Cut: One Woman's Fight Against FGM in Britain Today
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Imagine for a moment that you are 6-years-old and you are woken in the early hours, bathed and then...
Biography memoir social issues
Don't Give Your Heart to a Rambler: My Life with Jimmy Martin, the King of Bluegrass
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As charismatic and gifted as he was volatile, Jimmy Martin recorded dozens of bluegrass classics and...
Early One Morning
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A grey dawn in 1943: on a street in Rome, two young women, complete strangers to each other, lock...
Row for Freedom: Crossing an Ocean in Search of Hope
Bear Grylls, Julia Immonen and Craig Borlase
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"When you're in the middle of the adventure, you just have to live it. When you're on an expedition,...
One Million Lovely Letters: When Life is Looking Hopeless, One Inspirational Letter Can Change Your Life Forever
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In the summer of 2011, aged only 22, Jodi Ann Bickley contracted a serious brain infection that...
There Your Heart Lies
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From the award-winning novelist Mary Gordon, here is a book whose twentieth-century wisdom can help...
literary fiction
Black Rainbow: How Words Healed Me: My Journey Through Depression
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Black Rainbow is the powerful first-person story of one woman's struggle with depression and how she...
Whatchareadin (174 KP) rated Motherhood in Books
Apr 9, 2019
Thank you to Henry Holt and NetGalley for the opportunity to read and review this book.
I couldn't get this book. I read it from cover to cover and I just couldn't find the something that drew it all together. To me it seemed really repetitive and there was really no cohesiveness.
I wanted to read this book because from a young age, I didn't want kids. Everyone one in my family and all of my friends knew this about me. I love kids. I was the neighborhood babysitter, I was a Girl Scout Camp leader, I went to school to become a child psychologist, but I just didn't want to have any of my own. One year before my Doctor agreed to tie my tubes if I hadn't had kids I got pregnant, two years later came baby number 2 and 10.5 months after that baby number 3. So I was really looking forward to reading this book and hearing someone else's perspective on the topic.
I couldn't relate to anything in this fiction/non-fiction tale. I'm not even sure if the main character had a name. Was it the author? The boyfriend was Miles. I'm not sure what message was trying to be conveyed, but I didn't get it.
I don't know if I will read other books by this author.
Bookapotamus (289 KP) rated From the Corner of the Oval in Books
Jun 18, 2018
It's not so much about the inner workings of Obama's administration - you aren't going to learn any federal secrets or inside Obama family scoop - but follows one young woman's journey working in the depths of the white house on a super-low rung of the totem pole, as she builds some pretty fun relationships and interactions between the staffers.
Beck Dorey-Stein is living in Washington D.C. at an all-time career low (out of work teacher) when through of all things - a vague Craigslist ad - is hired as a stenographer in the Obama White House. She is totally out of her element and finds herself navigating the DC elite, finding out who she is and what she wants from life and making WAY TOO MANY HORRIBLE mistakes in love.
I LOVED getting all the inside looks to what a day could be like in the White House from a 20-somethings' perspective. She zooms all over the world in Air Force One following POTUS to just about every speaking engagement he had throughout almost his entire administration. She has several fun interactions with him, and sees and experiences high and lows of our country and our world that she will never forget. All the while, she is navigating falling in love and trying to find where in this world she fits in.
She has a really fun group of friends and I thought every character in the memoir deserved some more attention. I do wish there was a bit more development or backstory of some of the people she is closest to, but we mostly learn about Beck's life here. At some points you can feel how hard she truly tries to make relationships work, but it gets really intense and a bit annoying, and you're like "Get your Sh*t together already woman!" But that's the story - Beck is trying to get her Sh*t together and it's a fun journey to follow!
There's some super colorful language - so if calling Congress a 'Bag of D*cks' is not your thing... be forewarned! I personally enjoy a good F-bomb every now and again, so it only made the story more light and fun. I TORE through this. It's fun, and fascinating, and I wanted so much more!!
Equal Ever After: The Fight for Same-Sex Marriage - And How I Made it Happen
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"My story starts at the very end of the journey to equal marriage rights. I stand on the shoulders...