Author:Steven R Goldstein,Laurie Ashner
Gail Sheehy in the Silent Passage called menopause the calm after the storm. This book is about the storm itself. Much is known about the menopause, its symptoms and effects on women's lives but very litle has been mentioned so far on the decade leading up to the menopause during which time ovulation decreases and ostrogen levels are destablising. Every women experiences it yet it is one of the least understood, most misdiagnosed and most confounding stages in a women's life. Could it be. . . . . Perimenopause? outlines the symptoms - both psychological and physical - which are a direct result of this hormone imbalance and shows how best to combat them. It gives you the facts you need to make clear choices about medicinal and natural therapies and it teaches you about following a healthy lifestyle -such as diet, nutrition, excerise and vitamins - that you can start today and that will bring about far-reaching ramifications for your future overall health. Could it be. . . . . Perimenopause is essential reading for all women.
Hilarious ... one of those entertaining paeans to cricket and its role in life, the universe and everything
—— GuardianDelightful stuff
—— Michael Simkins, author of Fatty BatterA charming and witty book
—— Times Literary SupplementHighly entertaining
—— Sir Tim RiceBeguiling charm
—— WisdenA warm, funny, realistic and affectionate book
—— All Out Cricket...really gets at the roots of attraction between and women in an intelligent, useful way... this is the only map you need
—— Marni Jackson, Canadian non-fiction authorShilling is brave and endearingly frank
—— ScotsmanAn intelligent discursion on what it means to be a no-longer-youthful female in a world obsessed with staying young ... Her thoughts are refreshing, provocative and a pleasure to read
—— MetroJane Shilling is an excellent writer...this is detailed, personal and memorable
—— William Leith , Evening StandardThe essay form, with its drifts and lurches, suits Shilling's purposes perfectly as she catalogues her experience of middle-ages confusion and loss... all with detail, nuance, enthusiasm and care
—— Ian Sansom , GuardianThe usual stereotypes about grumpy old women are jettisoned in favour of ironic and nuanced observations about sexuality, identity and death in this crisply written memoir about middle age
—— Benjamin Evans , Daily TelegraphAn honest midlife memoir of ageing, false expectations and unrealised dreams
—— Michael Binyon , The TimesDetailed, personable and memorable
—— William Leith , ScotsmanHer story may not be unusual, but the elegance and range of her writing most certainly is. The journey is a delight
—— Daily TelegraphFans of this beautifully crafted, critically acclaimed memoir of middle-age might well take the view that it should be distributed free on the NHS to all women over 50... a penetrating analysis of the challenges and heartaches of life's middle phase
—— Katherine Whitbourn , Daily MailShilling casts a self-critical eye over the events that have shaped her life
—— Emma Hagestadt , IndependentThe specifics of her early abuse is vivid, violent, and no less horrifying for its familiarity... If the memoir was begun as a final exorcism of the monster mother, it ends with a moving acceptance of her
—— IndependentMoved me deeply. [It] celebrates the redeeming power of the written word and is undercut with an irresistible humour born of residence in hardship
—— Juliet Nicholson , Evening Standard, Books of the YearAn extraordinary tragic-comic literary autobiography
—— Mark Lawson , Guardian, Books of the YearThere is something darkly Dickensian in the urgency and energy of her character and quest, in the acute, abrupt style of her self-presentation and in the extreme characters who have informed her life
—— The TimesFunny and scary mixed together, in the manner of the Brothers Grimm, sharp as a knife, round as a child's eye
—— Daily TelegraphDifficult, spirited, engaging... a resonant affirmation of the power of storytelling to make things better
—— Jane Shilling , Daily MailMoving, turbulent
—— Zoe Williams , GuardianShattering, brilliant memoir... Here childhood eas ghastly, as bad as Dickens's stint in the blacking factory, but it was also the crucible for her incendiary talent
—— Daisy Goodwin , Sunday TimesVerbalyl dazzling, emotionally searing, compassionate and often hilarious memoir
—— Genevieve Fox , Daily MailJeanette Winterson's new memoir appears to have been highly praised, rightly it seems to me, for its zest and candour and noted for a quality that some reviewers have seen as haste or even carelessness but which I see as her characteristic lively, pugnacious inventiveness.
—— Nicholas Murray , Bibliophilic BloggerThe prose is breathtaking: witty, biblical, chatty and vigorous all at once. She defines the pursuit of happiness not as being content (which is "fleeting" and "a bit bovine"), but as the impulse to "swim upstream", the search for a meaningful life. This breathless, powerful book is that search.
—— Emily Strokes , Financial TimesWinterson is a bold author with a track record of writing imaginative transformation tales, and this is a work about the power of words, stories and books to give identity to a life that is in turns shocking, funny, warm and wise.
—— Tina Jackson , MetroEngaging memoir.
—— Daily TelegraphThere clear-eyed, drily witty, searingly moving memoir.
—— Katie Owen , TelegraphIt does all that committed fans might hope... This is far funnier than the novel that made Winterson’s name... Brilliant book.
—— Catherine Nixey , The TimesAn inspirational memoir written in beautiful exact prose that celebrates the wildness of the ordinary. Winterson’s understanding of who she is… is both appallingly funny and deeply moving. Essential reading for anyone with a snitch of an interest in writing
—— Rachel Joyce , The TimesWhy Be Happy When You Can Be Normal? burrowed deep and made me laugh and weep. This memoir has a great warmth and an intensity and honesty that is rare and the writing is exceptional
—— Jamie Byng , HeraldWinterson’s unconventional and winning memoir wrings humor from adversity as it describes her upbringing by a wildly deranged mother
—— New York TimesIt is in laying the truth bare in this unflinchingly honest and gripping memoir that Winterson really seems to find self-acceptance, love and even happiness
—— Yvonne Cassidy , The Gloss