Ziegler presents a fascinating look inside the opposing sides of the abortion debate in the immediate aftermath of the 1973 Roe decision. Tracing the origins of both sides from the mid-1960s, she provides readers with a deeper sense of the discussions inside both camps, and a much more nuanced understanding than the current rhetoric belies. Most important is recognizing what was lost: the women in the early "pro-life" movement who understood that without universal healthcare, paid parental leave, affordable childcare, and quality education options, abortion rates would not decline. But those women were pushed out of the movement they started by far-right and "new right" religious men. And 50 years later, we are still fighting for these basic rights.