In Making Gaybies Jaya Keaney offers an empirically and conceptually rich account of racialization in contemporary queer family making. Through insightful exploration of how lesbian and gay couples navigate choice and constraint in their paths to parenthood in contemporary multicultural Australia, Making Gaybies makes vital contributions to transnational scholarly conversations in feminist science studies, queer studies, and critical race studies. A highly engaging book written with great candor and care, it deserves a wide readership. - Anne Pollock, author of (Sickening: Anti-Black Racism and Health Disparities in the United States) This astonishing book brilliantly reconfigures how we understand race, reproduction, and desire by investigating queer kinship as a terrain of feeling and the intimate bonds forged in the name of family as a site of radical transformation. Jaya Keaneys book is an instant classic-as beautifully written as it is forcefully and sensitively argued. - Sarah Franklin, author of (Embodied Progress: A Cultural Account of Assisted Conception) "Making Gaybies will be of interest to a wide range of readers, spanning from those who are working in the field of LGBTQ+studies, social studies of reproduction, and gender studies to race and identity studies. Making Gaybies raises important questions around queerness, heteronormativity, kinship, an racism, from my understanding, by telling the readers how multiple facets of 'choices' both contribute to the resistance of normalcy as well as to the reproduction of existing norms in society. I also believe that Making Gaybies comes in handy for people who work in fertility clinics and LGBTQ+organizations to understand more about queer intended parents feelings, concerns, and decision-making in their reproductive journeys." - Jung Chen (LGBTQ+ Family) "Keaney skilfully weaves together anecdotes, fieldwork glimpses, and conversations to paint a picture of the ways in which race literally operates at the heart of queer reproduction. As an engaged and nuanced critic, Keaney offers an exemplary way of accounting for the complexities of studying ones own community and the entangled relationships of ethnographic research." - Ulrika Dahl (Lambda Nordica) "Keaneys book is a powerful addition to the growing scholarship on reproductive markets. . . . Making Gaybies is a perfect fit for graduate seminars in health and society, race and ethnicity, and gender and sexuality. Beyond the classroom, Keaneys book deserves an enthusiastic and wide audience." - Brian Donovan (Ethnic and Racial Studies)