“Moran’s writing sparkles with wit and warmth. Like the confidences of your smartest friend”
Simon Pegg
“I adore, admire and – more – am addicted to Caitin Moran’s writing”
Nigella Lawson
“Spectacular! Very, very funny, moving and revealing”
Jonathan Ross
“I have been waiting for this book my whole life ”
Claudia Winkleman
“Ever since I was eighteen I’ve wanted to be as cool as Caitlin Moran. Now this book has shown me how. Witty, wise and wonderful, this is an indispensable guide to Ladyhood. I laughed. I cried. I found out what my favourite writer calls her vagina ”
Lauren Laverne
“She is a genuinely original talent” – Germaine Greer, Book of the Week, The Times
“This might just be the funniest intelligent book ever written .. Moran’s work packs a feminist punch in a way that Germaine Greer and an entire army of female eunuchs could never do, because she writes about things we’ve all done, thought, and said – but not quite so eloquently…the book everyone will be talking about” -Stylist
“The book EVERY woman should read” – Grazia
“Hilarious” – Heat
“Very, very funny…however, if you are female and particularly if you are a female under the age of 30, then, tucked around the jokes, Moran has provided you with a short, sharp, feminist manifesto.” – Miranda Sawyer, The Observer
“A must read for all humans, this” – David Sexton, Evening Standard
“Addictive stuff and extremely funny” – Daisy Goodwin, Sunday Times
“I loved How to be a Woman so much that, during the two days it took me to read, I couldn’t bear to be parted from it; like a best friend you can’t stop gossiping with.” – Sunday Express
“It would almost be unkind to call this an important book, because what it mostly is is engaging, brave and consistently, cleverly naughtily funny, but actually it is important that we talk about this stuff” – Katy Guest, Independent on Sunday
“Britain’s funniest writer” – Time Out
“I devoured How to Be A Woman in one sitting…this is the book that frustrated boyfriends have wanted someone…to write for decades” Actor Dan Stevens, The Times
“Anarchic, bonkers 21st century woman’s lib with laughs” Viv Groskop, Red
“Humour and commons sense make Moran’s redefining of what it means to be a feminist as readable as it is essential” – Alex Heminsley, Elle
“Moran is a clever, cheery companionable voice of sanity and How to Be A Woman is a laugh-aloud call to arms” – Metro
“Addressing life’s important questions including whether or not men really hate us, this book will provide endless dinner-party chat” – Marie Claire
“This brilliantly argued and urgently needed book – highly comic and deadly serious – is precisely what feminism has been waiting for” – Times Literary Supplement
“Funniest book of the year” – Evening Standard
“This is self deprecation and witty reflection at its finest” – The List
“Her life will have you snorting with recognition and questioning your credentials as a feminist. This is a must-read” – Glamour
“Laugh-out-loud funny, warm, humane and brilliantly written, Moran’s book charts a new path for feminism” – Mary Ann Sieghart, The Independent
“A sharply funny and incisive rallying cry for feminism, defining the myriad challenges of 21st century womanhood” – Sunday Express
“Addressing life’s important questions including whether of not men really hate us, this book will provide endless dinner-party chat. Join the debate” – Marie Claire
“A huge, provocative, hilarious and powerful hoot” – Ceri Radford, Daily Telegraph
“One of the must-reads of the summer” – Charlotte Higgins, The Guardian
“Proper, on the tube, stare-garnering, red-faced HONKING. On our own, in public. It’s a carriage clearer” – Gay Times
“Both hilarious and moving, should be placed in all teenage girls’ bedrooms, in the same way they leave the Bible in hotel rooms” – Rosamund Urwin, Evening Standard, Books of the Year
“The publishing sensation of 2011” – Radio Times
“Underneath beautiful, aching and hilarious memories of family life, it’s a true polemic” – Russell T Davies, The Observer Books of the Year
“A candid, hilarious and reassuring look at the inner world of women we wish every man would read. It’s the feminist handbook: honest enough to show women as they really are, without subscribing to stereotypes” – Cosmopolitan