Dont Forget to Scream, Marianne Levy
Dont Forget to Scream, Marianne Levy
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Don't Forget to Scream
Unspoken Truths About Motherhood

Author: Marianne Levy

Narrator: Marianne Levy

Unabridged: 5 hr 52 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Phoenix

Published: 07/21/2022


Synopsis

'Every person - parent or not - ought to read this . . . beautifully written and searingly honest'
i

Like grief or falling in love, becoming a mother is an experience both ordinary and transformative - one that not only turns your world upside-down, but your inner self, too.

In this frank, funny and fearless memoir, Marianne Levy writes with heart-wrenching honesty about love and loss, rage and pain, fear and joy. She breaks the silence around the emotional turmoil of raising a child and asks why motherhood is at once so venerated and so undervalued.

Here is the real story of being a mother in the modern world, voicing the unspoken truths that everyone needs to hear.

'I've never read a book about motherhood that captures so perfectly the impossible complexity of it all . . . genius'
Irish Independent

About Marianne Levy

Marianne Levy is the author of several children's books and her journalism has appeared in the Independent, the Guardian and the Financial Times. She writes features and book reviews for the i newspaper. She lives in London.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Molly

I've read a few essay collections about motherhood recently, and a trend I'm noticing is that in the attempt to break the taboo against acknowledging the hard parts of pregnancy and motherhood, some of these writers are leaning REALLY hard into the physical and emotional hardships, recounting trauma......more

Goodreads review by Odette

Een aantal mooie hoofdstukken, zoals over mom guilt. Maar over het algemeen voelde dit boek aan als een ongestructureerde rant. Hoewel het goed is dat de minder mooie kanten van het moederschap besproken worden, had het geheel van mij verfijnder afgewerkt en/of uitgewerkt mogen worden.......more


Quotes

I loved these sharp, unusual essays about motherhood and cried my way through much of the book. Childbirth, desire, consumerism and marketing of baby stuff, deciding to have a second child, goldfish. Recommended Amy Liptrot, author of The Outrun

Don't Forget To Scream is funny and heartbreaking - a powerful portrayal of all that makes up motherhood. It feels both intimate and profoundly universal Catherine Cho, author of Inferno

Marianne Levy's Don't Forget to Scream tells the truth of modern motherhood like nothing else I've read. Bold, brave and brilliant, it is also full of humour, joy and warmth. I loved it Cathy Rentzenbrink

How I wish this book existed when I was a mother of young children. Each essay executes a brilliant swallow-dive from the enervating everyday of parenting into deep waters of profound and unorthodox thought. This is exciting, emboldening writing Tanya Shadrick, author of The Cure for Sleep

I read Marianne's book with a constricted throat and welling eyes. Her writing cuts to the quick - so deep, direct, and moving but also wry and funny, often provoking a choked laugh. These essays tug and prod at what it means to be a mother - the 'messy cat's cradle of womanhood' - in the most intimate, powerful and painfully honest way, leaving me ravaged, occasionally enraged, but also feeling profoundly seen Beth Morrey, author of Saving Missy

Phenomenal. Words like 'searing' and 'extraordinary' and 'blistering' will be used about this book, and they will not convey one tenth of the strength of it, nor the honesty nor the bravery in writing it Emma Flint, author of Little Deaths

Honest, witty, powerful and moving . . . an important book brimming with hard-won wisdom Robert Webb, author of How Not To Be a Boy

A brave, unflinching, utterly necessary book. I'm in awe of what it must have taken to write these searing and all too recognisable essays Tammy Cohen, author of The Wedding Party

I laughed, I cried and I haven't stopped thinking about it since. A brave, moving, brilliantly-written and often funny exploration of what it means to be a mother. I want everyone to read it Anna Mazzola, author of The Clockwork Girl

A remarkable book, cutting to the quick of what motherhood really feels like - the terror and the rage and the joy of it. The mundane rubs shoulders with the life-changing, the damply humdrum is shot through with calamitous love. I've read so much about motherhood, but I've never read anything as sharply honest as this; mothers will find themselves here Shelley Harris, author of Jubilee