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Book Reviews

The Curse of the Boyfriend Sweater by Alanna Okun

7/20/2018

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Thank you to Flatiron Books and Alanna Okun for providing me with a free copy of The Curse of the Boyfriend Sweater to read in exchange for an unbiased review.  All opinions are my own.
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​Friends, I like to think of myself as crafty, but after reading The Curse of the Boyfriend Sweater, I think Alanna Okun shares a whole new level of crafty.  What Dear Fahrenheit 451 did for our favorite books, Okun does for our favorite creative expressions.  She uses the common thread (ha!) of crafting in each of her essays to share her anecdotes of love, loss, relationships, grief, triumph, and tribulation. To me, she is the Cheryl Strayed of crafting because she is able to blend her wit and sage advice into a story about knitting on the subway and still find a way for it to relate to me, the random reader.  No matter what kind of crafts you are into, she finds a way to compare the experience of creating, abandoning, revising, and (maybe) finishing a project to life events. It’s a great read to pick up and put down at your leisure (which I would recommend) or even to binge in a couple of sittings. 
TL/DR: If you’re looking for a collection of essays that blend memoir, crafting anecdotes, and tough-love advice, grab Okun’s book now!

​Rating: 
3/5 stars
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The Dead Inside by Cyndy Drew Etler

5/21/2018

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Thank you to @kidlitexchange for providing me with a free copy of The Dead Inside to read in exchange for an unbiased and honest review.  All opinions are my own.
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The Dead Inside is not like any other book I’ve read for Kid Lit Exchange.  It’s heavy and heart wrenching, providing a glimpse into the 16-month stay the author, Cyndy Drew Etler, had at a place called Straight Inc.  Straight Inc. is described as a horrific place, where all free will and reason were thrown out the door. After a few wrong decisions and years of conflict in her home, Etler’s mother and step-father sent her to the “rehab” facility, telling her she was going to boarding school.  What follows is Etler’s degrading and painful account of the ways Straight Inc. attempted to change who they thought she was into an unfeeling, emotionless lemming.

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Fun Home by Alison Bechdel

3/5/2018

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This is going to be a rare moment where I take the time to share about a book that I did not like.  In 2018, I made a goal to read more graphic novels. No set number and no set parameters. Just more. Fun Home was one that had been on my radar for a while.  After the recommendation of several friends on Instagram to pick it up, I was happy to find it nestled among the shelves of my local library while I was browsing.  It seemed like it was meant to be. Until it wasn’t.

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29 Gifts: How a Month of Giving Can Change Your Life by Cami Walker

10/15/2017

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You are completely healthy.  Not a care in the world.  Then your life comes crashing down around you as it becomes difficult for you to walk, work, or enjoy anything.  Crippling pain is your constant reminder that things aren’t what they used to be.  Life sounds pretty miserable, right?

For Cami Walker, a thirty-something with multiple sclerosis, this was her reality.  Lost in the fog of chronic illness, she felt that there was no hope.  That is, until she received a life-changing prescription from her friend, an African medicine woman.  Walker was challenged to give 29 gifts, one gift a day, for 29 days.  What follows was a lesson in giving and receiving in order to change one’s outlook on life.  29 Gifts: How a Month of Giving Can Change Your Life was one of the first books I picked up when I first developed my chronic illness.  I was only given one chapter a day, which helped me keep my mind off of my physical limitations at the time and on what I could do to participate in my own 29 days of giving.  
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I have a special place in my heart for this book, and I think everyone can stand to benefit from Walker’s candid story.  Read more to find out the full story of how this book entered my life and why I think you should pick it up!

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The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls

9/13/2017

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When I first finished The Glass Castle, I sat for a full afternoon staring at my computer hoping to find the right words to explain what it was like to read it.  It’s been almost a month since I finished it, and I still am having a hard time expressing my feelings about it.  Jeanette Walls writes in a way that makes you feel like you are reading your favorite fairy tale, except that her story doesn’t exactly have a fairy tale ending.  It’s a story of resilience and redemption, all through the eyes of woman who decided to take off the rose-colored glasses of her childhood. If you’re looking for a raw and unapologetic memoir, this is the one for you.

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Furiously Happy: A Funny Book About Horrible Things by Jenny Lawson

7/17/2017

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 What can a taxidermied raccoon teach you about happiness?  Everything.  
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Furiously Happy is one of those books that just stays with you.  Jenny Lawson is a queen at humor, especially when it deals with the more difficult parts of life like anxiety, depression, and chronic illness.  The Bloggess, as she is fondly known on her blog and social media, finds a way to make all of the hard in life seem bearable, even comical. The cover of this one explains it all: this is a funny book about horrible things.  Lawson uses her own life experiences to make you laugh until you cry (like I literally did) at the absurdity of life.  I found myself highlighting whole pages and reading them aloud to anyone that would listen, regardless if they wanted to hear it or not.  The situations Lawson finds herself in are indeed outrageous, and I always found myself wanting just one more story.  She balances her anecdotes with humor and candor, which left me laughing and contemplative at the same time.  Wonder how that happens? Read more to find out. ​​

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    The way to Alexandra's heart is through a great book recommendation.

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