BOOK REVIEW: Dairy of an Anorexic Girl, by Morgan Menzie

RELEASE DATE: April 16, 2003
AUTHOR LINKS: GOODREADS
PUBLISHER: Thomas Nelson
FORMAT: Paperback
SOURCE: Purchased
BUY NOW FROM: Amazon

A college student takes readers through a harrowing, but ultimately hopeful and inspiring, account of her eating disorder. Her amazing story is told through the journals she kept during her daily struggle with this addiction and disease. Her triumphs and tragedies all unfold in this beautiful story of God’s grace.

MY REVIEW (MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS) 

I’m not sure if Diary of an Anorexic Girl by Morgan Menzie is the best book to introduce to young girls on the topic of anorexia. I’ve never had to deal with the disorder, but after trying to lose weight for so many years (and doing it successfully and healthily, I might add), I felt drawn to the book, thinking that it would help give me perspective on what NOT to do, giving me yet another reminder on why I should be proud to be treating my body well. Continue reading

BOOK REVIEW: Her Fearful Symmetry, by Audrey Niffenegger

RELEASE DATE: September 29, 2009
AUTHOR LINKS: WEB / GOODREADS / FACEBOOK
PUBLISHER: Scribner (an imprint of Simon & Schuster)
FORMAT: Hardcover
SOURCE: Purchased
BUY NOW FROM: Amazon

Audrey Niffenegger’s spectacularly compelling second novel opens with a letter that alters the fate of every character. Julia and Valentina Poole are semi-normal American twenty-year-olds with seemingly little interest in college or finding jobs. Their attachment to one another is intense. One morning the mailman delivers a thick envelope to their house in the suburbs of Chicago. From a London solicitor, the enclosed letter informs Valentina and Julia that their English aunt Elspeth Noblin, whom they never knew, has died of cancer and left them her London apartment. There are two conditions to this inheritance: that they live in it for a year before they sell it and that their parents not enter it. Julia and Valentina are twins. So were the estranged Elspeth and Edie, their mother. 

The girls move to Elspeth’s flat, which borders the vast and ornate Highgate Cemetery, where Christina Rossetti, George Eliot, Radclyffe Hall, Stella Gibbons and Karl Marx are buried. Julia and Valentina come to know the living residents of their building. There is Martin, a brilliant and charming crossword-puzzle setter suffering from crippling obsessive compulsive disorder; Marijke, Martin’s devoted but trapped wife; and Robert, Elspeth’s elusive lover, a scholar of the cemetery. As the girls become embroiled in the fraying lives of their aunt’s neighbors, they also discover that much is still alive in Highgate, including – perhaps – their aunt.

MY REVIEW (MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS)

I loved this book. Of course, I feel biased because when The Time Traveler’s Wife came out, I loved that as well. And the movie. What can I say? Audrey Niffenegger can write a good story! Continue reading

BOOK REVIEW: Griffin and Sabine, by Nick Bantock

Date(s) read: February 14, 2010
Genre: Art, Graphic Novel

Series
1. Griffin & Sabine Goodreads | Amazon
2. Sabine’s Notebook
3. The Golden Mean

SYNOPSIS
Griffin: It’s good to get in touch with you at last. Could I have one of your fish postcards? I think you were right — the wine glass has more impact than the cup. –Sabine

But Griffin had never met a woman named Sabine. How did she know him? How did she know his artwork? Who is she? Thus begins the strange and intriguing correspondence of Griffin and Sabine. And since each letter must be pulled from its own envelope, the reader has the delightful, forbidden sensation of reading someone else’s mail. Griffin & Sabine is like no other illustrated novel: appealing to the poet and artist in everyone and sure to inspire a renaissance in the fine art of letter-writing, it tells an extraordinary story in an extraordinary way.

My Thoughts (May Contain Spoilers)
A few years ago I picked up Griffin and Sabine: An Extraordinary Correspondence because my sister-in-law had gotten it for her birthday. I was so intrigued by the layout of the book that I had to give it a try.

Continue reading