"Pro-lifers, especially given recent setbacks, should read this book carefully. Most people havent thought about abortion in a serious and informed way and significant hope remains for views that insist on justice for both human beings present in a pregnancy.Charles Camosy, author of Resisting Throwaway Culture
This book does a phenomenal job bringing together the numerous considerations that come into play with peoples abortion attitudes, many of which I suspect people have subconsciously thought of but never really surfaced. Being careful not to add her opinion or too much interpretation to respondents views, Tricia Bruce weaves together a beautiful synthesis of Americans views: where they clash, how they overlap, and what seems to really be at stake. Its very thoughtful, and at times has a sort of prophetic tone to it.Michael Rotolo, Pew Research Center
Unlike most large-scale studies of abortion attitudes, this book is based not on a survey but rather on hundreds of in-depth interviews with a nationally representative sample of everyday Americans. The result is a staggeringly humane and complex portrait of people doing their best to grapple with an issue that has become only more central to our national politics.Ruth Braunstein, SNF Agora Professor of Sociology at Johns Hopkins University, host of the award-winning podcast When the Wolves Came: Evangelicals Resisting Extremism, and author of My Tax Dollars: The Morality of Taxpaying in America
The books primary contribution is the extraordinary detail and nuance the author has achieved in the interviews. The polarization of thought on abortion leaves public discourse seeming very hackneyed and black-and-white, but in fact most people have complicated ways of thinking about, justifying, condemning, and classifying abortion. I dont know of another book or study that does this for any major issue, and certainly not for abortion. That this appears so soon after the Dobbs decision makes it all the more important, since it reveals the messy world into which the decision was dropped.Andrew J. Perrin, SNF Agora Professor of Sociology, Johns Hopkins University
Bruce amplifies the qualitative research to let the participants views present a convincing story about the murkiness of American opinions on abortion.Monique Moultrie, Professor of Religious Studies, Georgia State University
Our Lives is simply brilliant, an indispensable field guide to the complexity of abortion attitudes in America. Bruce fundamentally recasts our understanding of this critical issue, inviting us to think in new ways about life, liberty, and the most intimate parts of American life.Mary Ziegler, author of Roe: The History of a National Obsession
Bruce offers a rare, deeply grounded look at how everyday Americans make sense of abortion. In a field dominated by survey data, this book provides textured insight into lived moral reasoningcareful, empirically rich, and refreshingly free of political agenda. An important contribution to the sociology of abortion attitudes.Amy Adamczyk, author of Fetal Positions
Our Lives will quickly become an invaluable addition to the study of abortion attitudes in the United States. In a discourse so often marked by loud voices on the polar ends of a manufactured spectrum, Bruce skillfully reveals the ambivalence and complexity of our shared abortion imaginary.Andrew Whitehead, sociologist, award-winning author of American Idolatry, and coauthor of Taking America Back for God