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Eating Pomegranates

Eating Pomegranates
A Memoir of Mothers, Daughters, and the BRCA Gene  
This edition: Hardcover, 272 pages
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An intensely powerful and moving memoir about genetics, mortality, family, femininity, and the author's battle with cancer

After the grief of losing her mother to cancer when Sarah Gabriel was a teenager, she had learned to appreciate "the charms of simple happiness." With a career as a journalist, a home in Oxford, England, a husband, and two young daughters, she was content. But then at age forty-four, she was diagnosed with breast cancer—the result of M18T, an inherited mutation on the BRCA1 gene that had taken the lives of her mother and countless female ancestors. Eating Pomegranates is Gabriel's candid and incredibly intimate story of being forced to acknowledge that while you can try to overcome the loss of a parent, you can never escape your genetic legacy.

Being diagnosed with the same disease that killed her mother compelled Gabriel to write this story. In her struggle for survival, she recounts the rigors of her treatments and considers the impact of a microscopic piece of DNA on generations of her family's dynamics. She also revisits her past in an effort to reclaim her identity and learn more about the mother who disappeared too early from her life. Beautiful and brutal, Eating Pomegranates—like the myth of Persephone and Demeter, which inspires the title—is about mothers and motherless daughters. It is about a woman so afraid of abandoning her children that she is hardly able to look at them, and about the history of breast cancer itself, from early radical surgeries to contemporary medicine.


Combining passion, humor, fierce intelligence, and clinical detail, Eating Pomegranates is an extraordinary book about an all-too-ordinary disease.


"Remarkable, uncompromising and full of intelligence and insight. Gabriel has done a great service in probing social attitudes and in describing the intricate, often unspoken negotiations between the sick and the well."
Hilary Mantel, Booker Prize-winning author of Wolf Hall
"Gabriel writes with stunning precision. Her fear and bravery is palpable."
Robin Romm, author of The Mercy Papers
"Vivid and tense, at once raw and stylish, Eating Pomegranates brings the reader very close--for some readers unbearably close--to reality . . . devastatingly intimate."
John Carey, author of What Good Are the Arts?
-- to reality . . . devastatingly intimate."
John Carey, author of What Good Are the Arts?
"A literary triumph." Library Journal (Starred Review)
"Gabriel shares an estimable gift for memoir and introspection in this forceful account... Raw grace is in evidence here as Gabriel lives to speak to realities to which all too many women can relate." Booklist (Starred Review)
"Irreverent and tremendously moving… Gabriel handles heartbreaking issues frankly and with grace in this vigorously composed memoir." Publishers Weekly
"Gabriel tells her story in a bell-clear voice... her fury at curcumstance is aching and voluminous." Kirkus Reviews
"In this fiercely emotional memoir, Gabriel blends the story of her personal medical odyssey with the history of the disease." MORE Magazine
"A very brave book. Gabriel is an astute writer with a keen eye for the telling detail." The Daily Mail (London)
"To say that Eating Pomegranates is beautifully written is to understate: it has a psalmic quality." The Independent (U.K.)
"A heartrending book... written in real time, with a tone that moves from anger and bitterness--at her illness, at her mother and her father--through to peaceful acceptance."
The Observer (London)
-- through to peaceful acceptance."
The Observer (London)
"With grace and equanimity, Gabriel exquisitely reveals how a disease can ravage families and force mothers and daughters to reevaluate their lives and question their futures."
-- Library Journal, Best Books of 2010
MORE, March 4, 2010
...it takes a revolving door of girlfriends for him to realize that art is no substitute for love. EATING POMEGRANATES by Sarah Gabriel (Scribner) At 42, British journalist Gabriel opted to have her healthy ovaries removed after learning that ...
The Independent, October 1, 2009
...Reviewed by Sarah Gabriel Close I first read this book in New York, when I was 34. I was given it by a friend and I remember being shocked just by the title ...