”I love this book! It puts loving (and knowing) your body into words and pictures — you’ll find out yours isn’t so different after all. Body Drama has the answers you want to the questions you don’t know how to ask. Fun and frank, like talking to a good friend who knows absolutely everything and is willing to dish.”
Kim Gandy, President of the National Organization for Women (NOW)
“This honest, funny, and lucidly-written book is the perfect antidote to a culture constantly teaching young women to angst about their bodies. This liberating call speaks directly to the worries and concerns that most of us have, offering a perspective and solutions that will help girls and young women figure out what REALLY matters to them. And maybe the world will be that much saner as a result.”
Judy Norsigian, Executive Director of Our Bodies Ourselves and co-author of “Our Bodies, Ourselves”
“Body Drama…should be on the shelf of every family, school, and doctor in America.”
Nancy Brown, PhD, professor of Adolescent Sexuality at Stanford University, senior research associate at the Palo Alto Medical Foundation (PAMF) Research Institute.
“This generation of young girls has been raised in an especially casual, sexualized world and anything short of down and dirty would get tossed in the trash. Redd delivers a lot of great information for girls about what it’s like to live in their female bodies, and how to inhabit it with pride and care. When I first got Body Drama I called my sister. She’s a school nurse and all-around girl power, rock-star and I wanted her to know about it. We both agreed it’s a must-have for school health offices.”
— Alli Decker for Ypulse.com, the source for daily news and commentary on Generation Y for media and marketing professionals
“Today’s girls need body role models. They need real images…they need reality checks and reassurance. They need this book. By proudly presenting what real women actually look like and what women’s bodies naturally go through, Body Drama takes a major stride toward eradicating the dislike and embarrassment that women have learned to feel about their bodies. Groundbreaking!”
from the foreword by Dr. Angela Diaz, director of the Mount Sinai Adolescent Health Center, which is the largest health center for adolescents in America


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