Locker Room Diaries: The Naked Truth about Women, Body Image, and Re-imagining the "Perfect" Body
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Average customer review:Product Description
A riveting peek behind the locker room door of a beauty obsessed culture that reveals what women really think about their bodies
"I wish my thighs were smaller." "If only I could lose ten pounds." A wake-up call for any woman who has engaged in the "if only" wishing game, Locker Room Diaries uses the unique lens of the locker room to reveal what, exactly, goes into "shaping" not just a woman's body but her body image.
The locker room can be a wondrous retreat, a place to toss aside the worries of the day, but it is also where our flaws become most apparent-and where most of us can't help but wonder how we "measure up." Often dressed in no more than a towel, Leslie Goldman spent five years talking with women of all shapes and sizes about their body image, from taut twenty-somethings to heavyset seniors. Why is it, she asks, that almost no one seems satisfied with her physique? From compulsive workouts to daily dates with the scale, from bikini waxes to body fat measurements, American women are swept up in a constant quest for the "perfect" body. Thankfully, more than one woman reveals how she halted her cycle of self-loathing and learned to like her body as is. Blending expert opinion with wonderfully intimate, often laugh-outloud, confidences, Locker Room Diaries will inspire anyone who knows the highs of exercise to leave the lows of self-esteem behind-and, most especially, once and for all, to step off that scale!
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #959559 in Books
- Published on: 2006-05-22
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 264 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Self-confessed "workout junkie" Goldman has written a lively but exhausting book about women's body image and the cult of the locker room. A recovered anorexic, Goldman has an M.A. in public health and writes for the American Medical Association, but you'd hardly know it from the tone of this glib, giggly and also judgmental book. Goldman interviewed members of her high-end Chicago gym, many women of different ages and racial backgrounds, and those close to her age (she's 30-ish) and size mostly sound crass and thin-obsessed. Thankfully, a few older women contribute greater insight. As concerned as Goldman is by female self-loathing and obsession with perfect bodies, she appears to dwell obsessively on other women's bodies in a not particularly kind or sensitive way, launching at one point into a diatribe about the vulgar, unsanitary public rituals she sees women performing in the locker room. Yet she seems equally uncomfortable with the quiet women who dash in and out clad in towels, deeming them "Thoroughly Modest Millies" and regales us with descriptions of her lacy thong underwear. Who can win in this game? Maybe Goldman should have interviewed women who aren't exercise junkies. (June)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
When Goldman, then a public-health master's candidate focusing on women's health, learned of the "No Nudity" policy in the locker rooms of Women's Workout World, she concluded that women's self-esteem had dropped very low indeed, and she began close observation, as "a peeping Tomassinna," of women's locker-room culture. When naked, we are physically and emotionally vulnerable, she posits, and insecurities surface. As a recovered anorexic, Goldman was intimate with her inner critic, and that enabled her to appreciate such rites as mounting the dreaded scale, so equated with self-worth; quasi-covert comparisons of breasts; and $50 bikini waxes and other beauty rituals. Citing numerous women, she concludes that a very great number hate their bodies and therefore themselves, and this attitude is found in ever-younger girls. Having seen that age brings with it greater body confidence and comfort and the shedding of self-consciousness, Goldman, who underwent deep transformation while preparing this eminently suitable addition to women's studies, says it is "time to throw in the towel on hating our bodies." Whitney Scott
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
"(Diaries) is...witty, yet deeply poignant...Goldman's treatment of female vanity will leave you rolling on the floor for more." -- Mama's Musings Book Review, 10/2/2006
"Locker Room Diaries gives heart and humor to body image in a way like-minded books have not before. -- Erin Shea, author of Tales from the Scale
"An unflinching look at how women perceive—and try to ‘shape’—their bodies." -- Chicago Magazine, June 2006
"Goldman holds the reader's attention with her empathy and humor...A good read. -- Club Life, 05/06/06
"Goldman’s writing style is breezy and humorous, which certainly adds to the reader’s pleasure." -- Boston Sunday Globe, 8/6/06
"In Locker Room Diaries, Leslie Goldman reminds you that the 'perfect' body is your body." -- Wendy Shanker, author of The Fat Girl's Guide to Life
"Interviews and stories will resonate with readers and provide inspiration for maintaining a positive self-image." -- Kirkus Reviews
"Leslie Goldman's fascinating study of body anxieties gets into our own heads and under our skins. In the best way." -- Wendy McClure, author of I'm Not the New Me
"[Diaries] will inspire anyone who knows the highs of exercise to leave the lows of self-esteem behind." -- Jewish Book World, Fall 2006
Customer Reviews
Insightful, poignant and humorous
I bought the book based upon its previous shining reader reviews, and absolutely adored it! I am shocked by M. Prindle's negative review, and couldn't disagree more with her/his opinion. Did M. Prindle even read Locker Room Diaries in its entirity? I doubt it; in my opinion, this book was filled with invaluable anecdotes and information about women and body image.
Like many women in my 30s, I have experienced a myriad of body image issues---ranging from anorexia in my teens, to a combination of anorexia and exercise bulimia in graduate school. I'm considered healthy now (thanks to therapy and medications), but I always carry with me an awareness of my body---my physical fitness and dietary intake are omnipresent in the back of my mind. Locker Room Diaries helped my to realize that I am not alone, and that body image issues are pervasive in our society. It also helped me to see that my body has meaningful and amazing functionality, and it's physical beauty (based upon societal and cultural standards) doesn't need to define me as person.
Locker Room Diaries made me both laugh and cry, but more importantly, made me contemplate my view of my own body in a less critical way. Also, Goldman's writing style was easy, flowing and infinitely witty. I read the book in three nights before bed, and wished that it was even longer! I can't wait for Goldman's next book!
Perfect perspectives on imperfect physiques!
Locker Room Diaries is a thorough study of the gauntlet that modern women will run to feel attractive, from hair removal to eating disorders to that elusive goal, self-acceptance. The book's most revealing moments showcase the judgements we pass on ourselves and other women--for anyone who has ever thought to themselves, "Her _____ looks so much better than mine," this book invites the reader to join the club.
It treads the dark territory between elliptical machines and showers in brutally honest flip flops, not shying away from the pressures that our towel-wrapped sisters can apply--usually unknowingly and unintentionally. In anecdote after anecdote, Goldman shines a light into the heart of every woman's insecurities, especially her own.
Through its astute observations about the nature of women au natural, Locker Room Diaries gives any woman who has ever been in a locker room a sense of sorority, and the hope that maybe we shouldn't worry so much about being perfect, because we're already beautiful.
A Delicious and Page-Turning Read!
I devoured Locker Room Diaries over two days and I have since passed a copy along to my 3 sisters, my girlfriends, my husband, and even a student! I teach writing at a local university and Goldman's words sing and dance across the pages of her powerful book - a book that is part memoir, part ethnography, and part sociology. It is a beautiful work of art and a true labor of love.
Like Goldman, I too have struggled with my body over the years - constantly pushing it too many miles until it breaks or pinching every ounce of fat on my stomach and magically wishing it would turn to rock hard stone. Goldman's book is a testament to the times that we live in where Dove pushes for a "real beauty" campaign, yet the "real women" splashed across billboards are selling FIRMING lotion.
For any woman who has ever spent time in a gym, Locker Room Diaries will resonate with her. She will laugh and cry simultaneously as her fingers turn the pages. The voices that we hear talking about their boobs, bikini waxes, and food obessions are voices that we are familiar with - that we can relate to.
I highly recommend this book!!! Goldman will NOT disappoint.




