Thursday, October 28, 2010

Review and Giveaway: The Gifts of Imperfection by Brené Brown

I almost didn’t request a review copy of The Gifts of Imperfection: Let Go of Who You Think You’re Supposed to Be and Embrace Who You Are—Your Guide to a Wholehearted Life by Brené Brown because I really dislike the cover; however, the book’s subtitle called to me. Then I read the back blurb, which includes this passage:
“Brown explores how we can cultivate the courage, compassion, and connection to wake up in the morning and think, No matter what gets done and how much is left undone, I am enough, and to go to bed at night thinking, Yes, I am imperfect and vulnerable and sometimes afraid, but that doesn’t change the truth that I am worthy of love and belonging.”
And I knew I had to read the book. I cannot tell you how often I stress about the things I’ve left undone, not to mention feeling paralyzed by my own perfectionism. Brown is a researcher who has dedicated much of her career to studying shame, empathy, fear and vulnerability; in listening to people’s stories, she started to identify what she called wholehearted research participants, i.e. people who were leading amazing lives by “living and loving with their whole hearts.” This prompted her to ask “What did these folks value? How did they create all of this resilience in their lives? What were their main concerns and how did they resolve or address them? Can anyone create a Wholehearted life? What does it take to cultivate what we need? What gets in the way?” To answer these questions, Brown came up with 10 guideposts to wholehearted living: cultivating authenticity (letting go of what people think); cultivating self-compassion (letting go of perfectionism); cultivating a resilient spirit (letting go of numbing and powerlessness); cultivating gratitude and joy (letting go of scarcity and “fear of the dark”); cultivating intuition and trusting faith (letting go of the need for certainty); cultivating creativity (letting go of comparison); cultivating play and rest (letting go of exhaustion as a status symbol and productivity as self-worth); cultivating calm and stillness (letting go of anxiety as a lifestyle); cultivating meaningful work (letting go of self-doubt and “supposed to”); and cultivating laughter, song, and dance (letting go of being cool and “always in control”).

Here are some of the things that stuck with me:

1. Brown talks about writing a blog post on the “‘dig deep’ button,” which she defines as “a secret level of pushing through when we’re exhausted and overwhelmed and when there’s too much to do and too little time for self-care” (p. 3). She turns this concept on its head, explaining that when wholehearted people get exhausted, they get:
  • Deliberate in their thoughts and behaviors through prayer, meditation, or simply setting their intentions
  • Inspired to make new and different choices
  • Going: They take action
Ironically, while I was writing this review, I realized that I was relying on my own “dig deep” button, soldiering on and pushing through even though it was past two in the morning. (I think I already need to reread this book!)

2. Brown talks about how “one of the greatest (and least discussed) barriers to compassion practice is the fear of setting boundaries and holding people accountable” (p. 16). As she points out, “When we fail to set boundaries . . . , we feel used and mistreated. This is why we sometimes attack who [a person is], which is far more hurtful than addressing a behavior or a choice” (p. 19). This makes sense to me and yet I find it very hard to practise. (Why is it so scary to set limits?)

3. According to Brown, “the . . . one thing [that separates] the men and women who [feel] a deep sense of love and belonging from the people who seem to be struggling for it . . . is the belief in their worthiness” (p. 23). This finding is a bit depressing because for those of us who struggle with feeling worthy it’s such a catch-22: I feel like I don’t belong because I feel unworthy of belonging; I feel unworthy of belonging because I feel like I don’t belong. Although there are no easy answers, Brown does offer some hope: it is possible to cultivate a sense of worthiness by sharing our stories and letting go of our attachment to what other people think.

4. Brown describes herself as a “take-the-edge-off-aholic,” a concept that resonated for me. She says she can definitely say “today I’d like to deal with vulnerability and uncertainty with an apple fritter, a beer and cigarette, and spending seven hours on Facebook” (p. 72). My own numbing tools of choice (some of which veer towards addiction) are food, the Internet, television, sleep, lack of sleep, book buying, reading and busyness. And the funny thing is that in the middle of writing this review, when I was feeling stuck and vulnerable and my negative self-talk was starting up with the How could you leave this to the last minute again?, I procrastinated by watching Brown’s TEDxHouston talk, and it was only when she said “We numb vulnerability” that I realized that I was avoiding my own feelings of vulnerability by watching this video! (Listening to this talk is a great introduction to the concepts she discusses in this book and will give you a very good idea of whether this book is for you.)

5. Brown’s research shows that, “Without exception, spirituality—the belief in connection, a power greater than self, and interconnections grounded in love and compassion—emerged as a component of resilience” (p. 64). She also found that, “Without exception, every person [she] interviewed who described living a joyful life . . . actively practiced gratitude and attributed their joyfulness to their gratitude practice” (p. 77-78). I’m still at the point where I have what she calls “an attitude to gratitude”: it’s something I think about, but not something I practise (at least not yet).

My only complaint about this book is that I wish it was longer (it’s only 130 pages excluding the endnotes): I wanted more stories and more details about who the wholehearted were. I also found that her final chapter about the research process was a bit short on details: it didn’t satisfy the sociologist* in me. Having said that, if any of the concepts she discusses resonate with you in any way, I highly recommend this book!

Thank you to Hazelden Publishing for sending me this book to review.

*I have a BA in sociology.
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The Gifts of Imperfection was on blog tour with TLC Book Tours in September and October. Visit these other blogs for reviews:

Silver and GraceSimply Stacieevolution youPatricia’s WisdomLiving Outside the Stacksthis full houseoverstuffedFrom Marriage to MotherhoodRundpinneCynthia Lou

Read an excerpt from the book: Sober 24

To practise some of the things Brown writes about, participate in her Perfect Protest (watch the Protest Dance on the Being Joy blog for inspiration) and/or confess something imperfect about yourself on Karen Walrond’s Chookooloonks blog.

Visit Brené Brown’s blog: Ordinary Courage
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Would you like to win a copy of The Gifts of Imperfection? Hazelden Publishing has offered to send a copy to one of my readers. The giveaway is open to U.S. and Canadian residents only (no P.O. boxes). I will accept entries until 11:59 PM Eastern Time on Thursday, November 18, 2010.

For one entry, please let me know why you are interested in reading this book.

If you are a follower or subscriber, let me know and I will give you another entry.

Make sure you provide me with a way of getting in touch with you. Entries without a blog link or email address will be disqualified.

THIS GIVEAWAY IS CLOSED.
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Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Similar Covers: Repeat Lookalike

In my last Mailbox Monday post, I forgot to mention one of the books I purchased at the McGill Book Fair last week: No Previous Experience: A Memoir of Love and Change by Elspeth Cameron. The reason I forgot to include it is that I’d separated it from the pile as soon as I got home because its cover looked very familiar. Sure enough I’d seen the cover image before: three times in fact!




According to what I could find on Amazon, Defiance by Carole Maso was first published in May 1998 by Dutton; Cries of the Spirit: A Celebration of Women’s Spirituality edited by Marilyn Sewell came out with this cover in 2000 with Beacon Press; and Decision and Destiny: Colette’s Destiny by DeVa Gantt came out in 2009 with Avon. No Previous Experience (at least the copy I have) was published in May 1998 by Penguin Canada. (If the hardcover used the same cover image, it would have been the first to use this photo, as it was published in 1997.)

The original photo was taken by Jana Leon.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Mailbox Monday: Book Fair Loot (October 25)

Mailbox Monday buttonMailbox Monday is the gathering place for readers to share the books they received during the previous week. Warning: Mailbox Monday can lead to envy, toppling TBR piles and humongous wish lists! Mailbox Monday, which was started by Marcia at The Printed Page, is on blog tourand I’m thrilled to be hosting this month!

October is one of my favourite months because it’s Book Fair Month: as much as possible, I try to go to both the McGill Book Fair here in Montreal (which happened this past week) and the Quebec City Women’s Club Book Fair in Quebec City (which is next weekend). (In the past, I’ve referred to the last week of October as “Book Fair Week,” as both book fairs have taken place that week; this year, however, the McGill Book Fair was a week early.)

This year, Linda (Better with Books), Amanda (Tales and Treats) and I went to the McGill Book Fair and I came home with a pile of books:




The books are:
I also picked up a few yoga books (of the variety that contain pictures of various poses) for a total of 18 books for $60.

I think I managed to visit all your blogs last week—if for some reason I missed yours, please let me know and I’ll visit it right away!

What books came into your house this past week? Let us know by leaving a link to your post below. Next month, don’t forget to visit our November host, Julie at Knitting and Sundries!


Friday, October 22, 2010

Review: Up from the Blue by Susan Henderson

Up from the Blue by Susan Henderson is the story of Tillie Harris told from two turning points in her life: as an adult when she is about to give birth to her first child and as an eight-year-old child the year when everything changed for her family.

I loved the first half of this book. Tillie is an insightful and imaginative child coping with a difficult home life as best she can, desperately holding on (or inventing) any good moments her family has:
“The parade music jiggled my insides, and lifted the hair up on my arms. I wanted to be the girl with the pom poms tied to her shoes, jabbing a baton at the sky. I danced along behind my father, danced to the womp-womping of the tuba, the wild drumming. I trotted with fancy steps, keeping my eyes on my father’s hand, held out to the side with his fingers spread apart. If I could only catch up, I knew he’d take hold.” (pp. 20-21)
I was completely drawn into this story: it was one of those books that I itched to pick up again as soon as I put it down. Although I didn’t totally identify with Tillie (I was definitely a “good girl” as a child, while Tillie is constantly getting into trouble, both at home and at school), I could certainly identify with her loneliness and sense of alienation.

Unfortunately, midway through the book, my disbelief came crashing down around me: what happened to Tillie’s mother didn’t seem plausible to me, and as Tillie unravelled the events of that year, she no longer seemed believable as an eight-year-old narrator. One could argue that Tillie was only metaphorically eight years old—that at some level the adult Tillie was trapped in that traumatic year when everything changed—which would explain her mature thinking about what happened to her and her mother. Although this does make sense, I still can’t quite buy some of the plot twists. However, despite my disappointment at where the story goes, Henderson has crafted an absorbing debut novel, and I look forward to reading whatever she writes next.

Thank you to Harper Collins for providing me with this book to review.
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Up from the Blue was on blog tour with TLC Book Tours in September and October. Visit these other blogs for reviews:

The Zen Leaf
Sara’s Organized ChaosMusings of a Bookish KittyReviews from the HeartRundpinneBooks Like BreathingIn the Next RoomRaging BibliomaniaLife in ReviewPeeking Between the Pageslit*chickBooksie’s Blog

Other reviews:

A Musing ReviewsBibliophilic Book BlogBooking MamaDan’s JournalFizzy ThoughtsHey, I want to read thatKellyVisionlargehearted boyLiterary Kicksmy books. my life.The Best Damn Creative Writing BlogThe Book Pirate

Excerpt from the first chapter of the book: The House with the Blue Door

Two of my favourite quotes: Teaser Tuesday (on my blog)
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Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Similar Covers: Apple Behind Back

I have another foursome of copycat covers for you this week, all of which use the exact same cover image: The Visitor by Maeve Brennan, Sex Wars by Marge Piercy, The Looking Glass by Michèle Roberts and The Woodlanders by Thomas Hardy. According to Amazon, both The Looking Glass and The Visitor came out in 2001: the former was published in July by Henry Holt while the latter came out in October with Atlantic Books. Sex Wars was published in 2006 by Piatkus Books. I couldn’t find any info about this particular edition of The Woodlanders. My favourite of these four is definitely The Visitor.


I have also found three other covers featuring a woman holding an apple behind her back: You’re Not You by Michelle Wildgen, That Scandalous Evening by Christina Dodd and The Evidence Against Her by Robb Forman Dew.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Mailbox Monday (October 18)

Mailbox Monday buttonMailbox Monday is the gathering place for readers to share the books they received during the previous week. Warning: Mailbox Monday can lead to envy, toppling TBR piles and humongous wish lists! Mailbox Monday, which was started by Marcia at The Printed Page, is on blog tour—and I’m thrilled to be hosting this month!

I’m back from vacation—it was great to see my family and meet my new nephew, although I unfortunately was sick the last few days I was there, which explains the total lack of posts this week! (I’m feeling better now.)

One new book was waiting for me upon my return: Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson, which I won from Ladybug at Escape in a Book as part of her SpeakLoud giveaway. (You may want to read her thoughtful post about book banning from a Norwegian perspective.)



Here’s the blurb from the book’s inside flap:

Melinda Sordino busted an end-of-summer party by calling the cops, so her old friends won’t talk to her, and people she doesn’t know hate her from a distance. It’s no use explaining to her parents; they’ve never known what her life is really like. The safest place for Melinda to be is alone, inside her own head. But even that’s not safe. Because there’s something she’s trying not to think about, something about the night of the party that, if she admitted it and let it in, would blow her carefully constructed disguise to smithereens. And then she would have no choice. Melinda would have to speak the truth.

What did you find in your mailbox this past week? Let us know by leaving a link to your post below (and now that I’m home, I’ll make an effort to visit all your blogs!).


Sunday, October 10, 2010

Mailbox Monday (October 11)

Mailbox Monday buttonMailbox Monday is the gathering place for readers to share the books they received during the previous week. Warning: Mailbox Monday can lead to envy, toppling TBR piles and humongous wish lists! Mailbox Monday, which was started by Marcia at The Printed Page, is on blog tour—and I’m thrilled to be hosting this month!

I received one book in the mail for review this past week: The Find by Kathy Page, which I will be reviewing on November 10 for the 2010 Green Book Campaign: 1 Day, 200 Books, 200 Reviews run by Eco-Libris.

Here’s the blurb from the author’s site:

A day’s prospecting leads paleontologist Anna Silowski to make an extraordinary discovery in a remote part of British Columbia, but at the same time, the tensions below the surface of her successful career are exposed. Pushed towards breakdown, she finds herself unexpectedly dependent on high-school drop out Scott Macleod, and recruits him to help on the excavation of her find. Scott is soon way out of his depth, and the excavation itself teeters on the edge of disaster. The Find is a compelling story about discovery, inheritance and fate, and a moving exploration of the possibilities that hide within a seemingly impossible relationship.

I also ordered myself a copy of The Wisdom of Yoga: A Seeker’s Guide to Extraordinary Living by Stephen Cope, which I received at my sister’s place (where I am still). I am very much enjoying his first book (Yoga and the Quest for the True Self), which I haven’t finished reading yet!


What did you find in your mailbox this past week? Let us know by leaving a link to your post below!

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Review: The Lacuna by Barbara Kingsolver

The Lacuna by Barbara Kingsolver Barbara Kingsolver is one of my favourite authors, so when I was asked if I wanted to review her latest novel, The Lacuna, I jumped at the chance. But then the book sat unread on my shelf for ages—I felt intimidated by its size and its “historical fiction-ness.”

The Lacuna, Kingsolver’s most ambitious novel to date, is the fictional memoir of Harrison William Shepherd, a half-Mexican, half-American boy growing up in the early twentieth century. Kingsolver paints this story on a wide canvas that stretches from Mexico to the U.S., from 1929 to the 1950s and from the Great Depression to the McCarthy era and the heights of yellow journalism. Told mainly through journal entries, letters and newspaper clippings (both real and fictional), The Lacuna seamlessly blends historical fact with fiction. Many of the characters are recognizable historical figures (Frida Kalho, Diego Rivera and Leon [Lev] Trotsky being the main ones). I know relatively little about this period in history, but it’s clear that Kingsolver has thoroughly researched it, and she immerses her readers in the sights and sounds of this period, sprinkling the text with both American slang and Spanish words. (Though I made a list of over 100 terms I was unfamiliar with, for the most part they are understandable enough from the context or explained within the novel—I just wanted to look up what they meant exactly.)

In many ways, Shepherd nearly writes himself out of his own narrative—in his journal entries, he often refers to himself in the third person—but this device works (mostly) as he is very much an observer of the events transpiring around him, especially as a child and young man. My favourite section of the book is set in Mexico during the time he spent with Frida and Diego—Frida is especially memorable: prickly and yet sympathetic, her character leapt off the page.

However, Shepherd’s later life in the U.S. fell a bit flat for me: his self-effacing habits became somewhat frustrating because it is in this period that he is most actively affected by historical events (or at least more participant than observer)—the highlights of this section were his vivid letters to Frida.

These are a few of my favourite quotes, to illustrate the richness of Kingsolver’s language:

“An imperfectly remembered life is a useless treachery. Every day, more fragments of the past roll around heavily in the chambers of an empty brain, shedding bits of color, a sentence or a fragrance, something that changes and then disappears. It drops like a stone to the bottom of the cave.” (p. 258)
“I didn’t say what Frida would have. That you can’t really know the person standing before you, because always there is some missing piece: the birthday like an invisible piñata hanging great and silent over his head, as he stands in his slippers boiling the water for coffee. The scarred, shrunken leg hidden under a green silk dress. A wife and son back in France. Something you never knew. That is the heart of the story.” (p. 325)
I want to say more about the epic scope of this book, which deals with themes of identity and the intersection of art and politics (among other things), but I already feel like I’m giving away too much of the plot. Suffice it to say that The Lacuna is a breathtaking story, well worth reading (which I devoured in three days in the end!).

Thank you to Harper Collins for sending me this book to review.
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The Lacuna is on blog tour with TLC Book Tours in September and October (along with several other of Kingsolver’s books). Visit these other blogs for reviews:

Lit and LifePresenting Lenore’Til We Read AgainRaging Bibliomania* • The Lost EntwifeIn the Next RoomBookworm’s Dinner

*Skip the first paragraph to avoid spoilers.

Other reviews:

A Book SanctuaryAmused, Bemused, and ConfusedFyrefly’s Book BlogMari ReadsRatskellar ReadsThe Parenthesis and the Footnote
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Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Similar Covers: Girl with Mirror

Here’s another lookalike duo: Life Sentences by Laura Lippman and Perfect Girls, Starving Daughters: The Frightening New Normalcy of Hating Your Body by Courtney E. Martin. I also came across the original image (I presume), which was used to illustrate an article called “Femininity as Mental Illness” by Melanie McGrath on the Telegraph.co.uk site (the article is actually a review of Mad, Bad and Sad: A History of Women and the Mind Doctors from 1800 to the Present by Lisa Appignanesi).


Here are two other covers of the same books (Levenslang is the Dutch translation of Life Sentences):


I actually think I prefer these two covers: I like the fact that the book title on Lippman’s book is not obscuring the girl’s body, and the slanted image on Martin’s book makes it more eye-catching.

Martin’s book was published first, by Free Press in 2007, while Lippman’s book came out with William Morrow in 2009. In this case, however, it seems to me that it’s less of a big deal that the cover image was reused, since the books are in such different genres and the covers are also really different. What do you think?

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Mailbox Monday (October 4)

Mailbox Monday buttonMailbox Monday is the gathering place for readers to share the books they received during the previous week. Warning: Mailbox Monday can lead to envy, toppling TBR piles and humongous wish lists! Mailbox Monday, which was started by Marcia at The Printed Page, is on blog tour—and I’m thrilled to be hosting during the month of October!

I received one book for review in the mail this past week: Dirty Secret: A Daughter Comes Clean about Her Mother’s Compulsive Hoarding by Jessie Sholl, which is for a blog tour in January.

Here’s part of the blurb on the back:

When her divorced mother was diagnosed with cancer, New York City writer Jessie Sholl returned to her hometown of Minneapolis to help her prepare for her upcoming surgery and get her affairs in order. While a daunting task for any adult dealing with an aging parent, it’s compounded for Sholl by one lifelong, complex, and confounding truth: her mother’s is a compulsive hoarder. Dirty Secret is a daughter’s powerful memoir of confronting her mother’s disorder, of searching for the normalcy that was never hers as a child, and, finally, cleaning out the clutter of her mother’s home in the hopes of salvaging the true heart of their relationship—before it’s too late.

I forgot to mention last week that I also bought the second book in the Maisie Dobbs series (after reading and loving the first), Birds of a Feather by Jacqueline Winspear.

Here’s part of the blurb on the back:

Birds of a Feather finds Maisie on another dangerously intriguing adventure in London between the wars. It is the
spring of 1930, and Maisie has been hired to find a runaway heiress. When three of the heiress’s old friends are found dead, Maisie must race to find out who would want to kill these seemingly respectable young women before it’s too late. As Maisie investigates, she discovers that the answers lie in the unforgettable agony of the Great War.



What did you find in your mailbox this past week? Let us know by leaving a link to your post below! (Note that
I’m posting particularly early this week because I’m off on vacation later this morning [after some sleep!]. Generally, I’m planning to post late on Sundays.)


BEA 2012, HERE I COME!