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Lost and Found

Unexpected Revelations About Food and Money

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The #1 New York Times bestselling author of Women Food and God maps a path to meeting one of our greatest challenges-how we deal with money.

When Geneen Roth and her husband lost their life savings in the Bernard Madoff debacle, Roth joined the millions of Americans dealing with financial turbulence, uncertainty, and abrupt reversals in their expectations. The resulting shock was the catalyst for her to explore how women's habits and behaviors around money-as with food-can lead to exactly the situations they most want to avoid. Roth identified her own unconscious choices: binge shopping followed by periods of budgetary self-deprivation, "treating" herself in ways that ultimately failed to sustain, and using money as a substitute for love, among others. As she examined the deep sources of these habits, she faced the hard truth about where her "self-protective" financial decisions had led. With irreverent humor and hard-won wisdom, she offers provocative and radical strategies for transforming how we feel and behave about the resources that should, and can, sustain and support our lives.

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    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2011

      A timely portrait of one woman's devastating loss and subsequent rise from the ashes of the Bernie Madoff scandal.

      Roth (Women Food and God: An Unexpected Path to Almost Everything, 2011, etc.) invites us into the socially uncomfortable discussion of money with ease and aplomb, despite her status as a self-proclaimed shirker of fiscal responsibility. Faced with financial ruin after losing her entire life savings to Madoff, the author delves into the often-illusory world of finances, the determination of "metric worth, both in the community and with one another...[as]...our collection of new, shiny things," and the opportunity to alter one's sense of what is "enough." She weaves between the humorous, as in the chapter entitled "Hyperventilating at Target," and the painful—"by the time I was eleven, I stopped longing for my father's attention and love...and learned how to use them." Roth relates her extensive experience as a self-help food guru to money with such ease that even the fiscal novice will understand just how uncomplicated the world of money can be—and how important it is to understand it. The author presents a literary one-stop-shop of financial responsibility, social awareness, eating disorders, sexism, spirituality and, above all, happiness.

      An engaging exploration of the often intimidating world of personal finance.

       

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2011

      A timely portrait of one woman's devastating loss and subsequent rise from the ashes of the Bernie Madoff scandal.

      Roth (Women Food and God: An Unexpected Path to Almost Everything, 2011, etc.) invites us into the socially uncomfortable discussion of money with ease and aplomb, despite her status as a self-proclaimed shirker of fiscal responsibility. Faced with financial ruin after losing her entire life savings to Madoff, the author delves into the often-illusory world of finances, the determination of "metric worth, both in the community and with one another...[as]...our collection of new, shiny things," and the opportunity to alter one's sense of what is "enough." She weaves between the humorous, as in the chapter entitled "Hyperventilating at Target," and the painful--"by the time I was eleven, I stopped longing for my father's attention and love...and learned how to use them." Roth relates her extensive experience as a self-help food guru to money with such ease that even the fiscal novice will understand just how uncomplicated the world of money can be--and how important it is to understand it. The author presents a literary one-stop-shop of financial responsibility, social awareness, eating disorders, sexism, spirituality and, above all, happiness.

      An engaging exploration of the often intimidating world of personal finance.

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

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