The Family Roe: An American Story

Despite her famous pseudonym, "Jane Roe," no one knows the truth about Norma McCorvey (1947-2017), whose unwanted pregnancy in 1969 opened a great fracture in American life. Journalist Joshua Prager spent hundreds of hours with Norma, discovered her personal papers--a previously unseen trove--and witnessed her final moments. The Family Roe presents her life in full. Propelled by the crosscurrents of sex and religion, gender and class, it is a life that tells the story of abortion in America.

Prager begins that story on the banks of Louisiana's Atchafalaya River where Norma was born, and where unplanned pregnancies upended generations of her forebears. A pregnancy then upended Norma's life too, and the Dallas waitress became Jane Roe.

Drawing on a decade of research, Prager reveals the woman behind the pseudonym, writing in novelistic detail of her unknown life from her time as a sex worker in Dallas, to her private thoughts on family and abortion, to her dealings with feminist and Christian leaders, to the three daughters she placed for adoption.

Prager found those women, including the youngest--Baby Roe--now fifty years old. She shares her story in The Family Roe for the first time, from her tortured interactions with her birth mother, to her emotional first meeting with her sisters, to the burden that was uniquely hers from conception.

The Family Roe abounds in such revelations--not only about Norma and her children but about the broader "family" connected to the case. Prager tells the stories of activists and bystanders alike whose lives intertwined with Roe. In particular, he introduces three figures as important as they are unknown: feminist lawyer Linda Coffee, who filed the original Texas lawsuit yet now lives in obscurity; Curtis Boyd, a former fundamentalist Christian, today a leading provider of third-trimester abortions; and Mildred Jefferson, the first black female Harvard Medical School graduate, who became a pro-life leader with great secrets.

An epic work spanning fifty years of American history, The Family Roe will change the way you think about our enduring American divide: the right to choose or the right to life.

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Published Jan 17, 2023

672 pages

Average rating: 7.86

14 RATINGS

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Community Reviews

Sommer B. Williams
Jul 31, 2025
10/10 stars
Interesting backstory on the court case that established privacy protections for women in their healthcare.
stackedlibrarian
Dec 11, 2024
8/10 stars
Deep dive on a complex individual (and family) and the polarizing subject of abortion she represented on both sides.
jen.reads
May 23, 2022
4/10 stars
This book is over 700 pages. I wish it was more like 300. Norma McCorvey had a tough childhood, and an even tougher young adulthood. Story was there, however felt like a textbook a lot of times. Someone please write an abridged version of this book. Rating it OK/2 stars because of the well researched, deep info about all the characters offset by overly detailed descriptions. Some interesting info here. Maybe skim this one.

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