Summary:
“Anorexia was my first love,” de Rossi
declares in her memoir of her early Hollywood career and the
eating disorders that went along with it. Her unflinching
self-portrait depicts a cripplingly self-conscious young
Australian in LA overwhelmed by the pressure to be thin.
Never comfortable in her own skin, a by-product of her status
as a closeted lesbian, de Rossi was sure if she ever gained
weight (or came out as being gay), the shooting star
she’d been cultivating would turn to lead. Weight loss
was the key that allowed de Rossi to feel powerful and in
control, until dieting became a sickness that nearly killed
her and devastated her family. De Rossi’s story and
words are not revolutionary, but they are frank, brave, and
revelatory of the unhealthy trends that stardom can generate.
Although more development of de Rossi’s happy ending
(her eventual complete recovery, self-acceptance, coming-out,
and marriage to Ellen DeGeneres) would be welcome, the book
succeeds as it’s intended: a journal of her sickness
and a provocatively sad love affair with dieting. --Annie
Bostrom “Breathtakingly honest, brutal and
beautiful.” —Jonathan Safran Foer “De Rossi tells her story with genuine insight and
unflinching honesty. You will cheer her on.”
—Jeannette Walls “Possibly the best book on the subject ever written.
De Rossi is the real deal, a fine writer with a sharp mind
and substance. This rich, layered book of remarkable courage,
power, and significance will serve as life-changing
inspiration for many.” —Augusten Burroughs
Tags: [CNTY:USA, ZDC:RWZJ, ZDC:YWSJ]
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