“”

Women's Health, Your Way

November 07, 2025

Ask & Search With Clara

Welcome to a new standard for women’s health answers.

GIRLHOOD / The Books That Take Us Back

The Books That Take Us Back

November 6, 2025
The Books That Take Us Back

“You know how you can remember exactly when and where you read certain books? A great novel, a truly great one, not only captures a particular fictional experience, it alters and intensifies the way you experience your own life while you’re reading it. And it preserves it, like a time capsule.” ~Lily King, Heart the Lover

If you’re new here, you may not know that I spent nearly a decade working in book publishing at Penguin Random House. And while I absolutely love what I do now (or else I wouldn’t be here, writing this), I’ll admit: if I weren’t running Rescripted, I’d probably still be there, talking books, trading early galleys over coffee, and selling stories that linger long after the cover is closed.

This past weekend, I finished Heart the Lover, and it was the first time in a while that a book truly captivated me — that unputdownable kind of read that swallows whole afternoons. I was instantly transported back to my early twenties, when my relationship at the time felt like the only thing that mattered.

Reading it felt like walking down memory lanes I didn’t know were still paved. The narrator (unnamed until the end) meets two brilliant classmates, Sam and Yash, in her senior year of college. They call her “Jordan,” invite her into their electric world of late-night card games and 17th-century lit debates, and the triangle ignites.

What stayed with me was how our younger selves make decisions that ripple across decades. Jordan dates Sam but falls for Yash; years pass, she becomes a writer and a mother, and the past comes roaring back. The heartbreak, the longing, the what-ifs, they all remind us that who we were quietly shapes who we become. 

The Guardian called the novel “a long, tender farewell to youth,” and I can’t think of a better description. Because that’s the thing about getting older: our choices shape our fate, yes, but two things can be true at once. We can move forward and still feel the tug of the selves we used to be.


More from GIRLHOOD

When Skin Trends Go Too Far

November 5, 2025

This week, the FDA issued a safety alert that made me pause mid-scroll. Radiofrequency (RF) microneedling devices — tiny needles that deliver heat under the skin to “tighten” or “rejuvenate”... Read more

Friendship Is a Rising Tide

November 4, 2025

"A rising tide lifts all boats." Someone said that to me in the early days of Rescripted, and it stuck. Something to know about me: I’m a girl’s girl to... Read more
Yesterday, one of my colleagues (squarely on the cusp of Gen Z and Millennial, so I took it with a grain of salt) recommended a "personal growth" podcast to me.... Read more
I’ve had PCOS for as long as I can remember. My periods have never been regular — sometimes showing up after 60 days, sometimes not at all — and acne... Read more
This week, I went on my first business trip in two years (I was pregnant and had a baby, so there’s that). Historically, I’ve been one of those type B... Read more
At the ASRM fertility conference this week, my cofounder Abby and I were talking with our friend Dr. Carmen Messerlian, a Harvard-trained reproductive epidemiologist. The conversation started the usual way... Read more
I was at my kids’ soccer practice the other day when another mom asked what I do for a living. As soon as I said “women’s health,” she leaned in... Read more
I read the Vogue article about celebrities and microdosing GLP-1 medications (Ozempic, Zepbound, Mounjaro) and immediately flashed back to my diet-culture days. Growing up in the ’90s and early 2000s, I... Read more
Anyone who knows me knows I am low-maintenance when it comes to beauty and personal care products. My holy grail lineup? The CeraVe Hydrating Facial Cleanser (yasss, queen) and EltaMD's... Read more
When I went through IVF for the first time in 2018, it felt like sneaking into a club no one wanted to admit existed. Every appointment was a quiet act... Read more