Angry Fat Girls: 5 Women, 500 Pounds and a Year of Losing It...Again [精装] 0425232182

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A funny, painfully honest memoir about five women as they diet and eat, lose and gain, and struggle to find their individual definition of freedom along the way Like so many women, Frances Kuffel wondered: how could this happen again? She'd transformed her life by losing 188 pounds-but, like the vast majority of dieters, she transformed it again by gaining over half those pounds back. After all the struggle and hard work she somehow lost control, once again forced to carry nearly unbearable physical and psychological weight. But she also found new friends, in particular, four women in similar situations-and similar bad moods-whom she met online. Frances, Lindsay, Katie, Mimi, and Wendy dubbed themselves the Angry Fat Girlz and shared not just rage but embarrassment and fear, fragile hope, and a mutual obsession with shoes. They asked themselves-and each other-the difficult questions: Who am I inside all this weight? How much am I allowed to enjoy myself, and how much do I have to deny myself? What could I do if I was thin? In Angry Fat Girls, Frances Kuffel shares their story and struggle to find their best selves along the way.
专业书评
From Publishers Weekly Columnist, poet and short story writer Kuffel spent 42 years morbidly overweight before losing 188 pounds, which she chronicled in 2004's Passing for Thin: Losing Half My Weight and Finding My Self. In this follow-up, she recounts the story of gaining back half of that weight and beginning anew her struggle to find herself, this time with the help of an online "Angry Fat Girls" club, including four other women who have each learned the same disheartening lesson: "nobody who gets thin gets rid of their problems." Kuffel's narrative of rededication is a skilled blend of insight (the psychology of being overweight, the "literary paradigms of the chubby heroine") and emotion ("It is a lonely state, the fat woman and the food and her groaning, aching, widening body") that never flags in intimacy, honesty, or compassion. With keen humor and disarming skill, Kuffel introduces readers to the most private moments of the five women, whose addictive relationships with food make regular nourishment a constant nightmare of temptation. Though separated for most of the story, the members of the club eventually meet up in New York City for a conclusion that should prove unforgettable for anyone who has struggled with self esteem or addiction issues. Copyright Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Back Cover PRAISE FOR Angry Fat Girls A wake-up call to anyone who believes that weight management is a quick and easy feat.It's not.And Kuffel's greatest gift is a blast of hopeful reality for any brave reader ready to take herself on and honest face her own food and weight demons. - Pamela Peeke, MD, MPH, FACP, Chief Medical Correspondent for Discovery Health Channel, and author of Fight Fat After Forty. Angry Fat Girls is about women, weight loss, body image, and what we did and did not learn growing up fat, and why losing weight -- and keeping it off -- is so hard.This is not Valerie Bertinelli in a bikini, promising that if she can do it, you can; this is about 'serial relapsers' and why my cat knows how to eat ice cream off a spook.This book is honest, true, and occasionally very funny. - Cheryl Peck, author of Fat Girls and Lawn Chairs Passing for Thin Inspiring...brazenly intimate...Offers a powerful rebuff to anyone who believes that people can't change. - USA Today [Kuffel's] writing is as clear and sharp as broken glass...A glorious read. - The New York Times A smart, sassy, offbeat, funny-sad account of what the author discovered about herself when she went from being a very fat woman to a normal-sized one. - Kirkus Reviews (starred review) (added by author)
媒体推荐
Columnist, poet and short story writer Kuffel spent 42 years morbidly overweight before losing 188 pounds, which she chronicled in 2004's Passing for Thin: Losing Half My Weight and Finding My Self.In this follow-up, she recounts the story of gaining back half of that weight and beginning anew her struggle to find herself, this time with the help of an online Angry Far Girls club, including four other women who have each learned the same disheartening lesson: nobody who gets thin gets rid of their problems.Kuffel's narrative of rededication is a skilled blend of insight (the psychology of being overweight, the literary paradigms of the chubby heroine) and emotion (It is a lonely state, the fat woman and the food and her groaning, aching widening body) that never flags in intimacy, honesty of compassion.With Keen humor and disarming skill, Kuffel introduces readers to the most private moments of the five women, whose addictive relationships with food make regular nourishment a constant nightmare of temptation.Though separated for most of the story, the members of the club eventually meet up in New York City for a conclusion that should prove unforgettable for anyone who has struggled with self esteem or addiction issues.--Publishers Weekly 2/15/2010 (added by author)
作者简介
Frances Kuffel is the author of Passing for Thin: Losing Half My Weight and Finding Myself. She has written for Self and Psychology Today. Her website is: franceskuffel.net.
出版社Berkley Hardcover
作者Frances Kuffel