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Nancy Tucker

    The First Day of Spring
    That Was When People Started to Worry
    The Time In Between
    Powwow
    • Zahlr. Farbphot. von Krasemann, Volker und Dixon, Mark 110 S.

      Powwow
    • The Time In Between

      • 304 Seiten
      • 11 Lesestunden
      4,1(820)Abgeben

      When Nancy Tucker was eight years old, her class had to write about what they wanted in life. She thought, and thought, and then, though she didn’t know why, she wrote: ‘I want to be thin.’Over the next twelve years, she developed anorexia nervosa, was hospitalised, and finally swung the other way towards bulimia nervosa. She left school, rejoined school; went in and out of therapy; ebbed in and out of life. From the bleak reality of a body breaking down to the electric mental highs of starvation, hers has been a life held in thrall by food.Told with remarkable insight, dark humour and acute intelligence, The Time in Between is a profound, important window into the workings of an unquiet mind – a Wasted for the 21st century.

      The Time In Between
    • 4,0(257)Abgeben

      From the author of the acclaimed The Time In Between - what mental illness is really like for young women, and how we can all better understand it.

      That Was When People Started to Worry
    • The First Day of Spring

      • 320 Seiten
      • 12 Lesestunden
      4,0(282)Abgeben

      'So that was all it took,' I thought. 'That was all it took for me to feel like I had all the power in the world. One morning, one moment, one yellow-haired boy. It wasn't so much after all.' Chrissie knows how to steal sweets from the shop without getting caught, the best hiding place for hide-and-seek, the perfect wall for handstands. Now she has a new secret. It gives her a fizzing, sherbet feeling in her belly. She doesn't get to feel power like this at home, where food is scarce and attention scarcer. Fifteen years later, Julia is trying to mother her five-year-old daughter, Molly. She is always worried - about affording food and school shoes, about what the other mothers think of her. Most of all she worries that the social services are about to take Molly away. That's when the phone calls begin, which Julia is too afraid to answer, because it's clear the caller knows the truth about what happened all those years ago. And it's time to face the truth- is forgiveness and redemption ever possible for someone who has killed?

      The First Day of Spring