Bald: How I Slowly Learned to Not Hate Having No Hair (And You Can Too)
By (Author) Stuart Heritage
Profile Books Ltd
Profile Books Ltd
23rd July 2024
25th April 2024
Main
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Mens health
Coping with / advice about body image issues
Humour
362.196546
Hardback
192
Width 116mm, Height 182mm, Spine 24mm
207g
Nobody chooses to be bald. Nobody wants to look into the mirror and be confronted with an absence. Nobody gains any comfort from having a slightly better idea of what their skull looks like.
Stuart Heritage has been bald for two years. But before he accepted the inevitable, he spent a number of years ineptly trying to conceal this fact with an array of expensive treatments and terrible haircuts. Can a man go bald with dignity Maybe. But can a man go bald with more dignity than Stuart Heritage Oh good god yes, and this book is his attempt to make that happen for you.
Part-memoir-part-manual, Stuart brings us a self-deprecating, funny and genuinely helpful guide to being bald: what really happens, why it matters and how to feel much less crap about it.
'Stuart's head is made for baldness' - Larry David
'Speaking as a man who is getting too rapidly acquainted with the contours of my own skull, this book was a genuine tonic. And a very funny read.' - Nathan Filer, author of 'This Book Will Change Your Mind About Mental Health'
'Very very funny [and] LOL-packed while also quite poignant and weird ... all things I like a lot in a book' - Jessica Dettmann, author of 'How to Be Second Best'
'I love Stuart's constantly visible skull' - Robyn Wilder, author (and Stuart's wife)
'Praise for Bedtime Stories for Worried Liberals' - :
Stuart Heritage is a writer and columnist for the Guardian, and has also written for Vanity Fair, Esquire, The Times, Men's Health, Elle, Cosmopolitan, Red, Marie Clare and the NME. He has also written for television, and is the author of several books, including Bedtime Stories for Worried Liberals and Don't be a Dick, Pete.
For two years running he was named as one of the 50 most influential emerging figures in the British media by Independent, an honour that has singularly failed to manifest itself into anything even slightly meaningful. He is also bald, as you may have deduced by now.