Review Selected as one of the top ten titles in Lifestyle for Spring 2018.--Publishers Weekly"Required reading for anyone who is a woman, or has ever met a woman. This means you."--Jenny Lawson, author of Let's Pretend This Never Happened and Furiously Happy"This book deals with such an important subject. Abby Norman's odyssey with her own health is sadly an all too common story to those of us who suffered in silence for so long. My hope is that anyone involved in women's health will read her story and revisit the way we treat women and their health concerns in our culture."--Padma Lakshmi, New York Times best-selling author and co-founder of the Endometriosis Foundation of America"A fresh, honest, and startling look at what it means to exist in a woman's body, in all of its beauty and pain. Abby's voice is inviting, unifying, and remarkably brave."--Gillian Anderson, Actress, activist and co-author of We: A Manifesto For Women Everywhere"From wandering wombs to ovary compressors, Abby Norman's book is packed with fascinating historical detail about how women's bodies have been misunderstood and mistreated by male doctors for centuries. It is also an important reminder that there is still a culture of silence surrounding women's gynecological health in the twenty-first century, and that there is work yet to be done when it comes to advocating for women's healthcare."--Lindsey Fitzharris, author of The Butchering Art"Compelling and impressively, Norman's narrative not only offers an unsparing look at the historically and culturally fraught relationship between women and their doctors, it also reveals how, in the quest for answers and good health, women must still fight a patriarchal medical establishment to be heard. Disturbing but important reading."--Kirkus Reviews"With searing prose, science writer and editor Norman pens a heartfelt medical history and memoir of coming to terms with the limitations of one's physical body....A thoughtful read."--Library Journal"Abby Norman writes powerfully about her experience living with endometriosis and presents research on the disease and the history of women who were brushed off by medical professionals. You know, like how hysteria is anything that ails a woman, but the same symptoms do not equate hysteria in a man. It's hitting all my feminist and history and medicine buttons."--Book Riot"Author and activist Abby Norman, has put decades of labor-including careful, independent medical study-into studying this phenomenon, as she describes in her book Ask Me About My Uterus, both a memoir and a trenchant manifesto."--The New Republic"Norman doesn't sugarcoat just how difficult it can be to convince doctors that pain is legitimate. Instead, she offers searing commentary on how women have been conditioned to avoid seeking treatment or admitting that we feel bad in the first place."--The Cut Book Description This moving and inspiring memoir from a young woman suffering from pain and chronic illness highlights the disparity in how the medical community and society at large treats women's health issues, and her resilience in challenging those entrenched beliefs to get her life back. See all Product description
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