Natalie Kon-yu on ‘The Cost of Labour’: First Book Club The Kill Your Darlings Podcast

    • Arts

Each month we celebrate an Australian debut release of fiction or non-fiction in the Kill Your Darlings First Book Club. For February that debut is The Cost of Labour by Natalie Kon-yu, out now from Affirm Press.
Natalie was nine weeks pregnant when the trembling began. Two weeks later she checked herself into a mental health unit. Rather than a woman with a health concern, the doctors saw Natalie as a vessel carrying precious cargo. This loss of agency carried on through childbirth and into her early years as a mother. Natalie discovered that she was far from alone.
In fact, her experience typifies the inequalities that weigh heavily on child-bearing women, as well as the devaluation of what is still perceived as ‘women’s work’. With bracing clarity and verve, Kon-yu tackles the outdated institutions, expectations and ideologies that hold us hostage as parents. The pressure is building and the cost on families is stacking up. Something has to give.
Drawing on personal narratives, history, social research and interviews, The Cost of Labour tackles the expectations that keep us all hostage to a dynamic unfit for contemporary society and offers hope for a way out of the trap.
Our theme song is Broke for Free’s ‘Something Elated’. Sound production by Lloyd Pratt.
Further reading:
Read a review of The Cost of Labour in our February Books Roundup.
Read about Natalie’s favourite books and reading habits in this month’s Shelf Reflection.
The Cost of Labour is available now from your local independent bookseller.
(more…)
The post Natalie Kon-yu on ‘The Cost of Labour’: First Book Club appeared first on Kill Your Darlings.

Each month we celebrate an Australian debut release of fiction or non-fiction in the Kill Your Darlings First Book Club. For February that debut is The Cost of Labour by Natalie Kon-yu, out now from Affirm Press.
Natalie was nine weeks pregnant when the trembling began. Two weeks later she checked herself into a mental health unit. Rather than a woman with a health concern, the doctors saw Natalie as a vessel carrying precious cargo. This loss of agency carried on through childbirth and into her early years as a mother. Natalie discovered that she was far from alone.
In fact, her experience typifies the inequalities that weigh heavily on child-bearing women, as well as the devaluation of what is still perceived as ‘women’s work’. With bracing clarity and verve, Kon-yu tackles the outdated institutions, expectations and ideologies that hold us hostage as parents. The pressure is building and the cost on families is stacking up. Something has to give.
Drawing on personal narratives, history, social research and interviews, The Cost of Labour tackles the expectations that keep us all hostage to a dynamic unfit for contemporary society and offers hope for a way out of the trap.
Our theme song is Broke for Free’s ‘Something Elated’. Sound production by Lloyd Pratt.
Further reading:
Read a review of The Cost of Labour in our February Books Roundup.
Read about Natalie’s favourite books and reading habits in this month’s Shelf Reflection.
The Cost of Labour is available now from your local independent bookseller.
(more…)
The post Natalie Kon-yu on ‘The Cost of Labour’: First Book Club appeared first on Kill Your Darlings.

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