Kate Hopper's Ready for Air came to me at a moment in life when I needed her unabashed, beautiful description of this unmarked breathless territory: a birth plan gone awry. Hopper does not simply chronicle her experience as a new mother; she stakes a claim with her edgy and wise renderings of a woman admitting every limitation, from money to energy to health to hope. By sharing on the page what cannot be said aloud, Hopper's gorgeous words make room for more real women in the nursery. -Sonya Huber, author of Cover Me: A Health Insurance Memoir and Opa Nobody
Kate Hopper's raw, hopeful memoir is all paradox and ambiguity. Which is exactly how it is to become a parent: time stands still and gallops off; the world telescopes into microcosm and flings itself open; aching uncertainty meets unprecedented fortitude. Hopper takes us on an epic journey with her tiny baby-a stunning, breathless journey that shines with sincerity-and you'll be so grateful that you came. -Catherine Newman, author of
Waiting for BirdyHopper bravely explores what happens when we expect joy and instead are handed traumatic challenge, and she does so with a fresh, piercing, and, at times, humorous voice. I can't imagine a parent who wouldn't relate to this compelling story of a child nearly slipping away. -Debra Gwartney, author of
Live Through ThisThere is no writer I'd rather follow this journey with than Kate Hopper. Her storytelling skills are stunning. You will be rooting for her and her new family all the way. -Hope Edelman, author of
Motherless DaughtersAfter severe preeclampsia derails Kate Hopper's birth plan, the author confronts her fears of preemie parenthood with brazen honesty and an occasional fitting expletive. Her memoir, a testament to the delights and uncertainties of motherhood, reads like a novel, though you won't forget for a second that her story is true. -
Pregnancy & Newborn [Hopper] is a multifaceted narrator whose complex reactions to the relentless challenges of her daughter's premature birth are raw, uncensored, unapologetic, and unladylike. . . .
Ready for Air [is] a story that bucks the traditional narrative while offering women a model of what it means to be a mother and be wholly, incorrigibly yourself. -
Literary Mama Hopper's memoir can be seen as a comfort to some and an explanation for others, but for her it is proof of her own strength as she writes, 'As long as I have words, I'll be strong enough.' [An] emotional, informative memoir. -
Star Tribune Ready for Air looks unflinchingly at the psychological realities of learning to be a parent when other people are in a charge of a baby that can't come home. -
MinnPost This [is a] beautiful, brave book. [Hopper's] story is sure to be a crucial one for parents of premature babies, but it's also a book for anyone who has ever had her life go a bit askew. As Kate writes in her memoir, 'I followed the rules, I did what I was told, and it didn't matter.' Parenting, after all, ends up being about learning how little you can control things. -
Mutha Magazine Kate writes honestly, sometimes shockingly about her journey. The good, where she finds hope and encouragement along the way. And the bad, her life threatening illness with preeclampsia, the vomit, the heartbreaking pain, and the fear. She bravely tells it all with raw emotion. -
HuffPost Parents Ready for Air is an urgent memoir that plumbs the depths of the narrator's interior as she grapples with the premature birth of her daughter and with her own identity as mother. It is a book of truths that pulls back the curtain on a rarely talked about experience-preeclampsia and premature birth-and strikes a universal truth about what it means to be female in today's world. -
Writing Women's Lives