The Best Is Yet To Come*

*And All The Things I've Learned So Far During This Crazy Life

Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book The Best Is Yet To Come* by Harriet Diamond, Shipnuck, Ink
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Harriet Diamond ISBN: 9780692977590
Publisher: Shipnuck, Ink Publication: March 27, 2018
Imprint: Shipnuck, Ink Language: English
Author: Harriet Diamond
ISBN: 9780692977590
Publisher: Shipnuck, Ink
Publication: March 27, 2018
Imprint: Shipnuck, Ink
Language: English

Harriet Diamond has had a life like no other. Born in Brooklyn in 1932, her early years classic old-time New York. Harriet lived in a cloistered world, defined by her Jewishness. Then her family moved to sun-splashed Los Angeles and she fell in with the prettiest, WASPiest girls in school. The search for an authentic identity has been an enduring challenge for a chameleon who can light up any room with her spunk and style but who has spent most of her life trying to feel comfortable in her own skin.

Harriet’s journey is quintessentially American: she was a dutiful 1950s housewife, a ‘70s swinger and high-rolling hedonist in the ‘80s. She has lived as a single mom just scraping by and a pampered socialite luxuriating on the sands of Malibu. The only constants have been her boundless optimism and a refusal to ever act her age.

Now 85—but still dressing like she’s 25—Harriet looks back at her rollercoaster life in this bawdy, bittersweet memoir. Along the way she dispenses plenty of hard-earned wisdom about love, sex, marriage, money, aging and so much more. Readers will discover what has long been felt by her vast array of friends: to know Harriet is to be utterly charmed by her.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Harriet Diamond has had a life like no other. Born in Brooklyn in 1932, her early years classic old-time New York. Harriet lived in a cloistered world, defined by her Jewishness. Then her family moved to sun-splashed Los Angeles and she fell in with the prettiest, WASPiest girls in school. The search for an authentic identity has been an enduring challenge for a chameleon who can light up any room with her spunk and style but who has spent most of her life trying to feel comfortable in her own skin.

Harriet’s journey is quintessentially American: she was a dutiful 1950s housewife, a ‘70s swinger and high-rolling hedonist in the ‘80s. She has lived as a single mom just scraping by and a pampered socialite luxuriating on the sands of Malibu. The only constants have been her boundless optimism and a refusal to ever act her age.

Now 85—but still dressing like she’s 25—Harriet looks back at her rollercoaster life in this bawdy, bittersweet memoir. Along the way she dispenses plenty of hard-earned wisdom about love, sex, marriage, money, aging and so much more. Readers will discover what has long been felt by her vast array of friends: to know Harriet is to be utterly charmed by her.

More books from Biography & Memoir

Cover of the book David Letterman: Late Show by Harriet Diamond
Cover of the book A Simple Christmas by Harriet Diamond
Cover of the book Real Wild Child by Harriet Diamond
Cover of the book East Hill Farm by Harriet Diamond
Cover of the book Face Value by Harriet Diamond
Cover of the book The Will To Live On by Harriet Diamond
Cover of the book Across a Sea of Troubles: A memoir of illness, loss and recovery by Harriet Diamond
Cover of the book El Director by Harriet Diamond
Cover of the book Life on the Mississippi by Harriet Diamond
Cover of the book The Singing Masters by Harriet Diamond
Cover of the book Angel in a Thorn Bush by Harriet Diamond
Cover of the book Battalion by Harriet Diamond
Cover of the book Trail of Pebbles by Harriet Diamond
Cover of the book Tich by Harriet Diamond
Cover of the book It Gets Better by Harriet Diamond
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy