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The New Mother (2015)

von Eugene Fischer

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https://fromtheheartofeurope.eu/the-new-mother-by-eugene-fischer-and-lizard-radi...

A near-future story in which parthenogenesis becomes possible. I read it when preparing Hugo nominations in 2016 and really liked it, and nominated it. Rereading it again eight years later, it remains a classic for me – the clash between state-imposed ideological control of fertility, and the demands of humanity and of human nature, are well delineated without thumping the reader over the head with the point. The fact that the story is set in near-contemporary Texas, where some of the worst bits of this dynamic have been playing out in real time since 2016, makes it even more effective now. ( )
  nwhyte | Mar 24, 2024 |
This was an amazing novella. Told from the point of a journalist reporting on a new medical phenomenon, a sexually-transmitted disease which renders men sterile and causes women to reproduce via partheogenesis, creating clone daughters so long as they are fertile. Fischer does an absolutely amazing job touching on the religious, political, social, and economic ramifications of such a change, as well as the deeply personal, through the eyes of the not-so-neutral POV reporter.

Absolutely blew me away. ( )
  wisemetis | Sep 16, 2022 |
available online here:
https://medium.com/@glorioushubris/the-new-mother-9df848da415b#.vr1bsts5g

really enjoyed this.
takes a simple 'what-if' and explores it from all angles. it's kind of clinical, and there is not much emotional development with the characters, but it doesn't suffer for this. really interesting.

and wonderfully liberal. This certainly won't end up on a sad puppies slate! ( )
  mjhunt | Jan 22, 2021 |
What happens when some women can reproduce parthenogenically? ( )
  tldegray | Sep 21, 2018 |
Tess Mendoza is working on an important new article for the biggest magazine she's ever worked for. She's also pregnant, and starting to feel her baby moving.

These two facts are connected in an uncomfortable way.

Tess and her partner Judy chose to use an anonymous donor from a sperm bank to avoid any possible complications of the father someday wanting parental rights. The story Tess is researching concerns a new disease, still going by a number of names--one of which is Human Communicable Parthenogenesis. Women are getting pregnant without men, producing baby girls who are essentially clones of themselves. This is a sexually transmitted condition; whatever the as yet unidentified infectious agent is, it renders men sterile and women parthenogenic reproducers.

Their daughters are also parthenogenic reproducers.

Evidence suggests it originated six years ago, and while Tess and Judy selected the oldest sperm they could find, from a demographic group that seems not to have been the earliest infected, it's still only five years old. Their risk is very, very low, but not zero.

The story thoughtfully explores the stresses on Tess and Judy as a couple, the stresses on Tess, the edgy relationship between Tess and her own mother, Layla, along with the challenges of tracking down sources on this story where the sources most in demand--one of the most famous cases, a woman who was part of a religious cult when she became infected and started having babies--is stonewalling everyone.

I was totally caught up in it.

This is in many ways a very American story, with the issues surrounding HCP very tied up with American culture wars issues. That's not a weakness, but it is a reason this story may be less accessible to non-Americans.

What is a weakness is that it doesn't end; it just stops, at a seemingly arbitrary point. It was startling and unsatisfying.

Interesting, but not ultimately successful. ( )
  LisCarey | Sep 19, 2018 |
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This story first appeared in the April/May, 2015 issue of Asimov's magazine.
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