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Milk Fed

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Milk Fed

By: Melissa Broder
Narrated by: Melissa Broder
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Bloomsbury presents Milk Fed written and read by Melissa Broder.

A scathingly funny, wildly erotic and fiercely imaginative story about food, sex and god from the Women's Prize longlisted author of The Pisces

A STYLIST, INDEPENDENT, THE WEEK AND RED HIGHLIGHT FOR 2021

'Sexy and fun and a little weird ... This riot of carnal pleasure will make you laugh as well as gasp' The Times

'A revelation ... Melissa Broder has produced one of the strangest and sexiest novels of the new year ... Exhilarating' Entertainment Weekly

'A luscious, heartbreaking story of self-discovery through the relentless pursuit of desire. I couldn’t get enough of this devastating and extremely sexy book' Carmen Maria Machado, author of Her Body and Other Parties

Rachel is twenty-four, a lapsed Jew who has made calorie restriction her religion. By day, she maintains an illusion of control by way of obsessive food rituals. At night, she pedals nowhere on the elliptical machine.

Then Rachel meets Miriam, a young Orthodox Jewish woman intent upon feeding her. Rachel is suddenly and powerfully entranced by Miriam – by her sundaes and her body, her faith and her family – and as the two grow closer, Rachel embarks on a journey marked by mirrors, mysticism, mothers, milk, and honey.

Pairing superlative emotional insight with unabashed vivid fantasy, Melissa Broder tells a tale of appetites: of physical hunger, of sexual desire, of spiritual longing. Milk Fed is a tender and riotously funny meditation on love, certitude, and the question of what we are all being fed, from one of our major writers on the psyche – both sacred and profane.©2021 Melissa Broder
Fiction Other Religions, Practices & Sacred Texts Psychology Psychology & Mental Health Spirituality Women's Fiction Comedy
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Critic reviews

Every encounter is written with sumptuous detail, from glutting on nachos to intimate sex scenes (real and imagined), making for a simultaneously uncomfortable and revelatory read
Melissa Broder’s exhilarating, bleakly funny Milk Fed is another study of female appetite … The most eroticised, tender and romanticised writing in this singular novel is of food’
Milk Fed is a rich, sensual comedy about the joys rather than the privations of the flesh, and with a large number of extremely filthy sex scenes… A funny, sexy, romance about transgressive desire and whipped cream
Melissa Border's imagination, which gave us the story of a woman falling in love with a merman in The Pisces, returns with another wonderfully strange story
[An] imaginative story about food, sex and God (yes, all three of those)
Weird, funny and filthy … Milk, motherhood, food, faith, sex and desire are all tangled in a mess of archetypes, delivered with a sarky millennial spin. Milk Fed will be too much for some – too list-y, too vulgar, too solipsistic – but others will delight in its excesses
Deeply hilarious and embarrassingly relatable (Samantha Irby, author of 'Wow, No Thank You')
Milk Fed hits that sweet spot where pleasure and tension intersect, where the sumptuous exploration of sexuality and spirit meets the rigidities of culture and society. Strange and surreal, Broder's writing is a marvel of wit, heart, and thoughtful curiosity about the body and mind and how these things can overflow their boundaries to become utterly new (Alexandra Kleeman, author of 'You Too Could Have a Body Like Mine')
Sin as self-discovery, appetite as insight, transgression as transformation, Milk Fed is at once hilarious and heartbreaking; watching Broder's characters try to love themselves might just make you love yourself.... or at least hate yourself a little less (Shalom Auslander, author of 'Mother for Dinner')
Smart, funny, sexy, and hard to put down. In this fast-moving, deeply compelling novel, Melissa Broder combines an unexpected (and very hot) love story with a sharp-edged examination of body image, religion, and cultural identity (Tom Perrotta, author of 'Mrs. Fletcher')
Melissa Broder goes there and goes there again. Milk Fed is a hilarious and painfully accurate excavation of the female self-gaze, an erotic romp, a hyper witty satire of certain corridors of contemporary American culture and an unstoppable, wickedly seductive read (Dana Spiotta)
Physical hunger, sexual desire and spiritual longing merge in Broder’s funny meditation on appetites
All stars
Most relevant
An honest and slightly perverse (in a good way) telling of the experience of being a woman - every nook and cranny. Couldn’t put it down, I thought about Rachael every moment of my day between reading.

Doesn’t deserve the mixed reviews

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Sometimes I hated it, sometimes I loved it- but when it finished I was glad I’d invested the time to go on this wild ride!!
It was slow to start a little, but then it got really tactile & relatable & weird and I kind of loved it.
Main downside was having the author narrate, she can write but she cannot read bless her - it was a gcse drama piece, like she’d never even heard the material before!

A wild ride

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I dove into this book without really knowing what I was getting into and ended up being triggered by pretty much everything. It covers eating disorders, toxic family dynamics, and homophobia. What bothered me the most, though, was how much the main character seeks approval from others, constantly checking if people approve of her actions, even when it really should only matter to her. Despite this, it’s well-written and relatable. It hit close to home for me, reminding me of a version of myself I’ve moved past.

Look at the trigger warnings before reading

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I really enjoyed this book. The main characters monologue is modern and relatable, it definitely deals with some intense themes but well written and with understanding.

unusual and relatable

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If you haven’t read this, why? It’s brilliant, heart clenching. Would that I could listen again with new ears.

Learnt more from this story than all of non-fiction

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