Cover art for 1001 Days
Published
Cornerstone Press, July 2025
ISBN
9781529928686
Format
Softcover, 288 pages
Dimensions
22.8cm × 15.2cm × 2.6cm

1001 Days How Our First Years Shape Our Lifelong Health

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Due July 8, 2025.
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Discover the shocking truth about how your pre-natal and early experiences continue to shape your body and health throughout adulthood

'Fascinating . . . an essential guide to some of the biggest and most compelling issues in healthcare and psychology.' PHILIPPA PERRY, author of The Book You Wish Your Parents Had Read

'A vital, riveting book that challenges established ways of thinking about health . . . I loved it.'JULIA SAMUEL, author of Grief Works

'Jaw-droppingly important.' STEVE BIDDULPH, author of Raising Boys and The Secret of Happy Children

'An extraordinary tour de force . . . a game-changing book of the utmost importance, with a message that urgently needs shouting from the rooftops' DR. GRAHAM MUSIC, Consultant Psychotherapist at the Tavistock Clinic and author of Nurturing Natures


We think of babyhood and old age as polar opposites on the spectrum of life. Yet they are profoundly linked. Our early experiences set us up for a lifetime of good mental and physical health, or for future health challenges.

1,001 Days will explore the vital and often overlooked factors that determine our lifelong health. Delving into the latest research in the fields of medicine, neuroscience and psychobiology, acclaimed psychotherapist and author Sue Gerhardt explains how many of the most common illnesses affecting our society today - from type 2 diabetes to cardiovascular disease, depression and dementia - have their roots in pre- and post-natal childhood development.

She challenges the political and cultural assumptions that hinder us from acting on what science is telling us - for example, that ill health is often seen as a result of wrong 'lifestyle' choices. The evidence she brings to light could change the way we approach illness, prevention, screening and cure within our healthcare and wider social systems.

There is no simple cause and effect that explains an individual's health outcomes. But in learning about the ways your childhood continues to shape your health today, you can feel empowered to seek the help you need.

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