Going Hungry: Writers on Desire, Self-Denial, and Overcoming Anorexia

Author:   Kate M. Taylor
Publisher:   Random House USA Inc
ISBN:  

9780307278340


Pages:   352
Publication Date:   09 September 2008
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained


Our Price $42.11 Quantity:  
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Going Hungry: Writers on Desire, Self-Denial, and Overcoming Anorexia


Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Kate M. Taylor
Publisher:   Random House USA Inc
Imprint:   Random House Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 13.40cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 20.20cm
Weight:   0.287kg
ISBN:  

9780307278340


ISBN 10:   0307278344
Pages:   352
Publication Date:   09 September 2008
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Inactive
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained

Table of Contents

Introduction Kate Taylor Hunger Striking Maura Kelly To Poison An Ideal Ilana Kurshan Daughters of the Diet Revolution Jennifer Egan On Thin Ice Francine du Plessix Gray Hungry Men John Nolan Black-and-White Thinking Latria Graham Education of the Poet Louise Glück Big Little Priscilla Becker The Ghost of Gordolfo Gelatino Rudy Ruiz Earthly Imperfections Lisa Halliday Little Fish in a Big Sea Sarah Haight How the Faeries Caught Me Francesca Lia Block The Voice Trisha Gura Finding Home Maya Browne Shape-shifting Amanda Fortini Earning Life Clara Elliot Modeling School Elizabeth Kadetsky Thirty Years Later, Still Watching the Scale Joyce Maynard Acknowledgments

Reviews

Praise for Going Hungry In revealing essays by men and women-young and old, thin and not thin, black, brown and white-this anthology lends remarkable texture to a subject that has been too often sensationalized and oversimplified. - The New York Times Taylor writes with grace and insight of her self-imposed malnourishment. - The New York Times Book Review Powerful. . . . Allows[s] the breadth and depth of anorexia to be revealed in the thorough, eloquent words of its sufferers. . . . [The essays are] beautiful pieces in and of themselves that help shed light on a powerful affliction. - San Francisco Chronicle [ Going Hungry 's] authors defy many of the stereotypes about eating disorders, and who suffers from them. - Newsweek Eighteen women writers-and one man-share memories of anorexia's tenacious grip in this eye-opening collection. - People Those struggling with an eating disorder are sure to find among these personal essays at least one that will help them better understand their own condition, and provide company and hope. - Publishers Weekly Going Hungry is a remarkable book. To read these powerful and articulate life stories of anorexia is to gain a kind of new understanding into the conflict, disconnection and seductiveness of this potentially lethal disease. The psychology of anorexia is difficult to comprehend but I felt at the end of reading this book that I had a much better, much more human grasp of what is like to live and struggle with the illness. The stories are deeply illuminating, in the fullest sense of the word. -Kay Redfield Jamison, author of An Unquiet Mind In Going Hungry, writers of different ethnicities offer thoughtful personal perspectives on eating disorders. Of particular interest is the theme that anorexia nervosa can be an expression (albeit a harmful one) of a positive drive to accomplish something noteworthy and that such aspirations can be redirect


Praise for Going Hungry<br> <br> In revealing essays by men and women-young and old, thin and not thin, black, brown and white-this anthology lends remarkable texture to a subject that has been too often sensationalized and oversimplified. - The New York Times <br> Taylor writes with grace and insight of her self-imposed malnourishment. - The New York Times Book Review<br> <br> Powerful. . . . Allows[s] the breadth and depth of anorexia to be revealed in the thorough, eloquent words of its sufferers. . . . [The essays are] beautiful pieces in and of themselves that help shed light on a powerful affliction. - San Francisco Chronicle <br> [ Going Hungry 's] authors defy many of the stereotypes about eating disorders, and who suffers from them. - Newsweek<br> <br> Eighteen women writers-and one man-share memories of anorexia's tenacious grip in this eye-opening collection. - People <br> Those struggling with an eating disorder are sure to find among these personal essays at least one that will help them better understand their own condition, and provide company and hope. - Publishers Weekly<br> <br> Going Hungry is a remarkable book. To read these powerful and articulate life stories of anorexia is to gain a kind of new understanding into the conflict, disconnection and seductiveness of this potentially lethal disease. The psychology of anorexia is difficult to comprehend but I felt at the end of reading this book that I had a much better, much more human grasp of what is like to live and struggle with the illness. The stories are deeply illuminating, in the fullest sense of the word. -Kay Redfield Jamison, author of An Unquiet Mind <br> In Going Hungry, writers of different ethnicities offer thoughtful personal perspectives on eating disorders. Of particular interest is the theme that anorexia nervosa can be an expression (albeit a harmful one) of a positive drive to accomplish something noteworthy and that such aspirations can be redirect


Praise for Going Hungry In revealing essays by men and women-young and old, thin and not thin, black, brown and white-this anthology lends remarkable texture to a subject that has been too often sensationalized and oversimplified. -The New York Times Taylor writes with grace and insight of her self-imposed malnourishment. -The New York Times Book Review Powerful. . . . Allows[s] the breadth and depth of anorexia to be revealed in the thorough, eloquent words of its sufferers. . . . [The essays are] beautiful pieces in and of themselves that help shed light on a powerful affliction. -San Francisco Chronicle [Going Hungry's] authors defy many of the stereotypes about eating disorders, and who suffers from them. -Newsweek Eighteen women writers-and one man-share memories of anorexia's tenacious grip in this eye-opening collection. -People Those struggling with an eating disorder are sure to find among these personal essays at least one that will help them better understand their own condition, and provide company and hope. -Publishers Weekly Going Hungry is a remarkable book. To read these powerful and articulate life stories of anorexia is to gain a kind of new understanding into the conflict, disconnection and seductiveness of this potentially lethal disease. The psychology of anorexia is difficult to comprehend but I felt at the end of reading this book that I had a much better, much more human grasp of what is like to live and struggle with the illness. The stories are deeply illuminating, in the fullest sense of the word. -Kay Redfield Jamison, author of An Unquiet Mind In Going Hungry, writers of different ethnicities offer thoughtful personal perspectives on eating disorders. Of particular interest is the theme that anorexia nervosa can be an expression (albeit a harmful one) of a positive drive to accomplish something noteworthy and that such aspirations can be redirected into meaningful, productive endeavors. These messages inspire hope and provide a powerful counterforce to stereotypes that associate eating disorders with superficiality and vanity. -Dr. David Herzog, Director of the Harris Center for Eating Disorders, Massachusetts General Hospital


Praise for Going Hungry<br> <br> In revealing essays by men and women-young and old, thin and not thin, black, brown and white-this anthology lends remarkable texture to a subject that has been too often sensationalized and oversimplified. - The New York Times <br> Taylor writes with grace and insight of her self-imposed malnourishment. - The New York Times Book Review<br> <br> Powerful. . . . Allows[s] the breadth and depth of anorexia to be revealed in the thorough, eloquent words of its sufferers. . . . [The essays are] beautiful pieces in and of themselves that help shed light on a powerful affliction. - San Francisco Chronicle <br> [ Going Hungry 's] authors defy many of the stereotypes about eating disorders, and who suffers from them. - Newsweek<br> <br> Eighteen women writers-and one man-share memories of anorexia's tenacious grip in this eye-opening collection. - People <br> Those struggling with an eating disorder are sure to find among these personal essays at least one that will help them better understand their own condition, and provide company and hope. - Publishers Weekly<br> <br> Going Hungry is a remarkable book. To read these powerful and articulate life stories of anorexia is to gain a kind of new understanding into the conflict, disconnection and seductiveness of this potentially lethal disease. The psychology of anorexia is difficult to comprehend but I felt at the end of reading this book that I had a much better, much more human grasp of what is like to live and struggle with the illness. The stories are deeply illuminating, in the fullest sense of the word. -Kay Redfield Jamison, author of An Unquiet Mind <br> In Going Hungry, writers ofdifferent ethnicities offer thoughtful personal perspectives on eating disorders. Of particular interest is the theme that anorexia nervosa can be an expression (albeit a harmful one) of a positive drive to accomplish something noteworthy and that such aspirations can be redirected into meaningful, productive endeavors. These messages inspire hope and provide a powerful counterforce to stereotypes that associate eating disorders with superficiality and vanity. -Dr. David Herzog, Director of the Harris Center for Eating Disorders, Massachusetts General Hospital


Author Information

KATE TAYLOR is a culture reporter at the New York Sun; her writing has also appeared in Slate and the New Yorker. She lives in New York.

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