About The Book

An unflinching memoir of losing a leg to childhood cancer—and the lifelong work of reclaiming body, identity, and belonging beyond “normal.”

At fourteen, Caren Rabbino loses her leg to childhood cancer. The surgery saves her life—but it also fractures her relationship to her body, her family, and the world that suddenly reads as “other.”

In the years that follow, she navigates phantom limb pain and relentless pressure to “fix” herself, even as she tries to pass as normal to protect status, safety, and social mobility. She searches for belonging through work, art, and travel, while grappling with sexuality, objectification, and the particular loneliness of being visibly different.

Only after years of avoidance does she step into community—teaching yoga to an amputee group and discovering a grounded, hard-won form of embodied knowledge that cuts through shame and self-protection. Asymmetries is a candid story of survival and self-definition, asking what it means to inhabit a changed body—and to be seen, on purpose.  

About The Author

Caren Rabbino founded Fast Forward Consulting in 1998 and is a certified mediator through the New York State Unified Court System. She co-founded Miami Light Project, a non-profit cultural organization now in its 36th year, and served on the boards of Hester Street Collaborative, the Iyengar Yoga Association of Greater New York, and Hidden Water. She earned degrees from the University of Pennsylvania and New York University. She lives in New York City, New York.

Product Details

  • Publisher: She Writes Press (November 17, 2026)
  • Length: 256 pages
  • ISBN13: 9798896363941

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Raves and Reviews

“Caren Rabbino’s Asymmetries does everything memoir should do: it disrupts and delights. Rabbino artfully explores the unique conundrum of life in a non-normative body, using her experiences to challenge limited ideas about how this looks and feels. She also articulates the struggle we all face as embodied humans, disabled and temporarily able-bodied, to truly belong—to ourselves and to the world.”—Emily Black, author of My Left Leg

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