<b>A <i>Booklist</i> Top 10 Science & Health Book of the Year</b> <p/>Breast-cancer patients will fall in love with Sikka...a funny, chatty, and honest storyteller....Just what the doctor ordered.<i>- <b>Booklist </b></i><b>(starred)</b> <p/>[Sikka's] charming alphabetic compilation...is a warm and fuzzy friend to keep close during the cancer journey. 'B' is for buying multiple copies. <b><i>- Library Journal </i>(starred) <p/></b>Sikka's voice is calm and earnest, poetic and descriptive, and occasionally even uplifting. Those who find cancer in their lives, whether first-hand or through a friend or family member, will appreciate the raw but supportive voice that emerges here.<b><i>- Publishers Weekly<br></i></b><br>Sometimes humorous, always honest and straightforward, this little book offers the perfect combination of practical advice and personal musings to help any woman, her family and her friends handle the complicated road through Cancerland.<b><i>- Kirkus Reviews<br></i></b><br><i>A Breast Cancer Alphabet</i> is like having a chat with someone who's walked the walk and has a thing or two to share with you about it which just might make your walk a bit less scary.<b><i>- Nancy's Point</i></b> <p/>Thank goodness for Madhulika Sikka! She is neither a warrior nor a hero. Her breast cancer made her neither sexy nor spiritually enlightened. She is simply a real woman with a real illness who tells it true: with grief, anger, wit and great authenticity. <b>- Peggy Orenstein, author of <i>Cinderella Ate My Daughter: Dispatches From the Front Lines of the New Girlie-Girl Culture<br></i></b><br><i>"A Breast Cancer Alphabet</i> is a brisk, user-friendly ABC of dealing with the disaster of cancer and how to get through it with a smile. It is a remarkably insightful and sensitive guide to making the best of the worst, all delivered with Madhulika's wit and vital energy." <i><b>-</b> </i><b>Tina Brown, former editor of <i>Vanity Fair</i>, the <i>New Yorker</i>, and the <i>Daily Beast</i></b> <p/>Madhulika Sikka is the honest-talking-advice-giving-big sister-sage-support group that every girl needs to help navigate the world of 'cancerland'. <i>A Breast Cancer Alphabet</i> is the definitive how-to go-to book. <b>- Marisa Acocella Marchetto, author of <i>Cancer Vixen <p/></i></b>Madhulika Sikka's <i>A Breast Cancer Alphabet</i> is brilliantly researched, smart, and personal - an unvarnished primer of what every woman needs to know about the diagnosis, treatment, and consequences of living with breast cancer. Her practical advice from A to Z is exactly what I wish I'd known when I was first diagnosed. With the trained eye and ear of a top-flight journalist, she demystifies the disease, telling you everything you forgot to ask that no one else will share. Reading it will help you recognize, and even laugh, at your worst fears. B is for Brava, Madhulika - for your honesty and creativity in guiding us on a journey none of us chose to take. It is a lot easier when you have <i>A Breast Cancer Alphabet</i> at your side. <b>- Andrea Mitchell, </b> <b>NBC News Chief Foreign Affairs Correspondent<br></b><br>This useful and often amusing little book should be the first present you give someone who's been diagnosed with breast cancer. Its practicality extends from sound advice ("drugs are your friends") to the inclusion of pages for notes at the end. By presenting her own experience in a wry and matter-of-fact manner, Madhulika Sikka removes taboos in talking about sex, or looks or the desire on some days to just quit soldiering on through the whole deal. It won't make having breast cancer easier but it will make the dread disease and its treatments less mysterious. That's a gift indeed. <b>- Cokie Roberts, journalist and author of <i>We Are Our Mothers' Daughters <p/></i></b>Breast cancer is a topic no woman wants to learn about first-hand. But should it happen to you, Madhulika Sikka's <i>A Breast Cancer Alphabet</i> is an ideal primer for before, during and after the experience. Offering the kind of real-world advice that can only come from someone who's lived to tell the tale, Sikka's book is required reading for anyone in search of a book that will bring you up to speed quickly, gently, and with genuine empathy.<b>- Micki Myers, author of <i>It's Probably Nothing...<br></i></b><br>'T' should be 'Thank you, Madhulika, ' for writing a witty, practical and honest book. Too many cancer books out there gloss over the uncomfortable realities of living with a life-threatening illness. <i>A Breast Cancer Alphabet</i> is a must-have for women with cancer. <b>- Suleika Jaouad, <i>New York Times </i>columnist</b>
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