This article "Evan's Two Mothers" was written by Anna Kunderlen and published in the "New York Times" and 2004 edition "Good Reasons for Contemporary Controversies". In addition, this article features gay marriage and a free view on the ability to bring up children with homosexual families. The entire article of Quindlen takes an extreme perspective on gay marriage introducing spirit, sadness, and signs through various trial cases in order to gain readers' trust and drawing emotions and logic of readers with enthusiasm and unwavering strength Man.
In Evan's "Two Mothers" Anna Candelillen showed that it is unreasonable to prevent the two from being open to each other and to be legally restrained to have the same sex. Quindlen began her article by drawing a recent victory at same-sex marriage: the lesbian couple's approval, another couple lesbian partner's approval, the same incentive of heterosexual and homosexual couples. Quindlen enumerates cases of social injustice and justice by binding couple's rights and privileges. Because they do not match the definition of male and female husband and wife. Quindlen considers interracial marriage 25 years ago as taboo and is regarded as normal compared to current gay marriage. After she finishes the work, 25 years from now it will notice that the idea of forbidding gay marriage is just absurd.
Author Anna Marie Quindlen was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on July 8, 1952. Anna Kundlen joined the New York Times at the age of 18 and stole the girl. After graduating from Bernard College in 1974, he was hired as a reporter at the New York Post. She returned to the Times in 1977 and was appointed Deputy Editor in Metropolitan in 1983. From 1981 to 1994 as a columnist in The Times, Quindlen was the third woman in the history of a newspaper to write a regular column for the famous Op-Ed page. Her column "Public and Private" was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1992. Other columns include "About New York" and "Life in the 1930s". In 1995, she left the newspaper and became a novelist.