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Counting Backwards

A Novel

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 10 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 10 weeks

"Jacqueline Friedland's ripped-from-the-headlines story is an Erin Brockovich for our times." —Jill Santopolo, New York Times bestselling author of The Light We Lost

". . . a riveting, compelling story—but it's also an important one, reminding us that history's darkest aspects can echo forward into our present day and that there is so much work left to do in the fight for freedom and equality." —Kelly Rimmer, New York Times bestselling author of The German Wife

A routine immigration case, a shocking legacy. Jessa Gidney's quest for justice draws her into the heart of an abhorrent conspiracy. As she uncovers her personal ties to a heartbreaking past, her life takes a dramatic turn, in this emotionally riveting novel inspired by true events.

New York, 2022. Jessa Gidney is trying to have it all—a high-powered legal career, a meaningful marriage, and hopefully, one day, a child. But when her professional ambitions come up short and Jessa finds herself at a turning point, she leans into her family's history of activism by taking on pro bono work at a nearby ICE detention center. There she meets Isobel Pérez—a young mother fighting to stay with her daughter—but as she gets to know Isobel, an unsettling revelation about Isobel's health leads Jessa to uncover a horrifying pattern of medical malpractice within the detention facility. One that shockingly has ties to her own family.

Virginia, 1927. Carrie Buck is an ordinary young woman in the center of an extraordinary legal battle at the forefront of the American eugenics conversation. From a poor family, she was only six years old when she first became a ward of the state. Uneducated and without any support, she spends her youth dreaming about a different future—one separate from her exploitative foster family—unknowing of the ripples her small, country life will have on an entire nation.

As Jessa works to assemble a case against the prison and the crimes she believes are being committed there, she discovers the landmark Supreme Court case involving Carrie Buck. Her connection to the case, however, is deeper and much more personal than she ever knew—sending her down new paths that will leave her forever changed and determined to fight for these women, no matter the cost.

Alternating between the past and present, and deftly tackling timely-yet-timeless issues such as reproductive rights, incarceration, and society's expectations of women and mothers, Counting Backwards is a compelling reminder that progress is rarely a straight line and always hard-won. A moving story of two remarkable women that you'll remember for years to come.

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    • Booklist

      February 1, 2025
      Attorney Jessa Gidney decides to take a leave of absence from her job to do pro bono work interviewing immigrant women at a nearby detention center. After a few coincidences reveal a terrifying trend in the women's medical care, Jessa knows she has a chance to stop a disturbing practice. She works to gain the women's trust and uncovers a surprising connection to Buck v. Bell, the landmark Supreme Court case legalizing sterilization nearly a hundred years ago. As Jessa's investigation advances, Friedland (The Stockwell Letters, 2023) weaves in a parallel narrative from Carrie Buck, the subject of the 1927 court case, illuminating a dark chapter in American history and its repercussions. Fans of Jodi Picoult's Small Great Things (2016) and Chris Bohjalian's Hour of the Witch (2021) will appreciate Friedland's ability to balance weighty subject matter with moments of hope and genuine connection. With questions of reproductive rights and bodily autonomy echoing across generations, Counting Backwards is a timely, thought-provoking, and sobering reminder that the fight for reproductive freedom is far from settled.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2025
      A contemporary woman's quest to have a baby is interwoven with a historical legal case about involuntary sterilization. In the present day, the narrator is Jessa Gidney, a young lawyer at a Manhattan law firm who lives in a posh Upper East Side apartment with her husband, Vance, a hunky finance guy. Sounds pretty sweet, but Jessa's growing obsession with getting pregnant and her ongoing failure to do so are putting massive strain on her job and marriage. Orphaned when her parents died in a car crash, she was raised by her doting grandmother and feels driven to continue the family line. When she takes on a pro bono case helping Isobel P�rez, an undocumented immigrant, avoid deportation, she learns that while in detention her client was surgically sterilized without giving consent--and Isobel isn't the only one. The book's historical plot focuses on Carrie Buck, a real person who in 1927 was the plaintiff in the U.S. Supreme Court decisionBuck v. Bell. Carrie was born to a single mother, grew up in poverty, and had little education. After she was raped as a teenager, she bore a daughter who was immediately taken from her. She became a test case for a Virginia eugenics law that allowed the state to sterilize "promiscuous" or "feebleminded" women, with or without their consent. The court ruled the law was constitutional, and the eugenics theories it was based on became a foundation for the Holocaust. As Jessa passionately pursues Isobel's case, she learns shocking secrets, some too close to home. For the first part of the book, the interlinked stories, the abuses of the women in the detention center, and the women's engaging voices make a compelling combination. But in the last portion, the stories of Carrie and the immigrants drop into the background and Jessa takes over. Some of her successes, though, are unconvincing, and the plot ends up with too many loose ends. An intriguing pair of plots about women's reproductive rights starts off strong but goes astray.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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