logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code
Thin Is the New Happy - Valerie Frankel
Thin Is the New Happy
by: (author)
2.56 45
“Val Frankel is a woman of amazing insight. . . . Read this, weep, and heal.”—Stacy London, cohost of What Not to WearYou’ve heard the phrase “the mirror is not your friend.” For Valerie Frankel, the mirror was so much more than “not a friend.” It was the mean girl who stole her lunch money,... show more
“Val Frankel is a woman of amazing insight. . . . Read this, weep, and heal.”—Stacy London, cohost of What Not to WearYou’ve heard the phrase “the mirror is not your friend.” For Valerie Frankel, the mirror was so much more than “not a friend.” It was the mean girl who stole her lunch money, bitch-slapped her in the ladies’ room, and cut the hair off her Barbie. If you’re like 99.9 percent of women, the war you wage with yourself over your body image begins at the ripe age of eight, and the skirmishes are fought for the next eight decades. Sometimes you don’t even know when you’ve won. (How many of us have taken out a photo from high school and thought, “Hey! I looked great—why didn’t I know it?”) This book is for anyone who has spent most of her life on—or thinking about being on—a diet. It’s for anyone who ever wished for candlelight in dressing rooms. It’s for anyone who has ever owned a pair of “fat pants.” In short, this book is for anyone who ever felt good or bad about themselves based on how they look. Valerie Frankel, like most women, has spent most of her conscious life on a diet, thinking about a diet, ignoring a diet, or failing on a diet. At age eleven, her mother put Val on her first weight-loss program. As a teen, she was enrolled in Weight Watchers (for which she invented creative ditching methods). As a young woman, her world felt right only when she was able to zip a certain pair of jeans. Not wanting to pass this legacy on to her own daughters, Valerie set out to cleanse herself of her obsession. Thin Is the New Happy is the true story of one woman’s quest to exorcise her bad body-image demons, to uncover the truths behind what put them there, and to learn how to truly love herself. It’s a poignant, hilarious, and all-out honest account of one woman’s struggle with body image—the filter through which she’s always seen the world—and the way she ultimately overcame it.
show less
Format: hardcover
ISBN: 9780312373924 (0312373929)
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Pages no: 256
Edition language: English
Bookstores:
Community Reviews
I Like Books
I Like Books rated it
1.0 Thin Is the New Happy
Much to my dismay, this memoir fell flat for me. There was so much potential and it was sad to see the few promising of the aspects of the book ignored or written off. Maybe I had the wrong impression of this book. I thought this book was about a weight-loss journey for someone who has struggled wit...
kishawhite
kishawhite rated it
3.0 Thin Is the New Happy
I needed a pep talk. I was feeling down about my stomach. Depending on the chair, my belly would touch my thighs when I sat down. I had gained some weight over my vacation. I need to go up a size in pants. I was talking a good game about loving my body as is and getting off the diet merry-go-round, ...
Sharon E. Cathcart
Sharon E. Cathcart rated it
1.0 Thin Is the New Happy
Thin is the New Happy by Val Frankel, purports to be a book on how the author conquered her body image issues.She talks about being a chubby kid whose mother enrolled her in Weight Watchers at the age of 11 and had her doing fad diets at the age of *8.* She talks about yo-yo dieting and how she hate...
Kaethe
Kaethe rated it
A very readable companion of sorts to Gina Kolata's Rethinking Thin: The New Science of Weight Loss--and the Myths and Realities of Dieting. Frankel's style is pure Mademoiselle article, and each chapter stands alone. It's breezy and confessional and I skipped a bit. Too much of the women's mag emph...
Other editions (16)
Books by Valerie Frankel
On shelves
Share this Book
Need help?