'When I see her, my first emotion is anger, not sorrow, or the fear I raced here with that I would be too late.'
When Carol Lee's cherished god-daughter Rose descended into a long and frightening battle with Anorexia, Carol found herself at a loss to know quite what to do. Faced with a confusing assortment of perspectives, theories and treatments from the medical and psychiatric professions, there seemed to be little agreement regarding this perplexing, voracious and sometimes fatal illness.
This is the true story of Carol's relationship with Rose, the girl who "adopted me in a London pub when she two and three quarters". Carol tells of her quest to understand and help Rose, weaving back and forth in time creating a picture of Rose's childhood and describing her long battle with anorexia; her time spent in a secure unit, the secrecy and fury that forever lurked beneath the fragile surface and the infuriating, heartbreaking but ultimately life-saving relationship that they share.
Now, fully recovered, we learn through the entries of her diaries and in the book's afterword how Rose struggled to escape from her dangerous, extraordinary "dark romance" with anorexia and how it was the stories and words that were fed to her that helped her to slowly become well again.