Product Details
Losing It: And Gaining My Life Back One Pound at a Time

Losing It: And Gaining My Life Back One Pound at a Time
By Valerie Bertinelli

List Price: $26.00
Price: $17.16 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

142 new or used available from $6.00

Average customer review:

Product Description

Valerie Bertinelli, then: bubbly sitcom star and America's Sweetheart turned tabloid headline and rock star wife. Now: actress, single working mother of teenage rock star, and weight-loss inspiration to millions.

We all knew and loved Valerie Bertinelli years ago when she played girl-next-door cutie Barbara Cooper in the hit TV show One Day at a Time, and then starred in numerous TV movies. From wholesome primetime in America's living rooms, Valerie moved to late nights with the hardest-partying band of the decadent eighties when she became, at twenty, wife to rock guitarist Eddie Van Halen. Losing It is Valerie's frank account of her life backstage and in the spotlight. Here are the ups and downs of teen stardom, of her complicated marriage to a brilliant, tormented musical genius, and of her very public struggle with her weight.

Surprising, uplifting, and empowering, Losing It takes you behind the scenes of Valerie's acting career and marriage, recalling the comforts, friendships, and problems of her television family, her close relationships with her parents and brothers, the stress and worries of being the wife of a rock star, and the joys of motherhood. Like many women, Valerie often remembers the state of her life by the food she ate and the numbers on her scale. So despite her celebrity, Valerie's voice is so down-to-earth, honest, and appealing that you'll feel as if you're talking with a girlfriend over coffee. Funny and candid, Valerie recounts her attempts to maintain a healthy self-image while dealing with social pressures to look and act a certain way, and to overcome career insecurities and relationship problems, all of which will be familiar to the hundreds of thousands of women who struggle every day with these same issues.

From marital turmoil to the joys of a new career, from being named among Penthouse's ten sexiest women in the world to overhearing whispers about her weight gain in the grocery store, this is Valerie's inspiring journey as she finds new love, raises a terrific kid, and motivates other women as a spokesperson for Jenny Craig.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1127 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-02-25
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 288 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
A Note to Amazon Readers (and a Q&A) from Valerie Bertinelli

Dear Amazon Customer,

Glad to see you here and hopefully purchasing my book. I've heard if you buy multiple copies it's a better experience--a better one for me! But seriously, I'm usually on Amazon, too. I've been buying books through the site for ten years. I enjoy reading the reviews. I get a good sense of the book, and I like to hear what other people have to say. Like in a traditional bookstore, I can look at the cover, peek inside the book, and check out the bestseller lists.

Valerie

  1. Do you have a favorite character from a book? I love Scout and Atticus from To Kill A Mockingbird.
  2. If you can be any character from a book, who would you like to be? I would like to be Scarlett and I would let Rhett know how much I love him.
  3. How do you decide what next book you want to read? If it's for my book group, whoever hosts the next gathering picks the book, so it's picked for me seven out of eight times. But on my own, I read reviews and ask people whose taste I like what they're reading.
  4. Where's your favorite place to read? Either lying in bed or on the sofa next to the fireplace.
  5. What is your favorite genre? I don't really have one.




Customer Reviews

I had no idea!4
This book was a revealing look into the life of the "good girl" we grew up watching on TV. Valerie was very honest in telling us all about her life. I ended up liking her as a person and respecting her for what she has accomplished.

Will Date Faster than a Newspaper1
Curiously, although the frequent swearing in this book didn't bother me, the dated, ugly slang did. This book will date faster than a newspaper.

The author doesn't visit a friend, she "hangs" with him. They don't go out to dinner, they "grab some food." She "freaks out" at "frickin'" things.

When she reproduces her conversations with others, people seldom say, "Okay." It's always, "Cool." She doesn't vow to stop blurting out stupid things; she vows to "get her act together."

Two hundred and seventy-seven pages later, the reader is left with the feeling of having spent an exhausting evening with the high school friend from the seventies who never moved out of her parents' house. I almost expected her to invite me into a linoleum-floored basement to smoke a joint and watch "SNL." (After all, she quotes Roseanne Roseannadanna.)

The other, more important flaw in the book is her tiresome insecurity. The predictability of her actions and reactions is set after the book's first chapter. She feels fat, she feels wrong, she feels undesirable, she feels - oy. Couldn't she lie about feeling good about something, just to break up the monotony of this book? When she claims that her legs are good-looking (but only from the knees down, of course), it's too little, too late.

Good grief, the woman even feels wrong about how she feels about her feelings! She seems to have written this book to inspire people, but the reader wonders, inspire them to do what? Second-guess their every word and thought, and expect a round of applause for it?

Worst, nothing really happens in this book. Her husband's addictions make his behavior predictable and redundant: using, treatment, sober, relapse. And I cannot conjure a single memory of the twenty-plus TV movies she describes making. Her description of location shoots are deadly: She rides stationary bikes in hotel rooms.

It's a snooze, filled with lengthy descriptions of nothing in particular and slang so dated I suspect Tony Orlando edited the book.

Not very inspiring2
Poor little Valerie. I bought this book because I thought it would help be an inspiration to my daughter for loosing weight. Most people who have a weight problem would consider themselves lucky if they weighed 134 pounds! But Valerie made it sound like it was the end of the world. Yes, I'm sure that this would be a problem for an actress, but I don't think Valerie has a clue about what "normal" people go through in their challenge to loose weight. I found the rest of the book boring - I usually give a book 150 pages, if I still don't like it by then I close it and put in the pile to give away. I found that I couldn't wait to get to page 150 on this one!