Author:Andrew Horne,Carol Pearson
Overcome your symptoms and live a better life.
All the information you need to help you manage endometriosis.
One in ten women suffers with endometriosis. So why is there no definitive cure and why does it take an average of 8 years to diagnose? Endometriosis experts Professor Andrew Horne and Carol Pearson explain what Endometriosis is and provide vital information for women who suffer from the disease. Find out:
- How to get a diagnosis
- What treatment options and care are available to you
- How to overcome your symptoms and live a better life
- The lifestyle changes you can make that could improve your condition
With the voices of countless women at different stages of their journey and advice from a range of specialist healthcare practitioners, Endometriosis provides the information and support to empower anyone with the condition and those close to them.
A quiet and deeply affecting meditation on friendship and family secrets, Fathers glitters with love and uncertainty. Miller writes beautifully about mystery, memory, and how we choose our paths through life, how we decide who we are.
—— Helen MacdonaldFathers is something much more surprising than a literary life: both a touching celebration of a parent, and the gentle unraveling of a family secret.
—— Andrew Holgate , Sunday TimesI can’t remember when I have more enjoyed a memoir, in the reading and in the conversations in my head afterwards with its author. Fathers is a profoundly rich and rewarding experience and will be gobbled up by readers and writers.
—— Cathy Rentzenbrink , The TimesFathers… is not a misery memoir. Far from it. It is… a kind of detective story
—— Rachel Cooke , ObserverThis book began as an extension of the speech Sam made at his father’s funeral – and as a way to cope with his grief. It has become something else in the process: an exploration of love, sex, genetic disposition and what makes us who we are… There has been some remarkable dad lit over the last year… and Sam Miller’s is a fascinating addition to the genre… There may be some who would have preferred the story to stay in-house. And as Sam is quick to acknowledge, others would tell it differently. But his, the son’s version, is sunny: generous in spirit, exculpatory in tone, grateful rather than self-pitying.
—— Blake Morrison , GuardianThis engaging book is not only a valuable portrait of the intensely private Karl Miller, but also a poignant account of the life of his beloved friend.
—— William Palmer , Literary ReviewA very moving portrait of a startlingly charismatic figure.
—— Gaby Wood , Daily TelegraphIt takes a sharp look at family life, at the mores of the 1960s and 1970s, at Karl Miller’s history and complex personality, and at friendship, death, revelation and affirmation. It is subtle and reflective. It is… of a luminous idiosyncrasy… Fathers, elegant, illuminating and deeply personal, is a fitting tribute to a distinctive man. It affords new insights into someone especially hard to pin down.
—— Patricia Craig , The Irish TimesTactfully composed and sensitively written, Fathers leaves an abiding impression of decent people doing their best in difficult circumstances.
—— D.J. Taylor , SpectatorSam Miller's memoir Fathers is ostensibly about a family secret. But its true subject is a family silence… The book is about ways to be a father, but also, more generally, about ways to be a man, from the 1950s to now. Should you be an intellectual, and write letters full of irony and wit? How camp are you allowed to be, or how fearful of homoeroticism? Must you be good at manual labour? Where do you stand in relation to class or entitlement? Should you be more interested in football than you are?
—— Gaby Wood , Irish IndependentSam has written a moving memoir that reveals a life well lived.
—— Choice MagazineHere, warts and all, is the story of Miller paterfamilias and grandfather Karl, who died in 2014, researched by Sam with care and attention… A certain sly, piquant humour runs like a seam through the narrative and there is much to ponder on in the matter of relationships, family and otherwise.
—— Paddy Kehoe , RTE OnlineSam discovered when he was a teenager, he is not, in fact, Karl Miller’s son, but the product of an on-again-off-again affair his mother, Jane, had with a family friend, Tony White… Fathers is Miller’s heartfelt attempt to come to terms with his complicated family, to consider the meaning of fatherhood and to grasp at the ghost of Tony White… His quest for a deeper understanding of his paternity is punctuated by his accounts of the months and weeks before his father’s death, a time to which he returns in his mind, painting a loving portrait of father and son. Something is missing, and yet nothing is missing.
—— Erica Wagner , New StatesmanA powerful memoir.
—— Simon Shaw , Mail on SundayAny reader completely unfamiliar with the workings of the immune system is likely to be dumbstruck with admiration for its intricacy ... Davis's book is full of enlivening little anecdotes
—— Literary Review[The Beautiful Cure] offers fresh perspectives on future research strategies
—— Audrey R. Glynn , ScienceSuperb
—— Matt Chilton, **Books of the Year** , Daily TelegraphWe all think we know how the immune system works, roughly. This exciting and elegant book on new discoveries shows how wrong we were
—— 50 Best Books of 2018 , Daily TelegraphAn excellent book on our immune system. His lucid prose lets the science speak for itself, and it beautifully illuminates one of the most exciting frontiers of modern medicine
—— Science FocusEngaging and lucid... [There is] a compelling human story of the researchers who made the discoveries. The author has gone to great lengths to interview the key players in the story
—— Andrew Taylor-Robinson , The Biologist