Marlo Mack (not her real name) produces the How to Be a Girl podcast, chronicling life with her transgender daughter "M." She has been interviewed and featured in such outlets as National Geographic, Scientific American, TIME magazine, People, and Refinery29.
"A stunning story. . . . Smart, honest, and deeply personal, this
illuminating work should be required reading."
*Publishers Weekly, starred review*
"How to Be a Girl exemplifies the true meaning of unconditional
love. In this book, Marlo learns that her ‘son’ is actually a
transgender girl, and, terrified at first, shows what it looks like
to find acceptance and how transformative and uplifting that can
be. Capturing the complexity of a mother’s journey to understand
her daughter, this book is universally relatable to any parent who
is struggling to adapt and embrace who their child truly is as
opposed to who the parent thought they were. As transgender
children are often misunderstood, How to Be a Girl is an invaluable
tool to providing the support and empathy they need. Marlo’s tender
reflection and courageous love is an inspiration that will help
others to their own awakening."
*Jazz Jennings*
"A moving memoir that shows how one woman struggles, supports,
loves and learns from her daughter. While she doesn’t always do so
perfectly, Mack’s memoir offers the undeniable truth that listening
offers the best path towards understanding and love."
*Al Woodworth, Amazon Editor*
"Transgender children are in the news. Bobbing in the sea of
headlines is a growing number of memoirs written by parents of
transgender kids. . . . The latest is among the best—Marlo Mack’s
How to Be a Girl. . . Mack’s prose is accessible and smart, by
turns witty and searching. Her storytelling is sprinkled with the
kind of helpful explanations one might find in a parenting advice
book. . . . [Yet] Mack’s touch is light, like a friend making a
wholehearted suggestion over coffee."
*Women’s Review of Books*
"Marlo Mack’s How to Be a Girl is an extraordinary mother-daughter
story and also a wondrously ordinary one, not just about a mother’s
unconditional love but also about listening to one another,
learning together, following your mama-gut as well as your
mama-heart, and leaping into the unknown with a child—your child—as
your guide."
*Laurie Frankel, New York Times–bestselling author of This Is How
It Always Is and One Two Three*
"The gender journey is beautiful, though lined with thorns. Marlo
Mack brings this journey to life in exquisite, compassionate
recollections. Her honesty and wide-angle lens make How to Be a
Girl a brilliant must-read for any family member of a gender
creative child and every ally and professional who wants to make
this an affirming world for children of all genders. Thank you,
Marlo Mack, for setting us on the right path in the journey."
*Diane Ehrensaft, PhD, Director of Mental Health, Child and
Adolescent Gender Center, University of California Benioff
Children’s Hospital, and author of The Gender Creative Child*
"A compassionate and heartwarming story, this book speaks to the
truth that transgender adults start as transgender children. While
not every person of transgender experience recognizes their
authentic gender in childhood, many do. Endless gratitude to Marlo
Mack for sharing her own experience and love for her daughter with
the rest of the world."
*Johanna Olson-Kennedy, MD, Medical Director at The Center for
Transyouth Health and Development at Children’s Hospital Los
Angeles*
"Throughout How to Be a Girl are conversations about gender between
Marlo and her child that would have been impossible within my own
family. While society still struggles with its one dimensional
perspective of gender, Marlo Mack takes the reader through her
tesseract-like journey to love, support, and celebrate her
daughter. The end result? The impossible becomes possible, and we
all have greater capacity to see the brilliant parenting path we
once could never have imagined."
*Aidan Key, gender educator, speaker, and author*
"This beautifully written book is about parental love, pure and
simple. And I don’t mean just the rhetorical ‘love’ claimed by all
parents when things are going easy, but the unconditional ‘LOVE’
required when faced with something in your child that makes
them—and you—potential pariahs. There is so much to learn here from
Marlo and her gorgeous daughter M."
*Christine Burns, MBE, author and transgender activist*
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