Press Reviews
Dr Rachel Bryant-Waugh, Great Ormond Street Hospital
Compact, compelling and courageous, Bite Sized is a brave and honest account of a mother's experience of her daughter's anorexia. It should be recommended reading for all health care professionals.
From the foreword by Philip Gross, author of The Wasting Game
To speak with clarity and sensitivity, in a language so free of the too-available response of guilt or blame, is in itself a kind of care.
Susan Ringwood, Chief Executive of Beat
A powerful insight into the impact that an eating disorder can have on the whole family.
Erica Husain, Parent
Bite Sized speaks to me directly, as I imagine it will to any parent who has witnessed the horror of anorexia. A book to be shared with anyone who knows what it is to care.
Katie Green, author of Lighter Than My Shadow
Bite Sized is a brave and searing account from a mother navigating her daughter's anorexia... honest and moving, not shying away from how painful it is, Bite Sized nonetheless offers hope and a side of the story that needs to be heard.
Dr Clare Short, Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist
A generous gift for healthcare professionals, carers, and all who live with challenges of mental and physical conditions - or simply with the ups and downs of being human.
Journal of Eating Disorders, 2015
Bite Sized is by turns deeply personal, disturbing and ultimately uplifting ... Fiona Hamilton has captured the very essence of a parent's experience of having a child with an eating disorder and distilled it into an extraordinarily powerful account. She has taken her hard won insights and through them illustrated the impact on a family when a loved one develops this most challenging of conditions: anorexia nervosa.
Bristol University Psychiatric Society, 2015
It's a short book. Most of the pages have only a few lines on them, a few thoughts, with little punctuation. However, the language, though sparse, is beautifully and carefully written in a mix of poetry and prose. I personally feel that a journey through the experience of something so difficult to talk about should not be over-complicated by too much unnecessary detail, and for this writing style, it is the space between the sentences that is important and provokes reflection. As a student, one of the most important messages is that knowing how to 'fix' or treat someone is not always possible, and that being honest with the family is crucial in maintaining a long-term therapeutic relationship.