Reflecting on Writing about abortion

5.07.12
My novel “A Halo of Strawberries”, centred on the contentious subject of abortion. In the book, a granddaughter commits suicide after having an abortion and a grandfather confronts a number of moral issues as a consequence.
Having experienced real-life paternity, I set out to champion the unborn in their most vulnerable and defenceless stages of life.
Should a woman feel guilty about having an abortion? Pro-choice supporters provide lots of excuses and there are, of course, legal grounds for an abortion. There’s also, undeniably, a lot of social pressure on women to terminate an unwanted pregnancy.
How a woman feels about an abortion has to be a matter of conscience. All else is part of polarised pro-life/pro-choice rhetoric and often lacking in forgiveness and compassion.
“A Halo of Strawberries” reflects real life compared to the thrillers I’ve written and has touched people’s lives more than I expected, and not just over abortion.
No response to the pro-life views I hold was more poignant, however, than that left for me on a website by a woman or girl who said: “I had one [an abortion] a week ago and I don’t want to live.”
That a mother, as a victim of abortion, may become suicidal, is a premise of “A Halo of Strawberries”.
The saving of life will always be more important to me than the rhetoric of the debate.
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Published on July 04, 2012 21:27 Tags: abortion, book, suicide, unborn
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