After raising her son, Ben, as a single parent, librarian Inga Daudelin is blindsided when he is accused of the murders of four young women. Unable to believe Ben could be guilty, Inga is forced to reconsider her choices in life and whether she missed something important about him. At the same time, Jean, a pregnant naïf who seems both simple and wise, 'imprints' on Inga at work, drawing her into an unusual friendship. When Ben kidnaps Jean, Inga and lead detective Ron O'Loughlin, with whom she's falling in love, search for the two, who have landed in a hippie house in San Francisco, where, along with Jean's baby, they make a strange but human family."--Page 4 of cover.
On her way to achieving her most important goal--that of becoming a writer--Alden had always considered motherhood, but at age 39 she faced the possibility that she had waited too long. This intimate memoir chronicles Alden's discoveries and choices, as she and her husband decide to embark on a long and difficult course of infertility treatment.
Crossing the Moon is a memoir--at once witty and wistful--in which the author recounts her initial ambivalence about motherhood, the pain and frustration of following a course of treatment for infertility, and ultimately the birth of a new self, a writer comfortable at last with her family of two. It also touches a wide array of other issues.
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