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All in a Lifetime: An Autobiography

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She is everyone's favorite sex therapist; a four-foot-seven dynamo who answers the most intimate questions with disarming candor and heartening warmth. Yet few really know the real Dr. Ruth-her loves, her losses, and the irrepressible spirit that has helped her through it all-until now. Meet the child orphaned by the Holocaust, the Israeli soldier wounded on her 20th birthday, and the extraordinary woman who has called five countries home. ALL IN A LIFETIME is the revealing autobiography of a fighter who has survived heartache with her spirit intact, including the shattering loss of her husband, and how she's learned to thrive.

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First published November 10, 1987

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About the author

Ruth Westheimer

68 books138 followers
Karola Ruth Westheimer, better known as Dr. Ruth, was a German-American sex therapist, talk show host, author, professor, and Holocaust survivor.
Westheimer was born in Germany to a Jewish family. As the Nazis came to power, her parents sent the ten-year-old girl to a school in Switzerland for safety, remaining behind themselves because of her elderly grandmother. They were both subsequently sent to concentration camps by the Gestapo, where they were killed. After World War II ended, she immigrated to British-controlled Mandatory Palestine. Despite being only 4 feet 7 inches (1.39 m) tall and 17 years of age, she joined the Haganah, and was trained as a sniper, but never saw combat. On her 20th birthday, Westheimer was seriously wounded in action by an exploding shell during a mortar fire attack on Jerusalem during the 1947–1949 Palestine war, and almost lost both of her feet. Moving to Paris, France two years later, she studied psychology at the Sorbonne. Immigrating to the United States in 1956, she worked as a maid to put herself through graduate school, earned an M.A. degree in sociology from The New School in 1959, and earned a doctorate at 42 years of age from Teachers College, Columbia University, in 1970. Over the next decade, she taught at a number of universities, and had a private sex therapy practice.
Westheimer's media career began in 1980 with the radio call-in show Sexually Speaking, which continued until 1990. In 1983 it was the top-rated radio show in the area, in the country's largest radio market. She then launched a television show, The Dr. Ruth Show, which by 1985 attracted 2 million viewers a week. She became known for giving serious advice while being candid, but also warm, cheerful, funny, and respectful, and for her tag phrase: "Get some". In 1984 The New York Times noted that she had risen "from obscurity to almost instant stardom." She hosted several series on the Lifetime Channel and other cable television networks from 1984 to 1993. She became a household name and major cultural figure, appeared on several network TV shows, co-starred in a movie with Gérard Depardieu, appeared on the cover of People, sang on a Tom Chapin album, appeared in several commercials, and hosted Playboy videos. She is the author of 45 books on sex and sexuality.
The one-woman 2013 play Becoming Dr. Ruth, written by Mark St. Germain, is about her life, as is the 2019 documentary, Ask Dr. Ruth, directed by Ryan White. Westheimer had been inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame, and awarded the Magnus Hirschfeld Medal, the Ellis Island Medal of Honor, the Leo Baeck Medal, the Planned Parenthood Margaret Sanger Award, and the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany.

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Elliot Ratzman.
559 reviews84 followers
July 22, 2011
“Clearly one of the benefits of becoming Dr Ruth is a significant increase in my Chutzpah.” Written at the height of her radio and cable shows, we read Ruth at her busiest. Her first fifty years are extraordinary: saved by the Kindertransport she spends the war with other orphans in Switzerland, makes her way to an austere kibbutz in Palestine, learns to work a machine gun in the Zionist army, is injured in the 1948 War, then through luck and spunk studies psychology and sociology at the Sorbonne and the New School. After a promising but truncated teaching career at CUNY (budget cuts force her out) she happens into a late night radio sex advice segment, which, as captive audiences listens to on car radios returning from the Hamptons, catapults her—in the early 80s—to fame and fortune. The memoir, uneven and polite, is meant for a popular audience and is weighed down by her banal, youthful diary. Still her charm, humor and wise counsel contrast with today’s bullying advice celebrities.
1 review
January 1, 2022
Decent autobiography. Would have liked to hear more about her work as the book focused mostly on her youth and hound adulthood
1 review
December 28, 2023
I've read this a few times and enjoy every time. It is an easy read and shares interesting stories of her younger years.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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