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Motherlike

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We’re shapeshifters, women—beasts, but everyone likes to hush that up.

As soon as Katherine Leyton discovered she was pregnant, a powerful reckoning began. Motherlike is both a feminist memoir of new motherhood as well as a rumination on womanhood. A book for anyone interested in an honest and revealing look at a process that is essential to our experience as humans, and yet is routinely unexamined and dismissed.

Sharp and intensely candid, funny, and deeply poignant, Leyton weaves her own experience of becoming a mother to her son (the shocks, the strangeness, and the pleasures) with historical research and cultural commentary. Everything from the history of the birth control pill and the objectification of women's bodies to the risks of labor and the realities of being postpartum. Leyton invites us into a very personal story that reflects a larger picture of ourselves.

230 pages, Paperback

Published March 19, 2024

3 people are currently reading
170 people want to read

About the author

Katherine Leyton

4 books7 followers
Katherine Leyton was the inaugural Writer-in-Residence at the Al & Eurithe Purdy A-Frame in the summer of 2014. Her poetry and non-fiction have appeared in numerous publications, including the Malahat Review, Hazlitt, the Globe and Mail, and the Edinburgh Review. She is also the founder of the highly unorthodox video poetry blog, HowPedestrian.ca. A native of Toronto, Leyton has lived in Rome, Montreal, Edinburgh, and Forlì.

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5 stars
53 (69%)
4 stars
20 (26%)
3 stars
2 (2%)
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1 (1%)
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Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Shannon A.
420 reviews22 followers
November 13, 2023
A beautiful and unflinching memoir of the author’s first year of motherhood that will make you appreciate what it really means to raise a child.
Profile Image for Alyssa.
149 reviews
May 7, 2024
I would give this 105 stars if I could.
Profile Image for Kendra.
236 reviews5 followers
February 12, 2025
I can relate to so many of the pre- and postnatal ponderings in this book. I wonder why we don't talk about the terror and the discomfort and the pressures that we feel as we become mothers and grow humans in our bodies. I felt like a weirdo for thinking and feeling anything but flowers and sunshine throughout my pregnancy and these first 17 weeks of motherhood.

Yet I know that two opposing things can be true. I can be thrilled to have a daughter and, at the same time, afraid of how dysfunctional my brain is right now.

This book is a mirror.
Profile Image for sarah ☾⋆⁺₊⋆.
117 reviews
September 27, 2024
I anticipated this being a 5 star read and am happy to report that I was not wrong. 

This book is an honest and vulnerable exploration of motherhood. The author draws on her perceptions, experiences, and expectations of motherhood from conception to her son's first birthday, and how they intersect with the various other roles and identities she takes on as a partner, daughter, working professional, and woman. It also provides valuable insight into the ways in which women have been perceived historically, and how these perceptions have worked to cause harm to women in the areas of health care and social policy.

I would recommend this book without a doubt. It is guaranteed to educate you or shape your perception of motherhood profoundly. It explores motherhood in a way that is not discussed in popular media or in North American culture, period.
56 reviews
December 29, 2024
I read this book in 4 hours, but it took me over 7 weeks to finish it. I'm 10 and 8 years postpartum now, but the intensity of becoming a mom for the first time was captured so insightfully in this book, that I really had to take my time to digest it all.

It was so raw. The book, motherhood, pregnancy, birth, the loss of identity, the loneliness, the rebirth. I've never seen such an incredibly complete account of all of it, the grief and the unfairness of the way we are treated as women, as mothers, as female employees with children... And also the incredulity of it all - our body's ability to grow and birth and breastfeed an entire person and somehow be able to let them go out into the world without us.

Truly moving.
Profile Image for Gabby Sequeira Lucero.
235 reviews1 follower
January 19, 2026
Update: made Omar read it with me and he learned a lot of new things LOL

Update: second time reading through this and it still makes me cry :’)

This was the parenting book I needed to read— emotional musings of a woman’s experience from pregnancy through the first year of her child’s life, full of worry and doubts and not knowing, addressed to her son. It’s beautiful, and even though I’m not a mom, the author’s thoughts and reflections made me feel seen.
Profile Image for Allie Tierney.
23 reviews
April 28, 2024
I knew this book would get 5 stars from page one. I could’ve easily read this in one sitting but really wanted to take my time and digest it slowly. Beautiful insight on womanhood & motherhood.
Profile Image for Enid Wray.
1,461 reviews80 followers
March 9, 2024
Well… I think we have a sleeper hit here. Spread the word.

I wasn’t sure about this one - until I was.

Initially I found the little vignettes to be most unsatisfactory - like teases… I wished things were more fleshed out. But there was a moment - not exactly sure when, maybe 25 or 30 pages in - where I found myself so caught up in these same little vignettes that I knew that this was special.

Hardly surprising that much of the author’s prior work has been poetry. This is beautifully crafted and her use of language is sparse - everything stripped to its barest, most relevant, essentials.

A beautiful and nuanced exploration of women, womanhood, motherhood, gender politics and so much more. She covers heaps of territory in just over 200 pages (many of which might have only one line on them at that!)

Give this to every woman - and man! - in your life.

Thanks to the publisher and Edelweiss for granting me access to an early digital review copy.
Profile Image for David Horton.
113 reviews
August 17, 2024
As a parent who has borne witness to ordeal of pregnancy and birth and post natal reality, it was very moving to revisit those strange and scary and marvelous times through the words of Motherlike. Ms. Leyton has a gift for "screen capturing" the fleeting thoughts and moments that pile on and then are gone during the the 9 months of pregnancy and the year following. I really wanted to keep drinking in the stories and the memories she was willing to share and was sad when I came to the end. As in reality, there's only so much story to tell before baby is no longer a baby anymore. It surprised me that in spite of how willing she was to open up her heart, Ms. Leyton held back the darker things that pregnancy does to a woman's body and mind. There are clinical manuals that cover those matters but it would have been interesting to me to read a poets take.
Profile Image for Madison.
2 reviews
December 12, 2024
Wow, I read this in one day! I love the vulnerability it took to write this. This was like reading someone’s diary. It was invasive yet welcoming, cluttered with moments some would consider “tmi” but that’s the beauty of motherhood, you’ve reached the end of human capability and come back unashamed, powerful.

Every woman should read this, mother or not, because it opens the door to the stigma related to pregnancy and motherhood. Motherlike taught me that I will survive motherhood and in the end, I will thrive.
Profile Image for Nikki M.
130 reviews1 follower
October 23, 2024
A criticism of societies views of motherhood today, cynical but not overly so. I was reminded of Rupi Kaur’s writing voice/ style.
Profile Image for Lindsay.
662 reviews40 followers
September 19, 2025
This was very real and very good. The author doesn't shy away from the hard things but she also paints a beautiful picture of the good parts, too.
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews

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