Send Yourself Roses: Thoughts on My Life, Love, and Leading Roles by Kathleen Turner, Gloria Feldt

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: February 2009
  • 272pp
  • Sales Rank: 205,686
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: February 2009
    • Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
    • Format: Paperback, 272pp
    • Sales Rank: 205,686

    Synopsis

    The New York Times bestseller SEND YOURSELF ROSES is now in trade paperback.

    Kathleen Turner has always lived her life according to her own rules. The screen icon opens up about her own life—both personal and professional—the risks she's taken, and the lessons she's learned from her film and stage career, 20-year marriage (and recent seperation), raising her daughter, and her successful struggle with rheumatoid arthritis.

    In SEND YOURSELF ROSES Turner recounts why she took the roles she did—from her film debut as the sultry schemer in Body Heat to her subsequent craft-stretching roles in Peggy Sue Got Married (for which she received an Academy award nomination), Romancing the Stone, Prizzi's Honor, The War of the Roses, and Serial Mom. And she discusses her recent resurgence on the stage with Tony nominations in her roles as Mrs. Robinson in The Graduate and as Martha in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, for which she also won the a British Evening Standard Award.

    Publishers Weekly

    Turner has starred in films as diverse as Body Heatand Romancing the Stone; she's had rave reviews for her stage performances in The Graduateand Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf. Now Turner, with the aid of Gloria Feldt, bares her heart to readers in an upbeat account of her life and work. Turner discovered the theater when she was a teenager living with her Foreign Service family in London; from then on, she took every opportunity to study acting and to perform. Eventually, she landed the steamy lead in Body Heat. Playing such a sexually voracious female role might have typecast her, so she followed it with a comedy, The Man with Two Brains. As she discusses the other acting roles she's chosen, she's emphatic that "the selection of material and characters I play reflects my values." She's also been deliberate in her offstage life-her decision to marry, to have a child and to divorce. With great candor, she details some of her worst struggles, battling both rheumatoid arthritis and alcohol. In the end, she's realized it comes down to "taking the lead role" in her own life. While she may indulge in swear words a bit much for some readers, Turner's vision of life's many possibilities-even as she gets older-is surely inspiring. (Mar.)

    Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

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    Biography

    Kathleen Turner is an actress and activist probably best known for her Oscar-nominated performance in Peggy Sue Got Married and Golden Globe winning role in Romancing the Stone. She is actively involved with local charities like the Child Advocacy Center and City Meals-on-Wheels and she chairs Planned Parenthood's celebrity Board of Advocates.

    Gloria Feldt is the author of The War on Choice (Bantam 2004), a nationally prominent women's rights activist, and the former President and CEO of Planned Parenthood Federation of America.

    Customer Reviews

    Send Yourself Roses, an easy read and interesting.by JaneAustenNut

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    March 26, 2009: Send Yourself Roses" is interesting ,but, she sometimes expands to much "toots her on horn" on her own accomplishments.The book will keep you reading and help you to learn from her choices and mistakes. It is an easy read and well-written. When you read it chances are that you will feel better for having read her memoir.

    Turner Tanks with Bioby Anonymous

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    March 29, 2008: I really thought I would enjoy this book. What I know of Kathleen Turner's life has been anything but boring so how this book manages to become such a snooze is beyond me. KT's ego is overwhelming. She seems to spend all her time trying to make herself look good and guess what--it doesn't work! One of the worst books I have ever read!


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