Cheryl Peck

Cheryl Peck’s Followers (9)

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Cheryl Peck


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Cheryl Peck lives with her cat, Babycakes, in Three Rivers, Michigan, where she rarely sits on lawn chairs. Fat Girls and Lawn Chairs was her first book. She printed the first edition through a friend's publishing and vermicomposting company (Flower Press) in August 2002, figuring that she could always use unsold copies for worm bedding. Her second book, Revenge of the Paste Eaters: Memoirs of a Mistfit was published in 2005.
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Average rating: 3.3 · 1,035 ratings · 174 reviews · 4 distinct worksSimilar authors
Fat Girls and Lawn Chairs

3.42 avg rating — 466 ratings — published 2002 — 9 editions
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Revenge of the Paste Eaters...

3.11 avg rating — 447 ratings — published 2005 — 9 editions
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Scoot Over, Skinny: The Fat...

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3.52 avg rating — 122 ratings — published 2005 — 3 editions
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Financing state highways: S...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings
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Quotes by Cheryl Peck  (?)
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“The woman who looks back at me from my bathroom mirror is sliding toward her mid-fifties. She'd better be careful- she's getting old.
I myself am about thirty. I've been thirty for about twenty-three years now.”
Cheryl Peck, Fat Girls and Lawn Chairs

“Girls don’t learn the difference between personal victory and team victory or personal loss and team loss. Girls learned that if you don’t do it yourself, it doesn’t get done. Girls were never asked to fight the war in Vietnam or any other war. But if they had been, girls would have won. Girls would have felt guilty for not winning it sooner, and girls would have restored all of the roads, rebuilt all of the bombed homes, adopted all of the orphans, established daycare centers, domestic violence shelters and homeless shelters, and girls would have processed endlessly about what we could have done to have prevented the war and what we still can do to prevent it from ever happening again. Because girls believe, in the end, everything that happens is our own personal fault.”
Cheryl Peck, Fat Girls and Lawn Chairs

“This is what happens when people like you get all carried away with follow-through: if you gardened like me and just bought a bunch of plants, brought them home and let them die you wouldn’t be in this kind of trouble.” “You don’t have any tomatoes,” she pointed out. Which is true enough, I suppose, but then—neither does she.”
Cheryl Peck, Fat Girls and Lawn Chairs



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