Only Say Good Things: Surviving Playboy and finding myself

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Description

THE NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER’A fascinating demythologising of the Playboy brand and Hefner himself’ – Pandora Sykes’A raw, honest unveiling of the misogyny and darkness of the Playboy Mansion. . . I almost feel compelled to send a copy to every young woman who still believes the legacy of Playboy holds some glamour or promise’ – Ellie FlynnOne of Stylist’s ‘best non-fiction for 2024’One of the Independent’s 2024 ‘must-reads’One of The Sunday Times ‘most exciting memoirs’ for 2024’I was 21 years old when I found myself on the front stoop of the Playboy Mansion. I want to tell the real story of my time there – the good and the bad, the dark and the light.’In 2008 the Playboy mansion became Crystal Harris’s sanctuary – a shimmering vestige of opportunity. Within months she had ascended its hierarchy to become Hugh Hefner’s top girlfriend. But her new home came at a cost. Forced to follow strict rules that governed everything from her appearance to behaviour, she began to lose her identity. By the time she married Hef in 2012, the mansion had become her prison.Having made a promise to Only Say Good Things, for years Crystal suppressed the truth of what really happened behind the mansion’s closed doors. Now, in this raw and honest memoir, she’s finally ready to expose it all.Laying bare the devastating impact that a culture of relentless objectification and misogyny had on her health, Crystal’s extraordinary story carries powerful lessons that are relevant to us all.

Additional information

Weight 0.327 kg
Dimensions 1.8 × 15.3 × 23.4 cm
by

Format

Paperback

Language

Pages

240

Publisher

Year Published

2024-1-25

Imprint

Publication City/Country

London, United Kingdom

ISBN 10

1529923727

About The Author

Crystal Hefner spent 10 years inside the Playboy mansion, a place that was both her sanctuary and prison. Following Hugh Hefner's death in 2017, she was left searching for home, belonging, and a sense of self; she now dedicates herself to sharing what she has learned about body image, objectification and beauty standards in the hopes of reaching other young women.

Review Quote

Lifts the lid on the bleak truth of the inside story of the Playboy empire

Other text

A fascinating demythologising of the Playboy brand and Hefner himself – who is revealed to be an agoraphobic megalomaniac incapable of real emotion.What drew so many women to him? And why did they stay? In this absorbing memoir, Crystal Hefner grapples with these questions and many more, with admirable candour