Archive for “Book Reviews” Category
Check it out, y’all! I have a two page spread in this week’s PEOPLE magazine! Yay! Here is the first page and here is the second page of the article!
ALL COLORS, SHAPES, & SIZES
An ex-beauty queen wrote ‘Body Drama’ to help liberate young women from society’s obsession with perfection
By CECELIA GOODNOW
P-I REPORTER
Here’s how the struggle over girls’ self image is shaping up.
On one side: ubiquitous media images of pouty supermodels whose digitally enhanced perfection promotes shame, longing and cosmetic surgery among everyday girls battling zits and thunder thighs.
On the other side: the Dove “campaign for real beauty,” the first bans against ultrathin catwalk models and our mothers’ assurance that we’re beautiful just the way we are.
Guess which side is winning.
The scales may tip a bit closer toward sanity with Thursday’s release of “Body Drama” (Penguin, $20), a sassy, photographic body manual being hailed as “a book of liberation” and “the modern girl’s ‘Our Bodies, Ourselves.’ ”
Filled with practical, big-sisterly advice pitched to the adolescent ear, it celebrates the lumps, bumps, sags and smells that make us human while also sharing tips on fake tanning, hair removal, PMS and other health and beauty issues.
It doesn’t just tell, it shows — through frank, unretouched photos of exuberant young women of all sizes, shapes and colors. Women who flaunt stretch marks, dimpled behinds, keloid scars from piercings, uneven breasts and rough elbows as if to say, “Yeah, this is how I am — so what?”
Its most radical feature is the “vulva spread,” a photographic array of two dozen vulvas of diverse colors and grooming persuasions — a display meant to counteract the trend toward “designer vaginas” by showing the range of normal.
The brains behind this unusual book is a bubbly ex-beauty queen with the soul of a feminist and a girlie demeanor that masks focused determination.
“I wanted a body book with boobs and vaginas and cellulite and birthmarks and all the things that get erased away,” said Nancy Amanda Redd, 26, who laughs freely and often while speaking at warp speed.
Defying stereotypes, Redd won the Miss Virginia 2003 title two weeks after graduating from Harvard as a women’s studies major. She went on to win the swimsuit competition in the 2004 Miss America pageant.
A former mentor and advice columnist for Teen Voices magazine, Redd was still an undergrad when she won $250,000 on “Who Wants To Be a Millionaire.” She gave part of her prize to her church and her local 4-H.
“Body Drama” has won kudos from such heavy hitters as Kim Gandy, president of the National Organization for Women; Eve Ensler, author of “The Vagina Monologues;” and Nancy Brown, a Stanford University professor of adolescent sexuality.
The book was vetted by the director of the Mount Sinai Adolescent Health Center in New York, the nation’s largest teen clinic.
In Seattle, Dr. Leslie Walker, chief of adolescent medicine at Children’s Hospital & Regional Medical Center, took “Body Drama” home and gave it a look.
Her verdict: “I think the presentation is excellent. I haven’t seen any book like this. My teenage daughter looked at it and said, ‘Wow! They have everybody in here! All shapes, all colors.’ ”
Walker plans to buy a copy for the clinic.
Black, curvy and 5-foot-4, Redd often assures teens she has body issues, too, including weight that has fluctuated from 167 to 115 to her current 140.
“What I realize now,” she says, “is I was never any happier when I was a size 2.”
On the eve of “Body Drama’s” release, Redd talked by phone from Los Angeles about her campaign to show young women how beautiful normal can be.
P-I: Why do you think young women need a book like this?
Redd: There’s so much media out there, but there’s no photographic help for normalcy. All these women have is porn, and they have a lot of it.
So I really wanted to make this happen because we’ve got to get a reality check.
What reactions did you get when you proposed a photo display of vulvas?
When I came up with the idea, I was really nervous, because I knew it was kind of weird to have a photographic body book. I mean, my mom totally was like, “You’re never going to get this made.” She was very supportive and let me follow this dream as long as I was going to, but she said, “You know, this is totally porn.”
So you thought of this as a photo book rather than an advice book.
Oh, absolutely! Much more than an advice book, because it was useless without the pictures. Because … we live in such a visual society that the visual is the message now. And that’s really scary, because we alter the visual so much now. I want people to be able to see the glory in just what normalcy looks like.
Where did you get the models for the photos?
I wanted real women, so I posted on Craigslist for young women who wanted to be part of a really important project to help other young women feel better about their bodies.
And I said, “I don’t want to see your body, I just want a face pic — just because I wanted diversity. I just want to know why you want to be part of this project, right?”
I was terrified that I wouldn’t get any responses. (But) I got hundreds of women who were like, “Totally, that’s awesome!” And, “I’d love to — I’m a music teacher. I’m an artist. I’m a student. I’m a musician. I’m a lawyer. I’m a PE teacher.” All sorts of wonderful people. I was shocked. I was totally shocked.
And then I even asked for specifics. “Do you have braces? Do you have cellulite? Do you have a birthmark? Do you have a keloid? Do you have bad liposuction?” And everything came through.
Did they know from the start how graphic the photos would be? Did you put that in the ad?
Yeah! Oh, I had to. I couldn’t have women show up in my studio and like — hello!
You took the photographs yourself?
Oh, no. Goodness, no. The photographer (Kelly Kline) is awesome. I got her on Craigslist. She was a sports photographer and she was up and coming.
She was so helpful, especially for the vulva shootings. She was a trouper. It was such fate. We both grew up in southern Virginia. We both grew up not being able to talk about our bodies. And she got it.
And so the cool thing about this project is we were just this collaborative of women who wanted to make a difference — to do something fun and positive.
Describe women’s reactions to the vulva photos. My first thought was that most of my male co-workers have probably seen more of these than I have.
This is a body book and not a sex book, but one of the interesting things that I’ve found from showing my male friends and colleagues (is) they haven’t seen it either. Because there’s so much shame around the vulva.
I’ve found it fascinating the number of guys who are just like, “I’ve never seen anything like that.” I’m just like, “Well, you obviously aren’t looking, because I didn’t create these. These don’t come from another planet.”
It’s because their minds are so warped about what women are supposed to look like. I think they’ve got their eyes closed or something.
But I haven’t had a lot of women — unless it’s a reporter — specifically point (those photos) out. I think it’s still the concept of shame, but they know they’re not supposed to be ashamed, so they’re not even going to talk about it.
The politics of female genitalia seems to be high on the radar lately, what with “The Vagina Monologues,” the “vajayjay” thing and the sudden popularity of surgically altered labia, or “designer vaginas.” What’s going on with this body part that used to be one’s own?
The problem isn’t public discussion, it’s ignorant public discussion. OK, like this whole labiaplasty thing is completely insane, I mean completely insane! So much misinformation is being spread around.
I’m stoked that Oprah talked about her vajayjay. We need talk, but we need more than talk. We need photos. You can talk about having a healthy body image, but unless you show them what normal is and what healthy is, so they don’t have to look elsewhere for validation, you’re losing the battle.
I feel truly, from my discussions with teens, that a lot — a lot — of premature sexual activity comes from not understanding or respecting your body and looking for acceptance elsewhere. I think that it’s totally an overlooked issue in society.
Does public discussion of private body parts lessen shame or does it just further the sexualization of women?
There’s good elements and bad elements. It’s great that Tyra (Banks) is talking about how you don’t need to douche. That’s awesome — you go, girl, thank you. She quoted her mother that you don’t need to douche because your vagina’s a self-cleaning oven. Then Oprah talked about her vajayjay. That’s great.
Then you have the whole, like, “Ninety percent of guys prefer women without pubic hair.” I’ve seen so many articles about the whole new trend, like, completely bare, and it’s just like you have to do it (remove hair) every week or else you’re weird. It’s just really sad.
I didn’t realize that had become the norm.
Oh, it is! Anyone under the age of 30, I’m telling you, like, (having) pubic hair is like being some kind of fur baby. OK, let me stipulate — if you are part of the culture that believes in pop culture. Like, clearly, there are lots of really strong people who choose their own pube-do.
But for these teen girls, it’s completely become this phenomenon. And it’s pushed, I’m sure, by the cosmetic equipment companies. I mean, waxing’s big business.
I think that you get to make choices and you get to experiment, and that’s human. But I don’t think you should do these things because you feel like you have to.
Given the Dove “real women” ad campaign and the backlash against ultra-thin models, do you have hope that the tide is turning?
It has no place to go but to turn. We’ve gotten pretty much to the limit. They’re running out of things to enhance.
How much difference do you think you can make against the pop-culture juggernaut?
Huge. Because I think a tremendous amount of consumption has to do with shame — not fitting in, not feeling good, worrying, trying to go along with the status quo.
Again, I’m not saying that girls shouldn’t want to wear cute outfits and try different makeup and hair — that’s one of my favorite things in the world to do. I’m saying they should go about it with a healthy mindset.
THE RIGHT FIT
Dr. Leslie Walker sees it every day — teens who worry about whether they’re normal and attractive, whether they fit in.
And it’s not just girls.
“Boys have so many questions about size — a lot of sexual-development questions,” said Walker, chief of adolescent medicine at Children’s Hospital & Regional Medical Center in Seattle. She said boys need their own version of “Body Drama,” a new photographic body-advice book for young women.
A Web site would be even better, Walker said, because books can be a hard sell for adolescent boys.
As it is, most teens — her 15-year-old daughter included — turn first to friends or the Internet for health information.
“You just hope they can discriminate between safe information and unsafe information,” Walker said.
Despite the power of the beauty establishment, Walker said she’s optimistic that books like “Body Drama” can help young women achieve a healthier self image when coupled with other efforts such as restrictions on super-thin fashion models.
“The media is hugely important to these kids,” Walker said. “For teens, especially young teens, their main purpose is to see, ‘Do I fit in?’ ”
– Cecelia Goodnow
The article is located here on the Seattle P-I’s website!
OK, How cool is it that the Richmond Times-Dispatch did their own test study with six women to see what they thought of Body Drama? WAY cool, to me! I am so appreciative of the fact that Penelope took the time to get these opinions, and I absolutely loved reading about the women’s different reactions to the book, and seeing them opening up about their own body dramas was very satisfying. It’s so great to get a dialogue started!
The photographer who airbrushed out the one woman’s facial moles without her consent, as though they were facial flaws and not unique blessings, is SO uncool it’s not even funny! And the Korean woman’s girlhood experiences of binding her breasts because large breasts represented a lack of intelligence in Korea reminds me of the the women in Cameroon that I talk about on page 89 of Body Drama and right here on my blog, who sadly and desperately iron their breasts (ouch!) in an attempt to keep them from growing, because breasts indicate that a woman is ready to be forever plucked from school and married off, regardless of her age. And to think that we Americans tend to stress out over flat chests!
I really love and completely connect with the mom who didn’t understand the need for the photographs in Body Drama, but whose 20-year-old daughter was really into the book - sounds SO similar to my experience with my mom! My mom loves Body Drama now, but as you may know, she wasn’t always a fan of me writing this book. In fact, she thought it was going to be porn at first, which totally hurt my feelings, because I always try to please my mom in everything I do. However, she is the best proofreader in the world, and I insisted that she be the first to proof my earliest drafts. Being my awesome and loyal mom, she couldn’t say no to helping out her daughter in need, no matter how sticky the subject, so she read many, many, MANY versions of Body Drama.
And you know what? Dozens of great conversations were started because of her reading Body Drama and giving me her feedback, and not just on typos, either. We started talking about REAL issues that matter, and we’ve become SO much closer and we talk about SO much more stuff now! She actually laughed out loud at the New York Mag article, and after reading it she immediately called her older sister, and they giggled some more together! Yes, this is the same woman who originally thought my book was going to be labeled porn. Progress is possible, people!
Penelope’s article has inspired me to do a Q&A with my mom (and maybe her sister, if she’ll do it!), both women who grew up in the 1940s and 1950s (I was a very late-in-life surprise baby for my mom, the “flu” that was “caught” on vacation). So check back later for those Q&As, and feel free to email me with your own personal body dramas and your thoughts on Body Drama. Here’s the Richmond Times-Dispatch’s article!
Every body has an issue, what’s yours?
This blunt, illustrated book covers and explores women’s physical problems, reality
By PENELOPE M. CARRINGTON
If you’re female, you’ve probably experienced body drama, be it odor from your nether regions, a mustache, cellulite or breasts that no longer resist gravity.
Now teen girls and women can read about these issues - and more - in-depth in “Body Drama: Real Girls, Real Bodies, Real Issues, Real Answers” (Gotham Books, $20) by Miss Virginia 2003 Nancy Amanda Redd.
We snagged advance copies of the Martinsville native’s book and gave them to six area women. They are mothers, wives and significant others. They teach, run businesses, stay at home with their kids, work in retail or as massage therapists. Here’s what they had to say about the book and their own body dramas:
Name: Emily DeCarlo
Background: Poet and author. She’s been in education for 25 years, 13 of which have been spent teaching at James River High School.
A jaw-dropper: “I didn’t know [the book] was like this. . . . I was thinking, ‘She should’ve put this in a brown paper bag.’ . . . But my daughter was like, ‘This is wonderful. . . . I have questions about these things.’ . . . If my daughter was a teenager, I wouldn’t show her the book, but she’s 20. . . . The pictures were too much, too blunt and it was too much for me.”
Back then: “When I was a teenager and I had questions, I ordered a book. It answered my questions, but it had no pictures. If my mother would’ve given me a book with [women’s] body parts showing, that would’ve been strange to me. I would’ve been like, ‘Why would she do that?’”
Focused inward: “My perspective [on body image] is more spiritual, and it’s been like that since I was little. A person can be beautiful without going to drastic measures. I like having different clothes and hairstyles, . . . that’s the poetic part of me . . . with that comes my reflection on the inner person; a person who will do some good for the world. If I had money, it wouldn’t be used to change the shape of my nose or the shape of my lips. It would maybe build a shelter for women or children who have been abused.”
Name: Meg Phillips, 30
Background: Stay-at-home mom. Daughter is 4; Pregnant with baby No. 2.
The book: “There are a lot of things in here that may be easier to bring up [with teens] . . . and talk about rather than not talking about them at all. There were even things . . . I experienced from having a baby that I didn’t know or think about. It’s certainly something I would’ve liked to have had 10 years ago.”
On using real women as models: “Sometimes if you don’t have a picture . . . [the topic] doesn’t seem real. It’s like it’s fine to talk about, but it doesn’t really happen to everybody.”
Speaking of everybody . . . Phillips said she was at the gym last week when photos of actress Jennifer Love Hewitt appeared on TV. The rear-view photos showed a bikini-clad Hewitt with cellulite. “It’s funny, because that’s what most people have.”
On pregnancy and body image: “Most women don’t leave the hospital wearing the clothes they did before they were pregnant. . . . After I had a baby, I was like, ‘The baby weighed 7 pounds, what happened to the other 25?’ . . . After I had my first child, I never felt so body-conscious. When you hear so many people saying, ‘Oh my god, you look so good. I can’t believe you had a baby,’ while you’re out with your friends - and they’re not saying it to you - you think: ‘Oh my god! Do I not look good? Are my thighs too fat?’”
Taboo talk: “Some of the things [Redd] talked about are very true, but go unspoken, even among very close girlfriends.”
Name: Megan Buckler, 22
Background: Youngest of six. Works at a women’s clothing store.
Thoughts on the book: “I love the book. It just had so many interesting little tidbits: I really like the thing about moles . . . because I do have moles. I had heard it before, but seeing it written down was really helpful. . . . This is all those things you’d sit down at your computer and Google.”
Whom she asked about female things: The sister closest to her, who is three years older, or her sisters-in-law. Why not mom? “I don’t know if it’s because she was uncomfortable about it or it was me . . . but we can talk about anything else.”
Back-then body drama: Her facial moles. “I remember for my senior-year picture, the photographer erased my moles [without permission] . . . and I thought that was kind of like erasing a part of who I am. . . . It was kind of like saying there was something wrong with me, so he took care of it.”
If only . . . “If I would’ve had this book [five years ago], it probably would’ve made me feel much more comfortable and confident with myself. It proves you’re not crazy, and you’re not a freak. It’s just comforting to see other people with [the same issues]. It’s life. . . . And it’s refreshing to be open and honest.”
Name: Yonnette Poindexter, 39
Background: Hair stylist and owner of Beyond Beauty Spa & Salon on East Grace Street. Mother of five, including girls ages 15 and 22.
The book: “I thought it was interesting [Redd] didn’t have all skinny women [featured]. It was women of all sizes, which was nice, because everybody is not skinny.”
What she learned: “I never knew women had inverted nipples. I didn’t know people got acne on their back or their [behinds] . . . The book was very informative to the point you wanted to read more and more.”
Whom did she talk to as a teen about . . . you know? “When I grew up, talking about sex, babies and diseases - it was taboo. Even when I got my period, they just gave me the thing and said, ‘Just change it when you think it needs to be changed.’ When I asked why I was bleeding, I never got an answer.”
Spreading the word: “I would show this to my clients, because there are things in here [women] don’t know, and we need to know. If there wasn’t such controversy about telling teens [such things], I wouldn’t mind showing it to a bunch of teenagers. . . . I don’t think [Redd] left anything out about what a woman needs to know or what we go through physically or mentally.”
Name: Raechel Cutlip, 22
Background: Certified massage therapist at Beyond Beauty Spa & Salon. Her son will turn 1 this month.
Thoughts on the book: “I like these kinds of books - the descriptions . . . and the fact that they had stuff I could relate to.”
Questions as a teen: “My mom, she talked to me about some stuff - but [only] when it happened. I didn’t get the sex talk.”
Body parts she’s self-conscious about: “My breasts. I won’t go into detail, but it was in the book.”
Why women feel so pressured: “It’s the media and the [message] that all girls have got to be skinny and they have to have perfect breasts.”
Looking good is harder: “Before I was pregnant, I did exercise, but I didn’t do it seriously. Now I do these DVD things - Billy Blanks’ Taebo . . . because when you do, you feel energized. But you still look the same for a little while until you start to lose weight. . . . I’m getting back in shape, but you don’t feel cute. You’re aching and sagging, and you just feel like a blob.”
Name: Chinsuk Henshaw, 47
Background: Business owner. Mother of five, including a 15-year-old daughter. Grew up in Uijungbu-City, South Korea, and moved to the U.S. at age 20.
Something new: “That was the first time ever I’ve read something so real. . . . This book is very direct and very clear. . . . It seems they didn’t want to [sugarcoat] any of it, but some of us . . . want it with the sugar.”
Growing up in Korea: “We were just taught that you don’t get involved with anyone. . . . You really had to be quite daring to try anything. Now we are all modernized and the culture is changing in Korea, so it’s quite the opposite.”
Bigger wasn’t always better: “In Korea, we [used to] compress our bosom. And just like the blond jokes here, in Korea . . . someone with big breasts had no brains. Now women want to have plastic surgery to make [their breasts] bigger.”
Nursing difference: “We had very modest dress . . . but it was a natural thing for you to nurse your child anywhere. . . . When you come over here, you can have a nude picture anywhere, but you don’t [nurse] in front of anyone else.”
Milestone body drama: “My parents said, ‘You feel young in your heart,’ . . . but with your body and how it’s turning out, you know you’re different. . . . “At 30, . . . the major change was the pattern of my period, which was heavier, and I got tired more easily. . . . At 40, I really didn’t mind the white hair. . . . But the last few years, my body is really reshaping.”
The article is located here on the Times-Dispatch’s website!
Under Wraps
Former Miss Virginia pens practical guide to women’s bodies
By PENELOPE M. CARRINGTON
When pitching your dream book idea to friends, the last thing you want to hear is: “Ewww!”
Many, however, said just that to Nancy Amanda Redd about her plan to write a reassuring, practical guide to women’s bodies. It didn’t matter that she wanted her book to also be funny, honest and medically accurate. No one, friends and publishers said, would want to see real women’s bodies, let alone read about what goes on with them.
Lopsided breasts, back acne, dandruff, stretch marks, yeast infections and seemingly mysterious body bumps fell into the TMI — Too Much Information — category. And, according to the Martinsville native’s critics, those issues weren’t the stuff of one’s literary aspirations.
The former Miss Virginia 2003 and a Top 10 Miss America finalist didn’t listen. From her own experience struggling with body issues and a lack of information, the 26-year-old said she knew there was a need for such a book. Eventually, she convinced a publisher, and “Body Drama: Real Girls, Real Bodies, Real Issues, Real Answers” (Gotham Books, $20) was born.
The 272-page book, which hits bookstores Dec. 27, includes chapters on hair, mouth, shape, skin, breasts and down there. Yes, there.
Whether the issue involves something at a body’s top or bottom, Redd embraces traditionally embarrassing or uncomfortable questions. Teens are her target audience, but women of all ages as well as teen boys can benefit from her ultimate goal: to show the many faces of normal.
The 2003 Harvard grad and women’s studies major recently spoke from her Los Angeles home about society’s lack of tolerance for normal. Redd also explained why the book’s two-page vagina layout was a deal-breaker when considering publishers.
Q. Why did you feel compelled to write this book?
A. I remember how awful it was when I didn’t understand this stuff. I didn’t understand a lot of it until I went to college. . . . When I became Miss Virginia . . . I went around to a lot of different schools and I would always start my talks with, “When I was in middle school, I had big glasses and I felt weird and disgusting.” . . . Afterwards girls would come up and say, “I feel weird and disgusting, too.” Then I’d say, “You can e-mail me anytime.” . . . and I’d get e-mail that was very heartbreaking: “Guys don’t like me. . . . I feel gross all over.” . . . This is an epidemic.
Q. How so?
A. You can sit down with a teenager and have an hourlong conversation about plastic surgery, . . . but try and have an hourlong conversation about their body, and that conversation will be cut short. It comes down to being embarrassed. Also, they don’t know anything. . . . There are not enough real facts out there to start real dialogue about what real bodies are supposed to look like. . . . There is nothing to support normalcy. . . . In order to feel connected, people need reference points. They need materials.
Q. The process from idea to book took 2½ years. What changed during that time?
A. There was all this discussion about body image on “Tyra” and “Oprah.” The irony is, there is all this discussion, but still no photos. So you can talk all you want to, but a young woman’s imagination can run wild. . . . American women’s bodies are (depicted as) sexualized, hairless and without cellulite. It’s just time for a reality check.
Q. You get very real with the two-page display of vagina photos. Why include them?
A. Growing up from birth, (boys) can look at what they’ve got. They can play with it, get to know it and have a relationship with it. . . . We can’t. . . . We never get to see what a real vagina looks like. . . . (The display) is frightening to look at . . . but a penis looks weird, too.
Q. Do you anticipate any negative reactions?
A. I anticipated it to be more of an issue in the (book) review stage. But either people have flipped past it or read something else. . . . Not a single person — no one — has mentioned the vagina spread, except (one) radio show. . . . Only time will tell.
Vaginas are everywhere. You either show young men and women real women so they know what they look like, . . . or show them the unrealistic.
Q. What did your mom think of the book?
A. She was really concerned about the title of the book at first. . . . When we changed (it), she said, “Oh good. Now I can give a copy to our pastor.” . . . When she saw all the (nudity), she asked: “Is this allowed?” But she grew up in the ’40s and ’50s, and you didn’t talk about anything. I didn’t talk to her about anything . . . not because she was a bad mom — it was just uncomfortable. Since the book came out, we’ve had so many conversations about our bodies. . . . I’m constantly validated by other people telling me about their own body drama.
Q. You’re targeting teen girls and women but said boys would learn from the book, too. Why?
A. It would be good to show (boys) because then they won’t have unrealistic expectations of women. (The book) is not sexualized. It’s education, not sex education. If you know your body, you can own your body, and you can love your body and you save yourself so much stress.
Q. Some might say it’s ironic a former beauty queen wrote a book on body image. What do you say?
A. No one has more body drama than someone who has participated in a swimsuit competition. You’re forced to itemize and to scrutinize every single flaw — whether (imagined) or real — that you have. . . . I had to do it for a year . . . and it was this fantasy land where it made sense to tape down your boobs and put makeup on your thighs and put glue on your suit so it doesn’t ride up your tushie. Once I got some distance from that I thought, “Wow, that has got to be the fakest thing.” So teens know I’ve been there, done that on all sides . . . and lived to tell about it (because) . . . as I was walking on stage in 4-inch heels and a skimpy bathing suit, I still felt like I was stinky and gross.
Click Here for actual article.
“Demystifies female bodies and shows them as they really look: curvy, sometimes pimply and never perfect.” –Glamour magazine
Yay! It’s only 10AM here in LA and it’s already been a great day! Body Drama got a shout-out in the January issue of Glamour magazine! Check out a quote from the article:
“Demystifies female bodies and shows them as they really look: curvy, sometimes pimply and never perfect.”
– Glamour magazine
Sweet! The full bit is on page 103 in the magazine.
AND, I got a “gold star” Hall of Fame review from TeensReadToo.com!
“Since I started this job of reviewing about a year and a half ago, I’ve had the privilege of reading a number of self-help type books geared towards girls and women and their bodies. I have to admit that none have been as comprehensive, helpful, and realistic as Body Drama. As an adult, and a married woman with two children, I still found this book to be extremely helpful, and even discovered information that I hadn’t previously known. Kudos to Ms. Redd for such an informative read. This one is a winner!”
– Jennifer Wardrip of TeensReadToo.com
Click here for the full TeensReadToo.com review!

