The wrong knickers : a decade of chaos / Bryony Gordon.
Material type: TextPublisher: London : Headline, 2014Copyright date: ©2014Description: 311 pages ; 22 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781472210159Subject(s): Gordon, Bryony | Women journalists -- England -- London -- BiographyDDC classification: 070.92 Summary: For years, women have been told that their twenties are their golden years, filled with fun, parties, sex and glamour. Countless TV shows and movies tell us the same story: this is your perfect decade - don't waste it! You'll never be so happy or thin again. Here, in her hilariously honest memoir, Bryony Gordon gives us a fresh perspective. Like Carrie Bradshaw, she may have had a column in a national newspaper, but her twenties weren't one long episode of Sex and the City, instead they were a decade of hangovers, heartbreak, and hideously awkward mornings-after, all over her overdraft limit. Told with Bryony's trademark candour, humour and refreshing self-deprecation, this is a memoir of a twenty-something Londoner who lived through her Bridget Jones years and survived. Embracing the messier side of life, it is a must-read for any woman who has survived, or is surviving, her twenties.Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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wnor- Book | Northam Northam Adult Nonfiction | B / GOR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 31111058152255 |
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For years, women have been told that their twenties are their golden years, filled with fun, parties, sex and glamour. Countless TV shows and movies tell us the same story: this is your perfect decade - don't waste it! You'll never be so happy or thin again. Here, in her hilariously honest memoir, Bryony Gordon gives us a fresh perspective. Like Carrie Bradshaw, she may have had a column in a national newspaper, but her twenties weren't one long episode of Sex and the City, instead they were a decade of hangovers, heartbreak, and hideously awkward mornings-after, all over her overdraft limit. Told with Bryony's trademark candour, humour and refreshing self-deprecation, this is a memoir of a twenty-something Londoner who lived through her Bridget Jones years and survived. Embracing the messier side of life, it is a must-read for any woman who has survived, or is surviving, her twenties.
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