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Victoria Dillon’s new novel “Ava” (She Writes Press, March 3) asks a pivotal question: What if the only way to reclaim reproductive freedom was to rewrite the very nature of birth itself?
Ten years after Roe v. Wade is overturned, 22-year-old comparative biologist Larkin finds herself unexpectedly pregnant in a country where choice is no longer an option. Initially uncertain, she embraces motherhood—until a devastating diagnosis changes everything. Trapped by Tennessee’s strict abortion laws, she is forced to carry her baby, Maeve, to term, only to endure the heartbreak of losing her hours after birth.
Years later, still haunted by her loss, Larkin joins a radical scientific movement that could change everything: a groundbreaking technology that replaces gestation with incubation, allowing women true control over their reproduction. When she uses it to bring her second daughter, Ava, into the world, she believes she has finally reclaimed her autonomy. But as Ava grows and begins to question the very choice that created her, Larkin is challenged in ways she never imagined.
In this interview, Victoria talks about her background as a former research scientist and how this factored into the book, including how she developed this entirely new way for humans to give birth. She shares the day that Roe V Wade was repealed and how this singular event inspired the book. We also discuss Larkin, how the loss of her first child leads her to try this new science and the repercussion on her and her second child Ava.
If you enjoyed the interview, check out more at https://victoriadillonauthor.com/.
By citywideblackout5
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Victoria Dillon’s new novel “Ava” (She Writes Press, March 3) asks a pivotal question: What if the only way to reclaim reproductive freedom was to rewrite the very nature of birth itself?
Ten years after Roe v. Wade is overturned, 22-year-old comparative biologist Larkin finds herself unexpectedly pregnant in a country where choice is no longer an option. Initially uncertain, she embraces motherhood—until a devastating diagnosis changes everything. Trapped by Tennessee’s strict abortion laws, she is forced to carry her baby, Maeve, to term, only to endure the heartbreak of losing her hours after birth.
Years later, still haunted by her loss, Larkin joins a radical scientific movement that could change everything: a groundbreaking technology that replaces gestation with incubation, allowing women true control over their reproduction. When she uses it to bring her second daughter, Ava, into the world, she believes she has finally reclaimed her autonomy. But as Ava grows and begins to question the very choice that created her, Larkin is challenged in ways she never imagined.
In this interview, Victoria talks about her background as a former research scientist and how this factored into the book, including how she developed this entirely new way for humans to give birth. She shares the day that Roe V Wade was repealed and how this singular event inspired the book. We also discuss Larkin, how the loss of her first child leads her to try this new science and the repercussion on her and her second child Ava.
If you enjoyed the interview, check out more at https://victoriadillonauthor.com/.