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Women's Fiction
Reviving Ophelia : Saving the Lives of Adolescent Girls

Reviving Ophelia : Saving the Lives of Adolescent Girls

List Price: $18.00
Your Price: $12.60
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Thoughts to ease my troubled mind.
Review: I have read this book over seven times. I am twelve-year old and have had a few bumps on the road of life. This book lets me know that I am not alone. The way things are described in this book are described so well that I felt as though I was reading my diary! I really enjoyed this book and it made me feel better about myself and the way I view things.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Reviving Ophelia
Review: Excellent book! This book gives great insight into the world of teenage girls today. If you are raising a teenage girl who is experiencing problems in today's world, this is a must read. Professionals who are working with teenage girls should also read this book. Not only does it give case studies, but it helps you to know ways to deal with some of the problems. It shows ways to strengthen relationships, increase self-esteem in teenage girls, and how you can help them in saving their "selves".

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Reliving the Years through Reviving Ophelia
Review: Have you ever wondered why the girls in Disney movies all share a similar look? Or better yet why they all seemingly need some type of rescuing? How about why women, who hold te same jobs as men, make less money? Mary Pipher PH.D looks at these, and many other questions in her book Reviving Ophelia, which is a smart, witty and insightful look into the world of adolescent girls. A psychiatrist in Nebraska, Mary Pipher composes the numerous cases of her patients and uses them to answer the question: Why do the personalities of the girls change after thirteen? The experiences of the girls differ dramatically from one to next, yet Pipher, using the impact that the media has on parents and friends, attempts to paint a common picture for all her patients.
Reviving Ophelia is not your standard book. It does not have a plot, with characters and all the elements of a story. Rather, it is an informative guide that reqires the attention to plow through the different cases. Pipher's repetitive style of discussing her patients and analyzing them after the fact can become tedious and downright boring. Therefore, the desire to know is imperative before one can go through the various chapters.
The lack of a plot within Reviving Ophelia may deter readers from exploring the minds of teenage girls. However, by not reading this everyone loses critical information that could perhap reshape the way they treat females. It can better your knowledge of the impact that words, images and actions have on girls, worldwide. By not reading Reviving Ophelia people lose the chance of learning enlightening and interesting facts. Revivng Ophelia not only opens you up to understanding the environment around you, but it is also fun to read. Questions both serious and trivial arise and are answered, and might clue the reader into the important information that could be pertinent to their everyday life. A thorough piece of work, with solid quotes and references, Reviving Ophelia takes a shrewd lok into the complex mind of adolescent girls.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Very powerful
Review: I don't think that many Americans are truly aware of the turmoil and pressures faced every day by adolescent girls. The outsatnding research of this book can really be a wake up call to parents and educators.

Mary Pipher uses a variety of case studies to describe issues faced by girls of varying ethnic and socio-economic barckgrounds and one message is clear: It is not easy to grow up female in Amercica. She discusses changes that need to be made in our school systems and at home. Pipher offers valuable insight into what could be done to boost self-esteem of so many young women.

While this is usefull for adults, teenage girls will wnat to read this for reassurance that they are not alone and to realize that there are individuals and groups that want to help.

This is a meaningful book for anyone who cares about improving a difficult time in any girls' life.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Attention Women: Young and Old
Review: Reviving Ophelia is an account of truth. The truth that many young women continue to experience in our 'modern' times. For many, their truth includes, eating disorders, depression, sucide ideation, addictions, and abuse. Pipher, writes this book to understand why young women are so suseptible to these dangers and how we can stop this destruction.
If you are a parent or work with young women, you must read this book. It offers information so we can undertand, protect, and help our young women maintain a strong sense of self. Reviving Ophelia shines with clarity, it brings light to the plight of many young women. Reviving Ophelia...to read alone so you remember yourself; to read to together to share; and to lend out, to educate the world.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I only wish I'd read this when it came out
Review: I don't read self-help books or psychology texts. I'm a mathematician by education and training, and I'm as left-brained as they come. I'm married to a psychologist who specializes in adolescents, substance abuse, and eating disorders; if I want to know something, I ask her. A few weeks ago, she brought this book home for she (and hopefully me) to read. A friend and co-worker had strongly recommended it to her, and so it sat on our kitchen counter. I read a great deal, both in volume and in topics, so on a whim {translated: I had nothing else in my reading queue at the time), I picked it up and started reading it. I could not put it down. We have a 13-year old daughter, and have as much trouble as the next set of parents in trying to communicate with her and understand her. I find it particularly difficult at times as I grew up in a household with only boys. While there was certainly our fare share of sibling rivalry and other issues to help build my understanding in working with others, there was none of the stereotypical issues or dealings that you hear about with adolescent girls. My sole experience with adolescent girls was as an adolescent boy (and you know how sensitive your typical adolescent boy is). I like to think I'm a decent parent, but there's a lot I don't know about being an adolescent (boy or girl), and my daughter's not in a position in her life to tell me. This book communicates great deal of that and more that I needed and still need to hear. To be sure, there are things that are missing. If you're looking for an instruction set on how to communicate with or raise your adolescent daughter, you've got the wrong book. And at first, I believed this to be a serious failing. Pipher's book walks through a series of topics that can greatly influence a young girl, using vignettes of particular children and their stories to develop understanding and insight. And these are powerful vehicles for communication; presenting stories of strength and power in the face of unbelievable adversity. However, while they clearly mark the path for parents to avoid, they don't provide instruction on what TO do. And I believe that's how it should be. Parenting is a unique experience; one in which you can do everything right and still fail; one in which you can do many things wrong and still succeed. The purpose of this book is not to provide direction, but to provide understanding. And in that it is extremely successful.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A topic that can't be ignored.
Review: It was actually the second part of title that grabbed my attention. I guess you could say I was a father figure to a teen girl at the time. I got this book in an attempt to understand the world she is growing up in. As a guy, I might tend to be blind to what girls have to put up with. I needed a little education. We should be more aware of what's going on. Young girls being bombarded with images of rail-thin models - some too thin even for my taste. It's unrealistic for all girls to be like those presented in the media, but most of them want that on some level. They feel they need to be like those in magazine and TV ads. All of that is discussed here. I feel this is a great book. I didn't feel as if this book was simply out to bash the media which could have been an easy path to take. It is a well-presented argument for social changes that need to be made. We see examples of some of the girls being affected by our girl-poisoning society.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: 12 year old speaks
Review: Reviving Ophelia is a generalization that she should not have made,I read it and being just at the age she is talking about I think i of all people should know I agree that SOME girls do have problems when they go to junior high but for all the girls I know it was really fun and I am not being pressured to give up being a tomboy Elle

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An eye opening book
Review: I read this book many years ago, and at the time it was life changing, and what I have learned in this book has remained with me. Reviving Ophelia is an excellent book describing what happens in a woman's transformation from child-teen-adult. For the lucky ones the transition is painless, for others it is not.

I think this books gives those of us who have gone through growing up, and those of us who watch the others make this transformation an understanding of why this time can be so stressful and tramatic. This alone helps with the pain and suffering that we can go through. She gives several real life cases of others who were having a difficult time, and helps us to realize that this is a very common experience, and how we can best deal with the changes our lives makes from being a child to becoming a woman.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An antidote to the "girl poison" in our popular culture.
Review: ...Dr. Pipher has hit it right on the mark with her observation of our popular culture as being "look-obsessed, media-saturated, 'girl-poisoning' culture."

Reviving Ophelia is call to arms for parents, teachers, and anyone with a stake in the lives of our adolescent girls to go on the offensive and take them back from the jaws of death. This book offers a compassionate look as to why so many of our children have eating disorders, suffer depression and from a low sense of self, and are killing themselves in alarming numbers.

I encourage anyone with a daughter to read this book in order to innoculate her against the "girl-poison" that has saturated our popular culture. I would give this book 10 stars if I could.


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