The Motherload, Sarah Hoover
The Motherload, Sarah Hoover
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The Motherload

Author: Sarah Hoover

Narrator: Sarah Hoover

Unabridged: 11 hr 31 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 01/14/2025


Synopsis

NATIONAL BESTSELLER
An unflinching motherhood memoir that dares to ask what happens when “what to expect when you’re expecting” turns out to be months of rage, anguish, brain fog, and a total surrender of sex, career, and identity.

“A long overdue reality check.” —Oprah Daily
“Honest, unapologetic, and brutally funny.” —Stephanie Danler, New York Times bestselling author of Sweetbitter
A Most Anticipated Book of 2025 by Oprah Daily, Town & Country, and Brit + Co

“The kid was objectively a tiny worm, even worse, a worm with my nose.” Welcome to Sarah Hoover’s candid and propulsive take on motherhood where she turns the ecstatic narrative women have been fed—one of immediate connection to your child followed by a joyful path of maternal discovery—on its head.

Like most of us, Sarah Hoover grew up imagining a certain life for herself, and when she moved from Indiana to New York City to study art history, the life she’d imagined began falling into place. She got her degree in art history, landed a job in a gallery, made friends, and met interesting artists, one of whom became her husband. But when Hoover got pregnant, everything in her life began to unravel.

She felt like an imposter in her own body. She grew distant from her friends and husband. Anxiety, fear, guilt, and shame threatened to swallow her. She also experienced trauma at the hands of one of her doctors—a stark trigger. And when her son was born, there was no… joy.

Her despair was persistent, even with help, therapy, and pills. Grieving a lost identity and angry at the world around her, she found herself despising her baby, her husband, and herself. She was afraid it might not end. With the help of a doctor’s diagnosis, Hoover began to understand the cluster of symptoms that informed her experience—she was drowning in postpartum depression—and that she wasn’t a bad mother or a failed woman.

At its core, The Motherload is about learning to forgive yourself. It’s a rejection of the cultural idea of the mother as a perfect being. And it’s an honest, propulsive, and often funny take on the vicissitudes of marriage, life, and parenting—a motherhood memoir unlike any other.

About Sarah Hoover

Sarah Hoover holds a master’s degree in cultural theory from Columbia and a BA in art history from NYU. Her writing has been featured in The Wall Street Journal, Harper’s Bazaar, Psychology TodayMother TongueThe Strategist, and VogueThe Motherload is her first book.


Reviews

Goodreads review by emma on January 19, 2025

i reach my mid-twenties and suddenly i'm interested in books about being a mom...biology is a hell of a drug (review to come / thanks to the publisher for the arc)......more

Goodreads review by Emily on January 31, 2025

I preordered this book and couldn’t wait to read it. I have a nine-month-old and am from Indianapolis. I love Sarah’s mom’s restaurants and everything she’s done for the Indianapolis community, especially for women and children. I’ve followed Sarah on social media and been intrigued by her Carrie Br......more

Goodreads review by ari on November 20, 2024

I think this book is going to be very polarizing - it's extremely real, raw, and unfiltered. However, the author's circumstance is so removed from most people's realities. She is upper class, in NYC, and has access to more resources than the average person. Despite all that, I still found a lot of t......more

Goodreads review by Hannah on March 17, 2025

The author's life as explained in this book expresses every fear I've had about marriage and motherhood and why I'll never want either for myself. People have been trying to convince me to do both my entire life, which really pisses me off. Just because that's what they chose for themselves, they wa......more

Goodreads review by Madison ✨ on January 09, 2025

If you're interested in this book for the exploration and examination of one woman's post-partum depression, just know that examination (if it comes) will come from a ridiculously privileged woman who cannot write in a way to connect with the average person. I DNFed this book ridiculously early beca......more