Patricia Harman, CNM, has published in The Journal of Midwifery & Women's Health and The Journal of Sigma Theta Tau for Nursing Scholarship as well as alternative publications. She is a regular presenter at national midwifery conferences. Harman got her start as a lay-midwife on the rural communes where she lived in the '60s and '70s, going on to become a nurse-midwife on the faculty of Ohio State University, Case Western Reserve University, and West Virginia University. She lives and works near Morgantown, West Virginia, and has three sons.
In her sweetly perceptive memoir, Harman reveals how her exam room becomes a confessional. Coaxing women in thin gowns to share secrets ... she reminds them that they're not alone. --Michelle Green, People Harman has a gift for storytelling, and The Blue Cotton Gown is a moving, percipient book. --Karen R. Long, Cleveland Plain Dealer Harman shows us the joys and sorrows of listening to women's stories and attending to their bodies, and she leads us through the complicated life of a healer who is profoundly shaped by her patients and their journeys. --Perri Klass, author of The Mercy Rule and Treatment Kind and Fair Luminescent, ruthlessly authentic, humane, and brilliantly written. --Samuel Shem, MD, author of The House of God, Mount Misery, and The Spirit of the Place Touchingly revelatory . . . deeply moving. --Booklist, starred review As the mother of seven children and veteran of eight pregnancy losses, I knew when I ran my bath that I would be unable to resist Patricia Harman's memoir of midwifery, The Blue Cotton Gown. What I didn't realize was that it would cause me, a sensible person, to get into her bath with one sock still on and rise from it when the candle was gone and the water cold. Utterly true and lyrical as any novel, Harman's book should be a little classic. --Jacquelyn Mitchard, author of The Deep End of the Ocean and Cage of Stars