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This is how I know I'm reading an incredible book All of the day's obligations — making my bed, walking to the subway, cooking dinner — become obstacles that stand between me and the story's conclusion. With hysterical insight, unabashed sexuality, and unprecedented levels of raw, honest pain, Unwifeable is a blisteringly candid” (Sarah Hepola, New York Times bestselling author of Blackout) book that you can't help but respond and relate to—perfect for fans of Amy Schumer and Chelsea Handler.

It made me want to spend even more time hearing Mandy muse on life. There is brutal honesty and reflection in here, and therein lies the best Auto-Bio's There were times when I was reading this book that I was thinking about this review score. Start reading Unwifeable: A Memoir on your Kindle in under a minute.

180 Mandy—If your life started out in a nice safe place but you ended up in a totally opposite situation, you have found your cosmic twin dating with the author. Without giving too much away, the book cover describes the memoir: Unwifeable is a New York fairytale brought to life - Sex and the City on acid.

From the popular, "fresh, funny, and highly readable" ( Bustle ) dating columnist for New York magazine and the New York Post comes a whirlwind memoir recounting countless failed romances and blackout nights, told with Mandy Stadtmiller's unflinching candor and brilliant wit.

Unwifeable is a New York fairytale brought to life- Sex and the City on acid. Stadtmiller gives an honest — sometimes searingly so — account of her journey through this time, and the radical work and self-love required to come out the other side. Why she wrote a gossip and dating column for The New York Post and Xo Jane.

Basically, murder, sex and money,” Donna Garban of Little City Books in Hoboken told Moneyish. It's a story about the things that are closest to the heart of a family, and how a family deals with tragedy as both independent people and a collective unit. Like a real-life Carrie Bradshaw” (so called by Jenny McCarthy), she proceeded to chronicle her fearless attempts for nearly a decade in the Post, New York magazine, and xoJane.

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