
Becker applied the Page 69 Test to In the Family Way and shared the following:
It's sort of scary how indicative page 69 is when it comes to the themes in my novel. On that page, Lily’s best friend and neighbor, Becca, has dropped by for a visit. She’s nervous because she’s about to share a secret with Lily—something even Becca’s own mother doesn’t know: that Becca was “in the family way” when she married her husband, Bradley, more than a decade earlier. Now, Becca and Bradley have three sons but Becca’s recently discovered she’s pregnant again—with a baby she doesn’t want and cannot afford. But this is before Roe, so Becca has no options. Or does she?Visit Laney Katz Becker's website.
On this page we also learn that when Becca and Bradley were dating and first started “doing it” in high school, Becca thought she was protected because she douched afterwards. The lack of knowledge so many women had about their bodies in the 1960s, coupled with living in a repressed society (Lily is mortified as Becca shares her story)—where sex education wasn’t taught in schools and nice women didn’t talk about such things—is only one reason Raven House, the local Maternity Home for Unwed Mothers, is overflowing with girls who are “in trouble.” On page 69, Becca confesses that “there but by the grace of God,” she didn’t wind up in a place like Raven House.
Because my novel is set before the women’s movement, the women in my novel have to rely on each other to navigate through life’s challenges, marital issues and their pregnancies—both wanted and unwanted—and page 69 touches on all of those things.
Q&A with Laney Katz Becker.
--Marshal Zeringue