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The Reading Cure

On sale

22nd February 2018

Price: £9.99

The Sunday Times/Peters Fraser & Dunlop Young Writer of the Year Award, 2018

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Selected: ebook / ISBN-13: 9781474604666

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‘Freeman’s pleasure in the food of literature … is infectious. The Reading Cure will speak to anyone who has ever felt pain and found solace in a book’ Bee Wilson

At the age of fourteen, Laura Freeman was diagnosed with anorexia. But even when recovery seemed impossible, the one appetite she never lost was her love of reading. Slowly, book by book, Laura re-discovered how to enjoy food – and life – through literature.

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Reviews

Jake Kerridge, DAILY TELEGRAPH
Shines like a beacon
Jake Kerridge, S MAGAZINE
The most delightful hymn to the joys of reading that you could imagine.
CULTURE FLY
Inspiring and illuminating.
Daniel Johnson, STANDPOINT
A miraculous memoir ... Anyone who has encountered anorexia, either first hand or in someone they love, will recognise this harrowing yet heartening portrait. The Reading Cure is a book for the bookish, for those hungry for self-knowledge, or for those who are just hungry.
Tanya Sweeney, IRISH INDEPENDENT
Clear-eyed, ambrosial, impassioned, bountiful... The Reading Cure is the work of a true-blue bibliophile, and it's impossible not to be seduced by Freeman's love of prose. It's essential reading not just for those who love food, but words. Come dine with her.
SUNDAY BUSINESS POST
An extraordinary account of mental illness captured in all its vivid, perplexing extremity.
Eithne Farry, PSYCHOLOGIES
[An] honest, beautifully written account.
Ysenda Maxtone Graham
The Reading Cure by Laura Freeman is devastatingly close to the bone for anyone who has had an eating disorder and knows its power to warp the mind. Gripping, moving, healing, mouthwatering.
Ruth Scurr, THE SPECTATOR </i>Books of the Year<i>
[A] joyful celebration of literature and a candid account of how reading about other people enjoying real or fictional meals helped Freeman recover from anorexia
Craig Brown, MAIL ON SUNDAY
In its subtle, undogmatic way, The Reading Cure is a tale of joy winning against piety, and the triumph of life over death... both a stimulating argument for the power of fiction as a force for personal change and a wise memoir of anorexia. Moreover, it is never pat, always intelligent, full of enthusiasm, and almost entirely free of self-pity.
Bel Mooney, DAILY MAIL
Warm and insightful, Freeman takes us on an exhilarating journey.
Patricia Craig, IRISH TIMES
What strikes you most about this remarkable memoir is its joyous absorption in literature in general, and food-writing in particular. It is lyrical, exuberant, optimistic and engaging.
Lucy Pearson, THE LITERARY EDIT
Freeman's writing throughout is beautiful and bountiful; her descriptions of food are full of flavour and temptation; her journey to wellness an inspiring one.
Amanda Craig
Enchanting and original... an illuminating and highly engaging way to think about all kinds of literature.
Francesca Brown, EMERALD STREET
The Reading Cure is a painful exploration of anorexia but also a love letter to the healing power of books written with expert care, talent... and hope.
Kate Leaver, THE POOL
Hers is a story of salvation and picnics, ravioli and freedom, Dickens and survival. Laura's recovery is testament to the power of literature, the love of a concerned family and the tenacity of a woman on a mission.
IRISH INDEPENDENT
This stirring autobiography by Laura Freeman looks set to be a key release.
SUNDAY TIMES STYLE
This book seems to have had the most unanimously glowing reviews of 2018 so far. Quite rightly: Freeman's wonderfully uplifting book is all about how she rediscovered the joy of food, and overcame her anorexia, by escaping into the fictional worlds of Charles Dickens and Virginia Woolf.
Cathy Rentzenbrink, TIMES
[A] beautifully written hybrid of memoir and literary criticism... This book is about the anguish of anorexia, written by a bookworm unfurling her wings as a writer of considerable power.
Sophia Money-Coutts, THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH
The most moving, most evocative book.
Bee Wilson
You might not expect a book on anorexia to be a joy to read, yet somehow this is. Laura Freeman is unflinchingly honest about the loneliness and misery of suffering from an eating disorder: the desperate calculations over 'an inch of almond milk', the 'shivering hunger'. But her pleasure in the food of literature - from sweets in Harry Potter to roast goose in Charles Dickens - is infectious. The Reading Cure will speak to anyone who has ever felt pain and found solace in a book. There are no easy epiphanies here, but you are cheering Freeman on, page by page, as she slowly recovers her appetite, both for double-cheese toasties and for life.
Ada Coghen, LITERARY REVIEW
Gentle in its tone and astute in its insights, the book is a treat... [and provides] sound evidence for the ability of literature to affect life.
Eithne Farry, S MAGAZINE
Lyrically written, raw and honest, this inspiring book truthfully describes an ongoing struggle with inner demons but celebrates those hard-won achievements with grace and gladness as books and their invaluable lessons restored Laura's appetite for life.
CORNFLOWER BOOKS
Do read this book, whether or not you've been afflicted or affected by mental illness. Read it as a book-lover; read it to read with fresh eyes - or sharpened tastebuds; read it for fellow-feeling and hard-won wisdom, and for the sheer joy of taking pleasure in good things.
SUNDAY TIMES CULTURE
Highly charged but beguiling and absorbing.