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LAND OF LAST CHANCES by Joan Cohen

LAND OF LAST CHANCES

by Joan Cohen

Pub Date: Aug. 13th, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-63152-600-8
Publisher: She Writes Press

A midlife pregnancy triggers an executive decision in this debut drama.

Marketing professional Jeanne Bridgeton is a vice president at Salientific and has connections to its shot-callers. However, she doesn’t yet have what she’s always wanted: a chief officer title. She also finds herself having to make a choice that could have major consequences—not just for her, but also for other key characters in the story. She’s pregnant, and she’s debating whether she should get an abortion. At first, she ponders the question as dispassionately as she would a budget-line item—until her doctor tells her that, because she’s 48, this could be her last opportunity to give birth. She never wanted to have a child before, but the finality of the decision causes her to vacillate almost daily until her state’s 24-week legal abortion limit. She knows that the father is either Vince—a major investor in Salientific and her boyfriend of a year—or Jake, the company’s troubled CEO, with whom she had a one-night stand. Her deepest concern, however, isn’t paternity, as marriage is not in her DNA. Instead, she’s anxious about the risk of the baby having developmental challenges, and whether gambling on motherhood would be irresponsible. Another wild card also consumes her: Did her father die from early-onset Alzheimer’s disease? If so, would Jeanne’s child be at risk of inheriting the disease—or of becoming an orphan at a young age? Cohen offers an adeptly written genetic detective story in this novel. In Jeanne, she creates a sympathetic and multidimensional character that avoids outdated stereotypes that one often sees in portrayals of women executives. Readers meet a tough corporate player in the early chapters, but the author develops many other facets of the character over the course of the book, as when she must confront the possibility that her mother, now deceased, lied to her about her father’s condition. The central choice of the novel, which may polarize readers, effectively deals with extremely relevant issues.

An artfully crafted portrayal of a woman who learns about herself as she weighs an unexpected choice.