Marianne Levy is the author of several children's books and her journalism has appeared in the Independent, the Guardian and the Financial Times. She writes features and book reviews for the i newspaper. She lives in London.
I loved these sharp, unusual essays about motherhood and cried my
way through much of the book. Childbirth, desire, consumerism and
marketing of baby stuff, deciding to have a second child, goldfish.
Recommended
*Amy Liptrot, author of The Outrun*
Don't Forget To Scream is funny and heartbreaking - a powerful
portrayal of all that makes up motherhood. It feels both intimate
and profoundly universal
*Catherine Cho, author of Inferno*
Marianne Levy's Don't Forget to Scream tells the truth of modern
motherhood like nothing else I've read. Bold, brave and brilliant,
it is also full of humour, joy and warmth. I loved it
*Cathy Rentzenbrink*
How I wish this book existed when I was a mother of young children.
Each essay executes a brilliant swallow-dive from the enervating
everyday of parenting into deep waters of profound and unorthodox
thought. This is exciting, emboldening writing
*Tanya Shadrick, author of The Cure for Sleep*
I read Marianne's book with a constricted throat and welling eyes.
Her writing cuts to the quick - so deep, direct, and moving but
also wry and funny, often provoking a choked laugh. These essays
tug and prod at what it means to be a mother - the 'messy cat's
cradle of womanhood' - in the most intimate, powerful and painfully
honest way, leaving me ravaged, occasionally enraged, but also
feeling profoundly seen
*Beth Morrey, author of Saving Missy*
Honest, witty, powerful and moving . . . an important book brimming
with hard-won wisdom
*Robert Webb, author of How Not To Be a Boy*
A brave, unflinching, utterly necessary book. I'm in awe of what it
must have taken to write these searing and all too recognisable
essays
*Tammy Cohen, author of The Wedding Party*
I laughed, I cried and I haven't stopped thinking about it since. A
brave, moving, brilliantly-written and often funny exploration of
what it means to be a mother. I want everyone to read it
*Anna Mazzola, author of The Clockwork Girl*
A remarkable book, cutting to the quick of what motherhood really
feels like - the terror and the rage and the joy of it. The mundane
rubs shoulders with the life-changing, the damply humdrum is shot
through with calamitous love. I've read so much about motherhood,
but I've never read anything as sharply honest as this; mothers
will find themselves here
*Shelley Harris, author of Jubilee*
Brilliant, funny, heartbreaking, and true, Marianne Levy's Don't
Forget to Scream had me exploring my own experience of motherhood
in an entirely new way. I simply can't stop thinking about it.
*Deidre Mask, author of The Address Book*
An excellent book . . . elegant, funny, raw and beautiful. It made
me angry with myself and the world but it also made laugh.
Compulsive reading
*Emma Beddington, author of We’ll Always Have Paris*
A gut-punch of recollections about early motherhood . . .
Incredible, honest writing that gets to the heart of the
experience. It's wonderful
*Julia Raeside*
A remarkable memoir, threaded with humour and tenderness, and yet
exposing the often crushing loneliness and unfairness of
motherhood. A must-read for fathers and prospective fathers, this
book made me wish I could go back in time and do parenting
differently
*Alex Reeve, author of The House on Half Moon Street*
Don't Forget to Scream is a work of painful genius. Exquisitely
written, totally honest, insightful and alternately hilarious and
moving. I don't have or want children and might not have picked the
book up, thinking it's not "for" me. Which would have been a big
mistake. Huge. The beauty of reading is in allowing a skilful
writer to not only lead you into their world but picture yourself
there. This is what Don't Forget To Scream achieves, and it's
utterly compelling
*Jo Harkin, author of Tell Me An Ending*
A beautifully, and at times agonisingly, honest confessional.
Moving, funny, poignant and inciteful: Marianne's reflections shine
a light on both the joys and lies about parenthood with which we're
all complicit. This is This is Going To Hurt from the other side of
the bed
*Dr Keir Shiels, Consultant Paediatrician, Great Ormond Street
Hospital*
Brilliant, brave, honest (and sometimes very funny) . . . Don't
Forget To Scream should be read by anyone who has a mother
*Lev Parikian*
A staggeringly, ferociously good book - unflinching but humane,
real and funny and courageous, and vitally questioning. I wish we
lived in a world where it didn't need to be written
*Piers Torday*
The contradictions and complexities of motherhood dissected in a
painfully accurate and extraordinarily funny way. Don't Forget to
Scream is a must-read for anyone, not just mothers
*Ania Bas, author of Odd Hours*
Don't Forget To Scream is a stunning, urgent, feminist masterpiece.
Many of the essays brought me to tears, and I had to give myself
breaks between them to digest their beauty and wisdom and insight
before moving onto the next. In a world where motherhood is
simultaneously deified and scorned, Levy expertly stitches together
what this jarring juxtaposition means for the internal lives of
women navigating this. She's brave enough to tell the truth about
the daily conflicts between overwhelming love and overwhelming
grief at the loss of self - conflicts that are rarely allowed to
sit alongside each other, let alone felt within a five minute
period. She's angry enough to speak out about the depraved
normalisation of gynaecological violence, and the endless other
ways mothers are failed by the government and societal
expectations. And yet she also writes so beautifully about the
overwhelming wonder of having children - the joys, the love, the
laughter, and the true magic. So many mothers will see themselves
in this book. And anyone who has ever rolled their eyes while a
mother struggles to get a buggy onto the bus needs to read it too.
A masterclass in empathy. I'm buying copies for everyone I know
*Holly Bourne*
Funny, honest, courageous and brilliant . . . I really recommend
it
*Brian Bilston*
A terrific collection of bracing and often darkly funny personal
pieces about the transformative experience of becoming a mother and
the extent to which it derails your sense of self. I know I would
have fallen upon it with immense gratitude and relief when I had my
first child
*The Bookseller*
Extraordinary. Levy brings to life so many feelings and thoughts
that have lurked around my subconscious but are hard to look at
clearly, let alone articulate. I wanted to read it slowly because
it made me feel so many things, but ended up devouring it because
it's so damn good
*Emily Itami*
I finished this book in tears. It perfectly articulates the
contradictions of motherhood, the breath-stealing, heart-aching,
painful intensity - and, above all, the love. What a book
*Emylia Hall*
Fierce, funny, frightening . . . Marianne Levy offers the
unvarnished truth about motherhood, charting both its blisses and
its many challenges. Rarely is writing this raw yet also this
readable: Don't Forget to Scream digs deep, and the results are
can't-look-away compelling. Essential reading for anyone who has
kids, is thinking about having kids, knows someone who has kids,
was once a kid - basically, for everyone
*Holly Williams*
A paean to the messy, confounding, chaotic, beautiful,
heartbreaking soup that is motherhood - I loved it
*Kate Maxwell, author of Hush*
These brilliant essays are filled with the visceral, contradictory
emotions of early motherhood. Filled with righteous anger at a
society which still hasn't addressed how we mother in the modern
world, they'll make you both cry and laugh. Everyone should read
these words
*Araminta Hall*
Fascinating . . . Although full of love and written in glittering
prose, the domestic world the essays present is chaotic and at
times full of rage
*Irish Independent*
It's fabulous
*Eva Wiseman*
I devoured this book about motherhood in all its complex,
beautiful, ugly reality. It felt like seeing myself reflected on
the page for the first time in the better part of a year. Like
shouting out and finally hearing an echo in the darkness . . . I
gobbled it up like something delicious and forbidden, something
selfishly and exclusively mine . . . When I picked up this book it
felt like being seen and heard . . . Reading and writing about
mothering in such raw, searing, beautiful honesty is a radical act
. . . hearing that my feelings are shared by even one other person
- that the bittersweet, aching, love-pain of it all, the good tears
and the bad tears, the inertia and the wonder, were not mine alone
after all - felt like a revolutionary act of self-care
*Metro*
Courageous . . . bursting with urgency, both pocket therapy for
parents and a keen appraisal of the desperate bind of contemporary
motherhood. Levy tells her story with a light touch, an exhausted
heart and bright rage. She notes the pleasure, humour and sackfuls
of love that exist alongside the sleep deprivation and fury, but
more weight is given to the gruelling aspects of motherhood, the
hidden spaces . . . If you are a mother, read this book to know you
are not alone, to find vindication in your fury. If you are not a
mother, read it to empathise with the mothers in your life
*i newspaper*
Marianne's memoir, sometimes poignant, sometimes funny,
unflinchingly frank, gives voice to the maelstrom of fear, rage,
love and joy, the loss of identity and independence, and the pain
that motherhood entails . . . will strike a chord with all
parents
*Camden New Journal*
Some serious thinking about feminism and its intersection with
women's health policy, the environment, employment and the
philosophy of everyday life . . . flashes of brilliance . . . She's
quite right to point about that women's pain, from the first period
cramps to later-life illnesses, is treated differently to men's.
And her prose can be lovely . . . Levy comes alive as a writer
musing on her own mother, or her daughter's first, poignant
questions about the Holocaust, or just her own rather interesting
psychological make-up . . . clearly a good writer
*The Times*
Stands apart from the populous pack of recent books about
motherhood for a number of reasons . . . tremendous wit, warmth and
acuity . . . humorous observations . . . compelling discussions on
childcare challenges and the gender pay gap . . . colourful,
charming . . . truly, it's the sort of book that should be pushed
into every new parent's hands . . . courageous truth-telling can be
found on every page
*Irish Independent*
With wry wit and blistering honesty, her collection of essays
shines a light on the untold stories of modern motherhood
*Woman’s Own*
Brings humour to everyday pain . . . a heartfelt attempt to break
the discourse about motherhood out of this silo and bring it to a
wider and more diverse audience. It's an unvarnished look at the
grimy, lonely, frightening, alienating side of pregnancy and
motherhood, spanning birth phobia and physical trauma, the erosion
of Levy's sense of self and self-worth in the early months and
years, and the structural, social, economic bind in which so many
mothers find themselves . . . Levy is an engaging, often funny
author . . . There's virtuoso swearing, pet fish psychodrama and a
revoltingly accurate taxonomy of the various kinds of filth
motherhood involved . . . Don't Forget to Scream seeks to challenge
the way we minimalise and deny how hard the ordinary business of
mothering is
*Observer*
I recognise it all. And I welcome her urge to "invite other women
backstage". Levy is as aware as anyone that motherhood is an
ordinary miracle, but she also knows that it is still a miracle . .
. I also enjoyed her incredulous anger . . . Don't Forget To Scream
becomes really interesting when Levy wonders - usefully, intensely
- why we don't talk about such aspects of motherhood . . . Amid all
the rage and the wit, Levy writes with great tenderness about her
children and the "whole minutes of honeyed joy" she has with them,
however hard-won and conflicted that joy might be
*Daily Telegraph*
You must read this . . . a hilarious reflection on being a mother .
. . I've never read a book about motherhood that captures so
perfectly the impossible complexity of it all and the massive shift
that women experience in the process as Marianne Levy's Don't
Forget to Scream . . . Straight-talking and hilarious . . . to say
her work is genius would be an understatement. Each essay is a
masterpiece, a snippet of deep - and often hilarious - reflection
on being a mother in today's society . . . I found many of her
observations profound . . . and she revels in the joy of it all too
. . . Everything about the book has stuck with me, and though it is
a memoir and ultimately Levy's experience, so much of it is
universal and all of it is important
*Irish Independent*
Perceptive . . . honest and necessary writing . . . visceral
*BBC Culture*
Beautifully written . . . Insightful and funny, too
*Francesca Steele, i newspaper*
A terrific collection of bracing and often darkly funny personal
pieces about the transformative experience of becoming a mother and
the extent to which it derails your sense of self. I know I would
have fallen upon it with immense gratitude and relief when I had my
first child
*The Bookseller*
I've never read a book about motherhood that captures so perfectly
the impossible complexity of it all . . . universal and
important
*Irish Independent*
To describe this book as honest, brave, empathetic and powerful
doesn't do it justice - it is all these things in abundance, but
also funny and beautiful
*Adam Kay*
Phenomenal. Words like 'searing' and 'extraordinary' and
'blistering' will be used about this book, and they will not convey
one tenth of the strength of it, nor the honesty nor the bravery in
writing it
*Emma Flint, author of Little Deaths*
'A stunning, urgent, feminist masterpiece'
*Holly Bourne*
I've never read a book about motherhood that captures so perfectly
the impossible complexity of it all . . . universal and
important
*Irish Independent*
To describe this book as honest, brave, empathetic and powerful
doesn't do it justice - it is all these things in abundance, but
also funny and beautiful
*Adam Kay*
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