Rebecca Eckler is a Canadian book publisher, former writer of columns and blogs about motherhood, and is author of two books, Knocked Up: Confessions of a Hip Mother-to-Be (2004), and Wiped! Life with a Pint-Sized Dictator, (2007). Since 2016, she has written five more books, the latest of which is The Mommy Mob: Inside the Outrageous World of Mommy Blogging (2014).[1] [2]
Eckler was employed by the National Post from 2000 to 2005.[3] She was among a number of staff whose jobs were terminated by the CanWest newspaper chain.[4] From March–December 2006, Eckler wrote "Mommy Blogger", a weekly freelance piece in The Globe and Mail, appending to this set of blogs a departing blog in May 2007.[5] Eckler wrote bloc post appearing periodically in the Canadian periodical Maclean's from 2008 to 2016.[6] Eckler's work also appeared in Mademoiselle.
Eckler became pregnant with her daughter, Rowan Joely, on the night of her engagement party and published the 2004 book Knocked Up: Confessions of a Hip Mother-to-Be about her first pregnancy. The book received negative reviews.[7] [8] In April 2007, Eckler published her second book, Wiped! Life with a Pint-Sized Dictator, which chronicles her first two years of motherhood. Quill & Quire said the book was a "series of tired clichés about parenthood."[9] Eckler published Blissfully Blended Bullshit with Dundurn Press in 2019, on managing life with a blended family.
Eckler's writing has elicited controversy. For instance, there was international coverage of the responses to her blogging about her decision to leave her 10-month old infant to join her fiancé for the duration of a celebrity golf tournament in Mexico.[10] Responses to her book and blog content have frequently included assessments of writing from privilege, shallowness and immaturity, and self-justification of non-traditional decisions.[10] [11]
Eckler's home was referenced in the April 2007 edition of Canadian House and Home.[12] In 2007, Eckler participated in a charity auction for the magazine The Walrus, paying $7,000 for the right to have a character in Margaret Atwood's novel The Year of the Flood named after her.[13]