Reviews tagging 'Domestic abuse'

When the World Didn't End by Guinevere Turner

22 reviews

parenthesis_enjoyer's review

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challenging dark emotional hopeful reflective medium-paced

5.0


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kelanorton's review against another edition

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3.5


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tkelley23's review against another edition

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dark emotional sad slow-paced

3.5


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chovereads's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional reflective tense
I devoured this.

this approach is one I have found in other memoirs -- writing about their childhood self, but staying in the perspective of that child without letting the adult they are now influence that writing. I really really like this. continue to seek it out. the use of the diary entries here was such an addition to the book, I can't imagine it without them.

one thing I got confused about was the dates of the diary entries. I'd forgotten the time period the book started in and the entries before she left the cult were dated '04. I guess I thought it was 2004 even though that didn't seem right. later when she's in public school, they randomly switch to 1980. I believe this was showing she was transitioning from the "Family's time" and that they tracked the years differently. 

my favorite part was when she recounted how she taped a scale from every fish that was caught the summer she lived in MA and recorded all the details in her diary. 

the book did end rather abruptly and it seemed a bit odd to not know more about what happened with the man who took her in and became her legal guardian in high school. but of course, she was writing about her escape, and with him, she was free.

very challenging and difficult subjects for some, check the content warnings! 

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poisonwood's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional hopeful inspiring sad tense medium-paced

3.5


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librarymouse's review against another edition

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challenging reflective medium-paced

4.5

Prior to reading Guinevere Turner's account of her childhood, I'd never heard of the Lyman family. Reading Turner's story though both retrospective reflection and direct quotes from journal entries from when the events she describes took place made her storytelling so immersive and the horrors she endured all the more gut wrenching.
The story starting with the failure of an ascension predicted by the leader of the cult Turner was born into was such an eye catching hook to being readers in, and while it primed me for some of what to expect for some of  he other Lyman family beliefs, other aspects of Turner's story were totally unexpected.
Guinevere Turner has a mastery of language and how to keep a reader invested that is tangible even in the diary excerpts.

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katy82's review against another edition

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challenging emotional reflective medium-paced

4.5


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vtlism's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional reflective tense

4.25

Excellent memoir! Challenging, bleak, horrendous material, superbly written. I would be interested in a follow up. It's interesting she was raised in a cult but never calls it that, and I'm wondering about her recovery from that and the rest of her wildly fucked up childhood. 

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katerr's review against another edition

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dark emotional hopeful tense medium-paced

5.0

I got too distracted by other books- I’ll pick this one back up at some point. 

Started it again a few months later (was listening to it, read on Kindle the second time) and I was very engaged very quickly. Fascinating young life

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bzm0023's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional reflective fast-paced

4.0

Read this in a day! Similar vibes to Educated and The Sound of Gravel, which to say there were parts that made me feel sick/had to skip. (TW: childhood sexual abuse starting Chapter 34.) I was expecting it to be a big lead up until the spaceship/world ending event but the author was only 6 so the story is the aftermath.  Still a very fascinating perspective on cults, what defines family, and the power of choice.

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