Misfit: There's no such thing as normal

Misfit: There's no such thing as normal

Taschenbuch
1.01

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Beschreibung

'Hilarious and a timely look at women and our bodies' Juno Dawson

'Honest, rebellious and completely refreshing' Fearne Cotton

Charli Howard grew up thinking that she wasn't good enough. She wasn't pretty enough. She wasn't rich enough. She wasn't thin enough. Fitting in wasn't exactly easy.

Looking at the smiling girls in magazines, she came to the obvious conclusion: to be accepted, she has to be 'perfect'. She had to be a model.

But what magazines don't tell you is that you can't Photoshop your problems away (and they can Photoshop a lot).

So, when you're the thinnest you've ever been, your agency fires you, and you're battling anxiety and an eating disorder to boot, how do you get through it?

You get angry, go viral and discover that, after all that, you're not alone. At least that's what Charli did.
Haupt-Genre
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Sub-Genre
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Format
Taschenbuch
Seitenzahl
272
Preis
7.99 €

Beiträge

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Your decisions may not please certain people at the time, but you're not put on this planet to please other people. Unless you're hurting someone, why shouldn't you go out and achieve your dreams? Meh. Not a fan. I didn't like Charli's voice and I think she downplayed or right out ignored mental health issues. It was also SO repetitive! Of course, it was a lot about her eating disorder, but she didn't really talk about her recovery. I therefore think that the book isn't even remotely suitable for people with eating disorder. I think it could be quite triggering. Thinking about it, I changed my rating from two stars to one star. I don't think there was a single aspect I enjoyed. Adding to that, I removed it from my feminism shelf.

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