Up for Renewal: What Magazines Taught Me about Love, Sex, and Starting Over by Cathy Alter

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    (Hardcover)

    Details from Seller

    • ISBN: 0743288408
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Pub. Date: July 2008
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    Comments from the Seller: Great condition for a used book! Minimal wear. 100% Money Back Guarantee. Shipped to over one million happy customers. Your purchase benefits world literacy!

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    Synopsis

    By age thirty-seven, Cathy Alter had made a mess of her life. With a failed marriage already under her belt, she was continuing down the path of poor decisions, one paved with a steady stream of junk food, unpaid bills, questionable friends, and highly inappropriate men. So she sat down and asked herself what she truly wanted. A decent guy. A nicer home. More protein. When she took a closer look at her wants, she noticed something that seemed very familiar -- with the addition of exclamation points, her list could easily be transformed into the cover lines on every women's magazine: Find the love you deserve! Paint to the rescue! Eggs-actly perfect meals!

    So Cathy gave over her life to the glossies for the next twelve months, resolving to follow their advice without question. By the end of her subscriptions, she would get rid of upper-arm jiggle, crawl out of debt, host the perfect dinner party, run a mile without puking, engage in better bathtub booty, ask for a raise, and rehaul her apartment.

    Well, at least that was the premise of her social experiment. What actually happened was much less about cosmetic change and much more about internal transformation. Singular in its voice and yet completely universal, Up for Renewal will appeal to all who have ever wondered if they could actually make their life over.

    Publishers Weekly

    Realizing she needed to do serious work on her junk food/junk sex-littered lifestyle, Alter, a "recently divorced thirty-seven-year old" freelance writer, decided to spend each month of the coming year following the advice of a major women's magazine "without question." She picked nine titles focusing on a "how-to ethos" more or less aligned with her own demographic: Elle, Marie Claire, O, Allure, Self, Cosmopolitan, Glamour, InStyle and Real Simple. Each month she'd work on a particular "damage zone"-diet, social fears, clothes, relationship snafus, cooking, sex, etc.-and follow the advice of her chosen magazine as earnestly as possible. Meanwhile, she'd also begun dating a new guy, which brought up relationship challenges her magazine mentors loved to address-spicing up the sex, learning to cook instead of eating out and deciding if his birthday present meant a marriage proposal was imminent. While she ends up feeling positive about the self-improvement her magazine experiment has brought, she knows if she hadn't been ready and willing to change, all the advice in the world wouldn't have helped. In the end, fans of Bridget Jones will also enjoy Alter-she's funny and endearing. (July)

    Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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    Biography

    Cathy Alter is a Washington, D.C.-based writer whose articles and essays have appeared in The Washington Post, Washingtonian, Self, Fitness, and McSweeney's. Her first book, Virgin Territory: Stories from the Road to Womanhood, was released in 2004.

    Customer Reviews

    A Cosmo Cover Comes to Lifeby Spyder

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    12/28/2008: As an editor and book critic at PODBRAM, I have read a number of books aimed at women, and this is certainly one of the best of those I have read in that genre. I cannot speak for all male readers, but from my viewpoint, Cathy Alter is a highly competent writer in all respects. As I have sometimes done, I chose to read Ms. Alter's lighthearted poke at the frivolity and pseudo-seriousness of women's magazines sandwiched between a pair of books of much heavier subject matter, and Up for Renewal proved to be a very satisfying read.

    Up for Renewal is apparently autobiographical and has been composed in a sort of real-time framework. Ms. Alter has been a contributor to some of the same magazines discussed in the book, showing off her insider expertise on a plotline of which she is intimately familiar. What I was most impressed with was her deft, yet compact, use of the characters, dialog, pacing, and language in the storyline. I felt as if I was being taken along on a slice-of-life joyride by a lady who really knows how to drive. Although this is only Cathy's second book, her extensive experience in magazine writing drips off the pages. Maybe that's why the storyline is so precise. The author knows how to truly make every word count, showing off some really tight editing. Do I have anything negative to say about Up for Renewal? I get a delicately queasy feeling that Ms. Alter has led a very easy, comfortable, upper-middle-class lifestyle that has left very little room for any angst to develop that cannot be solved by a little dose of feminist, pop psychology. Maybe that's just the impression I get when I read Up for Renewal between a morality treatise on the death penalty and the history of religious politics in America.

    Cathy Alter creates a style that I strongly admire, one that I have diligently tried to impart in my own books, the concept of giving the reader the deepest and best experience possible in as few words as possible. Up for Renewal held my interest from the first word to the last, and I'm not even a member of the skirt-wearing target audience for the book!

    Floyd M. Orr is the author of The Last Horizon: Feminine Sexuality & The Class System, Timeline of America: Sound Bytes from the Consumer Culture, and a few books on subjects that men like to read.

    I Also Recommend: Second Chance, The Rock Star's Homecoming, The Traitor's Wife.

    Do you trust a magazines advice?by Anonymous

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    09/18/2008: We have all read the front of magazines, touting their articles aimed at improving your health, beauty, weight, sex life, and relationships. Now, admit it you have not only been tempted to pick one up and see if the article truly can fulfill its magic promise of improving your life, you have actually purchased it. Cathy Alter realized life wasn?t going the way she wanted it to. In hopes of getting it back together, she formed a plan, sort of an experiment. Each month she would focus on one particular problem. She chose nine magazines and put their advice into action. Up For Renewal is non-fiction. There is more depth to this book than I expected. Alter writes in a witty style. Up For Renewal is a pleasant, easy read. This book will appeal to young women or women going through crisis.


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