Reviews

The Believer by Sarah Krasnostein

angelatm's review against another edition

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challenging informative reflective medium-paced

3.5

laurenbookwitchbitch's review against another edition

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4.0

“The Believer,” - Sarah Krasnostein This is a book I’ve always wanted to write. A book chronicling the strange sometimes fringe beliefs of people on the margins. From Death Doulas to UFO researchers, paranormal investigators and road side biblical themes attractions. Odd, off the beaten path, Krasnostein writes it all with tact and grace. I appreciated the way in which she was honest and non- judgmental, or rather if she did judge it was with measured facts and totally transparency.

Even among those who’s beliefs I as a reader greatly disagree with, reading about the people who held those beliefs was easier then say reading an article or a click-bait headline. It was fascinating, and while I inevitably felt more compelled by some sections more than others, (Annie the death doula and Vlad the paranormal investigator mainly), I enjoyed all of them very much. I’d read a whole anthology of work like this!

ruth_rb's review

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challenging emotional informative reflective medium-paced

4.25

thisgirl_writes's review

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reflective medium-paced

5.0


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sksnikolaus's review

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emotional reflective fast-paced

3.5

elleceeveee's review against another edition

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challenging informative inspiring mysterious reflective slow-paced

4.5

mary_beth's review

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challenging dark emotional hopeful informative mysterious reflective sad medium-paced

4.0

therealtcp's review against another edition

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3.0

3.5 stars

jaclyn_sixminutesforme's review

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4.0

The deeply engaged and personal conversations Sarah Krasnostein is able to have with individuals from such vastly different walks of life is truly incredible. Religion, terminal illness, incarceration, UFOs, ghosts... Krasnostein casts her net widely in putting together perspectives on which to examine “belief.”

Admittedly my first thoughts as a reader engaging with this book was from a perspective of subject matter interest—my connection to the six stories covered being tempered by my own proximity or preconceived notions, my biases on “belief” essentially. I definitely connected to some narratives more than others—while UFOs are not my wheelhouse, I don’t think I’ll ever forget the woman that is called Lynn and her experience of incarceration and life post-release.

But as I moved through THE BELIEVER, my engagement shifted and I started thinking about *why* these six stories worked so seamlessly as they interwove, why the scope of belief was so well interrogated across such vastly different experiences. Krasnostein delivers such an intimate snapshot into these lives and perspectives, I can only infer from the open-minded and unbiased way she writes them that her questions and conversations with her sources were equally respectful. I think there’s a lesson in that alone about approaching belief! There’s also this vulnerability that she brings to her own engagement with belief—her own lived experiences and faith and response to the research process.

What I took away ultimately was that while the content of our beliefs is deeply personal, there is a shared element in how much it drills down to the very core of your being engaging with what you want out of life and how you want to go about living it. How you’ll deal with what you encounter in your life, and how much you’ll let that shape you and your ethics and values. That despite our views different, that we are all seeking meaning and connection and this complete alignment of that with our lived experiences. I think this would be a truly fascinating bookclub read!

Many thanks to @text_publishing for sending me along a copy of this to read

brookesbookstagram's review

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DNF.
Really struggled with this.
Changed to audiobook and the narration made it worse.