Thrombosis and Embolism: From Research to Clinical Practice: 2016: Volume 1
Book
This unique publication explores diverse themes relating to thrombosis and embolism, from basic...
Anticancer Living: Six Weeks to a New Way of Life
Lorenzo Cohen and Alison Jefferies
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"You have cancer." These are perhaps the most feared three words that will ever come out of a...
The Art of Baby Making: The Holistic Approach to Fertility
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From the bestselling author of 'Everything You Need You Have'. Nature teaches us that a balanced...
The Complete Guide to Living Well Gluten-Free: Everything You Need to Know to Go from Surviving to Thriving
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Going gluten-free? Go here first.Whether you've been diagnosed with a gluten-related condition or...
Kim Pook (101 KP) rated The Theory of Everything (2014) in Movies
Sep 4, 2020
It starts in the 1960s, Stephen is an awkward and nerdy college student attending classes, wondering about the universe and meeting the love of his life. Straight away it is evident from little things that his disease is taking a hold on him even before his diagnosis. Eddie Redmayne does such a good job of portraying him that his decline is hard to watch and you feel the frustration he must have felt too. It not only shows Stephens struggles with his motor neurons disease, but also Jane's struggles with helping him, which understandably pushes her into the arms of another man.
The film has its ups and downs, you feel for Stephen and the people around him, but you also laugh as despite his disease his personality remained intact. It is a long movie (just over 2 hours) and very intense, but worth every minute.
The Cancer Ladies' Running Club
Book
Sometimes we need our friends to help us find our feet… When Keira first receives her breast...
Twirling Naked in the Streets and No One Noticed: Growing Up With Undiagnosed Autism
Book
Jeannie grew up with autism, but no one around her knew it. Twirling Naked in the Streets will take...
Miranda Nights (A Miranda Quinn Legal Twist #2)
Book
She has a loving husband and a successful career–who says you can’t have it all? Miranda Quinn...
Contemporary Women's Fiction
Louise (64 KP) rated None of the Above in Books
Jul 2, 2018
This book has been out for sometime and I have always been intrigued about it but never actually took the plunge until I saw it being offeredon Netgalley to read due to it being reprinted in paperback edition. This book was really good, I love contemporaries where something dramatic has happened in our protagonists life that is very different and only happens to a minority of people.
We follow Kristin, she is 17, in with the popular crowd at school and has been named prom queen…her life is fantastic and everything a teenage girl could want. She even has this boyfriend that’s really understanding and takes it slow and seems to be really into her. Kristin wants to take their relationship up another level and prom is the night! Except when that time arrives,it’s a lot more painful than expected…..so excruciating that she consults her gynecologist.
What Kristin learns at her appointment changes her life forever…. she was born intersex. Intersex is where you are born with both genitalia at birth.With this discovery we see how people react to her once her secret has been leaked and how she overcomes the negatives and start to look at the positives.
This story evoked so many emotions from me, I was shocked and angry at how people treated Kristin, the problem is people are scared of what they don’t know and they become ignorant to that persons feelings. There was sadness when it seemed like Kristin’s life was crumbling away and how her diagnosis had such an effect on her everyday life.
All the characters in this were great and I thought were all necessary for the plot – you had two best friends that were totally different from one another and she could confide with them for different things. There were the bullies which showed their utter stupidity and how harmful their remarks can be. We had the characters that treated Kristin exactly the same before her diagnosis and also other intersex characters which helped her through the process of coming to terms of her diagnosis.
I suspect a lot of people are questioning how she could not know that she was intersex, she had a female body and everything about her was feminine yet it was mostly her insides that were different and if you don’t know if anything is wrong how would you know to look for it.
Overall I thought this story sent out a great message and portrayal of intersex characters – if definitely made me want to find out more about the different types of intersex there are and how common/uncommon it is. I have never met an intersex person so I can’t say if this is an accurate portrayal but with all the emotions flowing it certainly felt like it.
I couldn’t find a fault with this book it had great characters, LGTBQ, great parents, Romance(but not too much) and was an informative, eye-opening read and definitely recommend if you are looking to read more diversely or want to read about intersex main characters.
I rated this 5 out of 5 stars
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