delivered by narration that evinces deep sincerity and the purest happiness." -- The Dallas Morning News "Equal parts wryly analytical and wholeheartedly emotional. She is honest, funny and scandalously frank." -- Dallas Morning News - Merritt Tierce "To write well in the mother-child arena, a person must understand that the essential condition of motherhood . . . is absurdity. Samuel Beckett could have come up with a great book on babies. Anne Enright has." -- Judith Newman - New York Times Book Review "An oddly sweet-and-sour but loving memoir about becoming a mother." -- Dwight Garner - New York Times