Passing for Thin: Losing Half My Weight and Finding My Self
by Frances KuffelSign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of this book.
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 169)
Read in January, 2008
Tackling the last frontier of acceptable prejudice, Kuffel examines her life before and after she is transformed from morbidly obese to healthy of body and mind. Although 12 steps are mentioned - this is not the focus of the book. Instead we learn what life is really like for those who are very obese and what lessons are in store for anyone who changes their outword appearance without changing w/in. Kuffel is a fun and funny writer. She deflty handles the twin demons of self pity and self sabo...more
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Read in January, 2003
For anyone who has struggled with weight and self-image and then discovered the new set of issues that comes with weightloss. Kuffel, a cynical New Yorker, writes a very raw journal of her experience of losing over 100 pounds from beginning to end. She never hides an emotion or an embarrassment. She is a heroine to anyone facing their own demons or addictions. Funny and inspiring.
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Read in June, 2007
I enjoyed this book more than "Fat Girl." Even though there are only three pictures in the entire book, I could notice Frances' transformation through her words. I found myself rooting for her when she succeeded, and feeling sorrowful when she stumbled.
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This is an amazing memoir of an obese woman who decides to lose weight the day she can't close the safety bar on the rollercoaster. It's so neat to read about her transformation physically but not mentally. She's a good writer.
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bookshelves:
weight-loss
Read in January, 2007
I was disturbed by how much this woman appeared to hate fat people once she had lost her weight. It paints a much harsher picture of successful weight loss than you usually find celebrated in a book.
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diet-work-womens-life-culture-self-
Read in January, 2008
I would not describe this nasty manifesto as "darkly comic". This woman is one bitter fritter. The book reminded me of an incident that happened to me in 1999. I know the year because I was in a department store shopping for a bathing suit for a Caribbean vacation. I was very lean at that time, from sheer hard work and sacrifice. There was a woman, about forty years old and fifty pounds overweight, rummaging through bathing suits on the other side of the same rack I was looking through...more
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Read in August, 2008
I picked this book because I wanted to read about someone else who has struggled with compulsive overeating and who has recovered/is recovering from it with some success.
I really did appreciate the descriptions the author, Frances Kuffel, gave of her life as a compulsive overeater - her thoughts, her feelings, her food associations, the secretive nature of this problem, the amount of time, energy and money taken up by food - eating it and thinking about it. I could identify with so much o...more
I really did appreciate the descriptions the author, Frances Kuffel, gave of her life as a compulsive overeater - her thoughts, her feelings, her food associations, the secretive nature of this problem, the amount of time, energy and money taken up by food - eating it and thinking about it. I could identify with so much o...more
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A story about a woman who loses an enormous amount of weight, yet her family and friends don't accept it very easily. She is a fat person in a thin body and has to learn to become a thin person in a thin body-a very long journey.
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Read in September, 2005
Frances Kuffel is a fantastic writer, and she is honest, heartbreaking and funny in her description of her weight-loss journey. From her tentative first forays into the gym to her dating adventures, she may break your heart, but she never disappoints. Her relapses and her use of a twelve-step program are hilarious, encouraging and appalling all at the same time.
If you become addicted to her writing as a result of reading this book, fear not! She blogs about her ongoing battle of the bulg...more
If you become addicted to her writing as a result of reading this book, fear not! She blogs about her ongoing battle of the bulg...more
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bookshelves:
biosandmemoirs,
medicalandhealth
Read in January, 2003
recommends it for:
people with weight issues
This book is a journey of discovery and identity as the author loses half her body weight and is now "thin". She had been large for so long, she did not know how to be "thin". She notices how she gets treated differently being thin, and thinks she's a fraud. I had never considered what it would be like for a large person to be thin again. It shows how our body is a part of our identity.
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memoir
I read this after reading an expert in a magazine. It's the memoir of a woman who loses a tremendous amount of weight but then realizes that that didn't fix everything in her life. The author's personality can be somewhat tough to take at times, but otherwise an interesting read.
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