Please please please don't read pregnancy books! My second pregnancy (after a miscarriage)was completely ruined by the insane fears some of these books caused me to have. A great book I can recommend which is no filled with unnecessary information is "411" ( they have an expecting version)
I actually am finding reading about all of this comforting, encouraging, and exciting. Of course, there *are* parts that I do skip over. For now? I really like the classic "What to Expect When You're Expecting" and "The Girlfriends Guide to Pregnancy." I think they're a nice complement to one another. "What to Expect" is very informational (without being scary!) and "The GFs Guide" is sort of sassy and lighthearted. I also like that "What to Expect" focuses on *calming* your fears. The whole front of the book is formatted as a Q&A and the answers are all very reassuring.
I whole-heartedly encourage you to find a book that makes you feel good and empowered about of all of this. It's scary, for sure, but it's nothing countless women before us didn't do. Good luck to you and congrats!
I'm reading the mayo clinic guide to pregnancy but I have limited myself to just reading once a week whats happening that week with my husband. Its been a fun way for us to bond over the pregnancy and stops me from obsessively reading about all the bad stuff
I like WTEWYE and the Girlfriend's Guide, like @Cecilbear mentioned. I don't find either of them to be scary or alarmist. A lot of people have recommended Your Pregnancy Week by Week but I haven't read that one yet.
Penny simkins books are really good and not scary. I liked ina mays guide to child birth but its not for everybody. I liked reading birth stories. Most books have a section on complications. I would avoid that section unless something happens and you need the information.
Mama to a little girl born July 2011 and a little boy born April 2014!
I recommend Birthing From Within. I am very Anti "What to Expect" as I feel its not about empowering a women to know and make her own birthing decisions but about making you so afraid you become a docile and compliant patient. But, thats just my opinion.
I liked Your Pregnancy Week by Week, but I got it from the library so I don't think I finished it. By the time I was later in the pregnancy, I was on to baby care books. Baby 411 and Baby Bargains are both great.
I just started reading Pregnancy Day By Day (Canadian Edition). It's a hardcover book with lots of pictures of the day by day evolution. Very informative so far! https://www.amazon.ca/gp/aw/d/1553631188
Totally agree! They will scare the crap out of you. I quit reading them around 8 weeks. Get updates via thebump or another pregnancy app. Skip the books
I don't have a pregnancy book rec, but I do have one for the baby. I used this so much when my girls were babies and toddlers. I've given it as a shower gift several times too.
Caring for Your Baby and Young Child, 5th Edition: Birth to Age 5 (Shelov, Caring for your Baby and Young Child, Birth to Age 5) Paperback
THIS. I spent my whole pregnancy reading pregnancy books. Then a friend of mine bought me this book shortly before delivery and it helped me SO much over the years. The info is updated, relevant, and is organized perfectly.
Time to get on my soapbox...Ina May's Guide to Childbirth is the best book ever if you desire a pain free natural delivery. After baby arrives, Baby Whisperer all the way!!
BFP #2 03/01/13 EDD 11/12/13 MC and D&C 04/29/13 @ 12 weeks.
Re: What books should I read?
@sweetpeace13 - I couldn't agree more about What to Expect.
BFP #2 2/6/14 EDD 10/16/14- keeping our fingers crossed!
https://www.amazon.ca/gp/aw/d/1553631188
BFP #2 03/01/13 EDD 11/12/13 MC and D&C 04/29/13 @ 12 weeks.