
The Invisible Woman
Taking on the Vintage Years
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Narrado por:
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Maggie Ollerenshaw
Acerca de esta escucha
Sixty is the new 40, we're constantly told. Or is it that 70 is the new 50? Either way, there's nothing middle of the road about middle age. From coping with bodies that are 'heading south' to rampant ageism in the workplace, this time in our lives, in the words of Bette Davis, is 'no place for sissies'.
From the irrepressible voice behind the much-loved Guardian column 'The Vintage Years' comes a clarion call for any woman who neither wants to be told constantly to look younger nor is ready to join the 'cardigan and slippers brigade'.
From family, finances and work to cosmetics, fashion and sex, 59-year-old journalist Helen Walmsley-Johnson shows how we can reinvent middle age for the next generation of women.
Full of wit and vitality, The Invisible Woman is a new sort of book about ageing: one that teaches us not how to avoid it but how to enjoy it, grow with it, and thrive. Invisibility is not an option!
©2015 Helen Walmsley-Johnson (P)2015 Audible StudiosLo que los oyentes dicen sobre The Invisible Woman
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Ejecución
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Historia
- Sara
- 01-19-16
Depressed Point of View
This was not at all what I was expecting. What a dour, negative and an unhappy take on life. The author assumes too much in her thinking that she represents all women or even a majority of women over the age of 50. I wonder how she slogs herself out of bed in the morning?
In fact, I personally know many inspiring people who enjoy living a full happy life, have started new careers and even changed the course of their lives in "middle age". The author's position that these things never happen to the over fifty set is preposterous. So much of life and living well depends on your attitude, perspective and point of view. Walmsley-Johnson's angle is one I would rather do without.
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