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Books : Fiction : Contemporary Fiction: 1970 Onwards : Authors A-Z : O : Oudot, Susan
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If you are looking for a sizzling, laugh-out-loud, two-boxes-of-tissues read then look no further than All That I Am, the sequel to Susan Oudout's Real Women. Eighteen months after her unforgettable wedding, Susie has swapped her stilettos for sleepless nights and mastitis; Mandy has divorced her good-for-nothing husband and is out for a good time; Karen has admitted her lesbianism to her friends but now faces the consequences of discovery by others who may not be so forgiving; career woman Anna decides she really wants a baby; and Janet's life begins to crumble as her failed attempts with IVF treatment rip her to pieces.
The joy of All That I Am is that these women are as real as you are ever likely to find between the pages of a book. Likable and detestable, strong and vulnerable, intelligent and stupid, each of them faces a personal struggle to find out who they really are. And at the end of it all is the bond of female friendship that, despite all the struggles and heartache, can never be broken. Not too taxing but not too light, this effervescent tale of five north London schoolmates pulling together, falling apart and revealing themselves in all their neurotic, vacillating and totally believable glory, is an absolute pleasure to read. --Susan Harrison
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If you are looking for a sizzling, laugh-out-loud, two-boxes-of-tissues read then look no further than All That I Am, the sequel to Susan Oudout's Real Women. Eighteen months after her unforgettable wedding, Susie has swapped her stilettos for sleepless nights and mastitis; Mandy has divorced her good-for-nothing husband and is out for a good time; Karen has admitted her lesbianism to her friends but now faces the consequences of discovery by others who may not be so forgiving; career woman Anna decides she really wants a baby; and Janet's life begins to crumble as her failed attempts with IVF treatment rip her to pieces.
The joy of All That I Am is that these women are as real as you are ever likely to find between the pages of a book. Likable and detestable, strong and vulnerable, intelligent and stupid, each of them faces a personal struggle to find out who they really are. And at the end of it all is the bond of female friendship that, despite all the struggles and heartache, can never be broken. Not too taxing but not too light, this effervescent tale of five north London schoolmates pulling together, falling apart and revealing themselves in all their neurotic, vacillating and totally believable glory, is an absolute pleasure to read. --Susan Harrison
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If you are looking for a sizzling, laugh-out-loud, two-boxes-of-tissues read then look no further than All That I Am, the sequel to Susan Oudout's Real Women. Eighteen months after her unforgettable wedding, Susie has swapped her stilettos for sleepless nights and mastitis; Mandy has divorced her good-for-nothing husband and is out for a good time; Karen has admitted her lesbianism to her friends but now faces the consequences of discovery by others who may not be so forgiving; career woman Anna decides she really wants a baby; and Janet's life begins to crumble as her failed attempts with IVF treatment rip her to pieces.
The joy of All That I Am is that these women are as real as you are ever likely to find between the pages of a book. Likable and detestable, strong and vulnerable, intelligent and stupid, each of them faces a personal struggle to find out who they really are. And at the end of it all is the bond of female friendship that, despite all the struggles and heartache, can never be broken. Not too taxing but not too light, this effervescent tale of five north London schoolmates pulling together, falling apart and revealing themselves in all their neurotic, vacillating and totally believable glory, is an absolute pleasure to read. --Susan Harrison










