“Filled with insight that manages to be at once beautiful and razor-sharp. This book is fucking elucidating. I cannot recommend highly enough.”
—Ann Helen Petersen, Culture Study
“Details her own story beautifully and intersperses with oft-ignored research.”
—The Cut
“An essential addition to the motherhood canon.”
—Lit Hub
“Interweaves her personal experience with a deeper, researched examination of what it means to be a disabled parent in a culture that prizes individualism and fears disability. ..also offers an illuminating perspective that applies to all parents.”
—The Washington Post
“Cuts boldly and beautifully through that silence, inviting readers to imagine what our world might look like if we met every family where they are.”
—Vogue
“A must for collections. This work offers much insight and interweaves the author’s personal experiences with interviews with numerous parents with a variety of disabilities about their experiences.”
—Library Journal, Starred Review
“A love letter to disabled parenting—an impeccably researched, reported, and referenced love letter—as well as an artfully drawn map of an exquisite, convivial society that can only be achieved with the creativity, skill, and joy of disabled people.”
—Angela Garbes, author of Essential Labor and Like a Mother
“This is such a glorious, revelatory book. Jessica Slice cuts through all the judgment and stereotypes to reveal the truth: disabled people are, in many ways, uniquely suited to and skilled at parenthood and are sources of wisdom, ingenuity, courage, and joy that the entire world can learn from.”
—Ed Yong, Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist and author of An Immense World
“A beautiful, transformative book about being a parent in a world that rejects frailty and weakness.”
—Rachel Aviv, author of Strangers to Ourselves
“An absorbing portrayal of what it’s really like to be a disabled parent, including the shocking and understudied discrimination they face . . . A fierce, compassionate, and unremittingly lucid book that I’ll be returning to again and again.”
—Andrew Leland, Pulitzer Prize–finalist author of The Country of the Blind
“This vulnerable, insightful, and thoughtful book is a must-read for any parent seeking a map for how to care for their children—while also caring for their own needs—with creativity, community, and joy.”
—Rachel Somerstein, author of Invisible Labor
“Powerful, necessary, and filled with raw honesty . . . For anyone who believes in a more compassionate and equitable world.”
—Alyssa Blask Campbell, author of Tiny Humans, Big Emotions
“Jessica Slice’s story of disabled parenting will feel familiar to anyone who has been told their body is ‘not enough’ or ‘too much.’ Slice’s work deftly tells a deeply moving story, while grounding readers in the many ways ableism shows up in parenthood. Unfit Parent is a must-read for anyone committed to building a just and accessible world for parents and kids alike.”
—Aubrey Gordon, New York Times best-selling author and cohost of Maintenance Phase