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Pissed Off: On Women and Anger
 
 
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Pissed Off: On Women and Anger [Paperback]

Spike Gillespie (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 20, 2006
Often accused of being overly emotional and mad, Spike Gillespie offers up a lifetime's worth of anger that all women can relate to. Two parts anger and one part forgiveness, Pissed Off is a book about Gillespie's lifetime of anger and the inevitable fallouts that ensued, which she uses, along with other women's stories, to describe the positive and negative influences of anger in women's lives. Gillespie's portraits depict anger that stems from interpersonal relationships toward coworkers, offspring, parents, and strangers. Her stories and observations are simultaneously funny and wrenching, providing the backdrop for universal experiences that range from irritation to fury.

Gillespie is opposed to the notion that women must quell their anger rather than examine it. Her message is that anger is a destructive force for those who allow it to consume them, but that anger can also be a useful catalyst. Her observations of forgiveness are about releasing that anger when its usefulness has faded, finding balance, and unlearning habitual anger. She has learned that one cannot simultaneously prevent and prepare for war, and that finding balance and happiness is about forgiving others their transgressions and making space to move on.

Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this book with The Anger Workbook for Women: How to Keep Your Anger from Undermining Your Self-Esteem, Your Emotional Balance, and Your Relationships (New Harbinger Self-Help Workbook) $14.93

Pissed Off: On Women and Anger + The Anger Workbook for Women: How to Keep Your Anger from Undermining Your Self-Esteem, Your Emotional Balance, and Your Relationships (New Harbinger Self-Help Workbook)

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. This is a curious hybrid: it's Gillespie's first-person account, but it also includes short essays by other writers about their experiences with rage and powerlessness. Memoirist Gillespie (All the Wrong Men and One Perfect Boy) writes as a single mother living in Austin, Tex., a former alcoholic and a woman who has been through the dating mill. She is also the estranged daughter of a furious Irish-American father, and this sense of alienation from her family of origin permeates the book. Although it initially feels like a collection of random portraits of people who have earned Gillespie's ire—men, professional colleagues, faithless friends—as the layers of experience and memories pile up, Gillespie paints an engrossing picture of women's rage, which, she says, often stems from powerlessness and fear. Her honesty about holding grudges is appealing: "I let my hatred for him fester," she confesses of a loathsome ex-boyfriend. Yet in describing her own foolish decisions during the relationship, she allows us to see how she enabled and even encouraged her lover's bad behavior. Every outrageous anecdote has a double-edged perspective that transcends self-pity, and as Gillespie progresses to talking about the nature of forgiveness and her increasingly calmer approach to life, we are rooting for her. (May)
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Product Details

  • Paperback: 225 pages
  • Publisher: Seal Press (April 20, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1580051626
  • ISBN-13: 978-1580051620
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5.5 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #505,238 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Women Unite!, August 7, 2006
This review is from: Pissed Off: On Women and Anger (Paperback)
An enjoyable read; I couldn't put it down last night! She gives some background on her dysfunctional family dynamics, being accused of over-sensitivity, her difficulties with professional jealousy, and relationship problems and interpolates her essays with other women's writings on anger, forgiveness, and other related emotions. Talks about her substance abuse and social pressure to stifle her negative feelings. Although the reader's anger may have different sources, she'll find much she can relate to in this great little book. The book has funny as well as belligerent parts; and she doesn't preach or turn into a counselor.

A great quote quoted by Gillespie, (I'm paraphrasing): "A dysfunctional family is any family with more than one person."

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Manual for Mellowing, October 11, 2006
This review is from: Pissed Off: On Women and Anger (Paperback)

If you grew up with an angry parent, this book will sound familiar. You may see yourself between the lines if you've run away from a discordant home. Anger is not only our power, but also our teacher, and the author has been on intimate terms with her subject for a very long time.

Pissed Off is the third book of Spike Gillespie, whose rage-aholic father set her up for a fiery life with All the Wrong Men (her first book). Although Pissed Off is the author's memoir, short essays are interspersed throughout it from other women writers who diversify the author's powerlessness and fear by their own stories. The book is divided into three sections--Part I, where anger begins, Part II, where anger festers, and Part III, where anger yields to forgiveness. Spike leads us through road rage, spiteful colleagues, manipulative bosses, cruel in-laws, and an addicted spouse on her way to meeting forgiveness. With clarity and directness, we travel from New Jersey to Texas where the author realizes that her father's anger is still running her life, even as he is slipping into Alzheimer's. "I don't know what made [my father] so angry so long ago, but I'm done letting his anger rule my life--and I feel bad for him whatever it was that took him down..." The author, who is known for her bumper stickers, might print "mellow with age instead of rage" as this book's adage. We would do well to read it and heed it.
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I have written three novels in my life, none of which was ever published traditionally (although I did publish one online). Read the first page
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