Body Full of Stars: Female Rage and My Passage Into Motherhood

Available
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
Bookshop.org has the highest-rated customer service of any bookstore in the world
Product Details
Price
$16.95  $15.76
Publisher
Counterpoint LLC
Publish Date
Pages
272
Dimensions
5.5 X 8.2 X 1.0 inches | 0.6 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781640092075

Earn by promoting books

Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.

Become an affiliate
About the Author
Molly Caro May is the author of The Map of Enough and Body Full of Stars. She received a writing fellowship at the Taft-Nicholson Environmental Humanities Center, and her work has appeared in Salon, The Hairpin, Orion, and Fourth Genre. After living in six countries and eight U.S. states, she has now made a home in Montana, where she lives with her husband, two young daughters, and Great Dane mutt. Find out more at mollycaromay.com
Reviews
If you or someone you love is experiencing postpartum depression, pick up this book. The isolation the author felt after the birth of her child made her realize how little acknowledgement society gives to the mental burdens placed on new moms. --Kaitlyn Pirie, Good Housekeeping

In this honest memoir, May recounts how she came to feel connected with her body again. It's a moving work for new moms about a subject that is often overlooked in conversations about postpartum depression. --Real Simple, a Best Book of the Year

What a beautiful, heart-filled, and honest account of motherhood and womanhood overall. We need more brave voices like Molly Caro May's. --Abby Epstein and Ricki Lake, creators of The Business of Being Born and authors of Your Best Birth

Her brutally honest account is both deeply personal and comfortingly universal. She doesn't shy away from the pain--emotional, physical, cultural, generational--of what she calls her 'passage into motherhood' . . . Her best, clearest, most lyrical writing practically dances off the page when she's describing her love for her daughter. --PureWow

Oh, you thought motherhood was all sweetness and light? Then this book is here, finally, to set you straight . . . I have never read anything so honest about the transition into motherhood before . . . Everyone who reads this book will also benefit from a generous, accurate, and hopeful story that ends not with a happily ever after but with honesty, dignity, and strength in the face of life's ongoing challenges, whether we are mothering our children, or just ourselves. --The Rumpus

Grapples with questions of love, grief, and healing as she undergoes several unexpected health issues after the birth of her first child. --Kerri Jarema, Bustle

May's writing is intensely, beautifully visceral and she brings a new perspective to the postpartum period. --Book Riot

In this raw and lyrical book, the author holds nothing back. From the blinding rages to the blackest emotional abysses, she records all with an eloquence that is both powerful and restorative . . . A searingly eloquent memoir. --Kirkus Reviews

Her healing memoir unabashedly begins a long-neglected conversation about postpartum rage and the power of reconnecting with your body that many a mom will appreciate. --Pregnancy & Newborn

If there was ever a person who could express through her tender use of language, the pain, upset and rage that so many new mothers feel in the dark, it's Molly Caro-May. --Mama Glow

Radiant. Bursting with wisdom and wit, raw with honesty, full of the truth. This book is nothing short of remarkable, life affirming, and breathtaking. --Mira Ptacin, author of Poor Your Soul

This book is an ancient call from our first mothers to connect to our bodies--for our own good and for the good of humanity. Through sharing her fierce and shattering story, Molly May goes straight to the pelvis of female rage and echoes the legacy of the sacred feminine. It is healing, illuminated. --Laura Munson, New York Times bestselling author of This Is Not The Story You Think It Is...

This is the biggest story of humanity that is rarely told--the way in which birth isn't just the passage for our existence on the planet, but how it breaks, transforms, and emboldens women worldwide. Molly May's unflinching telling of her own rage and reconstitution after birth is beyond brave. It's paradigm-shifting. --Courtney E. Martin, author of Perfect Girls, Starving Daughters: How the Quest for Perfection Harms Young Women