Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

What we're reading

Find your new favourite book or recommend one on our Book forum.

Are there any novels about fatness/weight loss?

66 replies

eggyweggies · 05/10/2013 18:30

Not diet books or 'how-to' type things...more novels exploring what it means to be fat these days, or where the main character loses a lot of weight...does such a thing exist?

OP posts:
JimmyCorpseHell · 25/10/2013 09:35

What a great thread, I'm writing all these titles down. I love reading books like this. Thanks to the poster who reminded me of the Paula Danziger books - took me right back!

I second Eating Myself by Candida Crewe. I've read that 2 or 3 times now. It really shows how weight obsession/dieting is such an absolute waste of time.

Moose by Stephanie Klein and Wasted by Marya Hornbacher are also good reads.

In Marian Keyes' Last Chance Saloon one of the three main characters is in a relationship where her partner is focused on her weight causing her to eat in secret.

And I'm another one who loved Jemima J. Good old chick lit but a great ending.

Rollermum · 25/10/2013 10:49

LifeofPo it sounds like The Hungry Years by William Leith. His struggle with addictive behaviour including eating really resonated with me. I did Atkins and lost 3 stone after I read it. He had success with it too. Weight didn't stay off btw.

I've always meant to read Fat by Rob Grant, thanks for mentioning it Burn.

DisgraceToTheYChromosome · 27/10/2013 19:51

Beyond Black by Hilary Mantel. The focus is mainly on the ghosts, but there's an insistent subtext on the protagonist's size. Mantel herself has steroid-induced obesity, and the book's very good on the constant alertness the very large need just to move about safely.

schlise123 · 06/12/2013 01:35

Fame and Misfortune by Frank Borne, Astraea Press 2013

Kevin Clayton wanted to be thin, attractive, and wear normal sized clothing. However, after rising to prominence as an accomplished fitness guru following an extraordinary transformation and weight loss of 200 pounds, he finds that happiness remains elusive. His marriage to his childhood sweetheart shattered, his relationship with his daughter destroyed, and unable to trust the countless women who swoon over him because of his new looks, Kevin struggles to find meaning for his remarkable accomplishment and his efforts to teach others how to change their lifestyle and lose weight. Kevin longs for his wife and wants to make amends with his daughter, but his career and staff have other plans for him. Ultimately, he is torn between pursuing his ex-wife, Jennifer, or yielding to the advances of his sexy young assistant, Mika, whose motives are questioned when Kevin discovers that she and a trusted ally, his trainer, may be responsible for altering more than his diet.

SomeDizzyWhore1804 · 06/12/2013 23:47

Just want to put it out there that I threw Jemima J in the bin after reading it, I was so appalled by it. I genuinely didn't want anyone else to get their hands on it and end up reading it. Absolute woman hating trash!!!

tumbletumble · 12/12/2013 07:21

I think that maybe when Jemima J first came out 15 years ago it was quite ground breaking to have a 13 stone heroine, but if it came out now it would be considered shallow and cliched for the reasons given above.

DuchessofMalfi · 12/12/2013 11:20

I read Big Brother by Lionel Shriver last week. So good, but doesn't have a very positive outlook on weight issues, and the ending is pretty downbeat.

Well worth a read for Lionel Shriver's superb writing alone.

aoife24 · 12/12/2013 17:19

A Little Stranger by Candia McWilliam . An unsettling and sininster read, one woman eats elephantinely during pregnancy while the nanny becomes smaller and smaller and has plans afoot.

Hippywannabe · 03/01/2017 23:10

Bumping an old thread to see if anyone has any more recommendations?

AyeAye · 05/01/2017 18:07

Doesn't Jemima J starve herself down to about 7 stone?

Ugh.

AyeAye · 05/01/2017 18:10

Ack zombie thread, apologies.

midsomermurderess · 05/01/2017 21:15

I would also recommend A Little Stranger, a haunting, and beautifully written, book. The descriptions of food almost evoke Dutch (Golden Age) still lives.

LobsterQuadrille · 06/01/2017 06:47

AyeAye no apology required - I'm looking at all threads for an eight hour round trip train journey. I second those who rubbished Jemima J though.

Hippywannabe · 06/01/2017 07:50

I bumped the thread rather than start a new one as there were some good recommendations on it.
I'm going to get the Making it big as that sounds like some light reading. I think I might have already read it years ago but seem to remember enjoying it.

Chicagosue · 11/01/2019 18:59

THE DIETER is funny and true all at the same time. The main character starts at 103 pounds when the book opens and just keeps adding pounds. Her experiences take you through scenes with all the major weight loss programs.

HelloViroids · 12/01/2019 16:54

There’s a few by Jennifer Weiner, whose writing is beautiful - Good in Bed and also Best Friends Forever. I liked Jemima J, But was very young when I first read it.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page