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Binge eating? Fluctuating hormones? Feeling like you're going mad? Join the club. Ten years on from first writing about her own experiences of mental illness, Bryony Gordon still receives messages about the effect it has on people. Now well into the next stage of her life and facing a new set of challenges alongside OCD and the endless battle to stay sober, in Mad Woman , Bryony explores the most difficult of all the lesson she's learned over the last decade - that our notion of what makes a happy life might be the very thing that's making us so sad.

Produktbeschreibung
Binge eating? Fluctuating hormones? Feeling like you're going mad? Join the club. Ten years on from first writing about her own experiences of mental illness, Bryony Gordon still receives messages about the effect it has on people. Now well into the next stage of her life and facing a new set of challenges alongside OCD and the endless battle to stay sober, in Mad Woman , Bryony explores the most difficult of all the lesson she's learned over the last decade - that our notion of what makes a happy life might be the very thing that's making us so sad.
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Autorenporträt
Bryony Gordon writes a column in the Daily Mail and is the host of the podcast The Life of Bryony. She previously wrote for the Telegraph for twenty-three years, becoming one of the paper's best loved writers, and hosted the Mad World podcast. She is the author of the bestselling The Wrong Knickers and Mad Woman, plus the Sunday Times Number One bestsellers You Got This and Mad Girl, which were both nominated for British Book Awards. In 2016 she founded Mental Health Mates, now a global peer support network which encourages people with mental health issues to connect and get out of the house. In 2017 she won the MIND Making A Difference Award for her work in changing the perception of mental health in the media. In 2018 she ran the London Marathon in her underwear. In 2020, she won the Journalists' Charity Award from the Society of Editors for mental health campaigning, and in 2023 she was a recipient of the Royal College of Psychiatrists President's Medal for improving the lives of people with mental illness. She lives in South London with her husband and daughter.