Reviews

Love Is an Ex-Country by Randa Jarrar

khaufnaak's review against another edition

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3.0

2 and 4 stars at the same time. The writing is dry, reflections on war are jarringly juxtaposed with recollections of sex. An oddly Freudian memoir. This is the author’s memoir, and the cross-country aspect is not incredibly pertinent. So, it is incredibly difficult to review, because this is not just a book, this is the story of a real person’s life.

2 stars because, I cringed a lot, especially in the beginning. Because of the war next to the sex, because she seemed like the mocked at caricature of the liberal. Very sensitive, often lamenting, and living rather lavishly. As the memoir continued, these things because contextualized. She was not living lavishly, she was not wealthy, she just enjoyed things sometimes. And maybe she is so sensitive because she has suffered so much. The sex was next to the violence because they were so tightly intertwined for her.

4 stars because, I see myself in her. In many ways, I could’ve been her, I could become her. The details of child abuse, pregnancy, domestic abuse. The desire for her parents’ love, how she reconnects with them in the end. The sense of hope that her family eventually sort of accepted her. I did get tears in my eyes at the end.

writingtothevoid's review against another edition

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4.0

Read for English 132, spring semester freshman year

moonyreadsbystarlight's review

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emotional reflective

4.25

This memoir covers many parts of the author's life, going from moments during her travel, to her childhood, to her relationships as an adult. She weaves them together, discussing pain and violence from these different parts of her life, but also pleasure and healing. 

She speaks candidly about racism and fatphobia that she experiences from stragers, but also violence from her parents as a child and partners as an adult. The violence of a homeland she can no longer visit and of a home that was too hostile to return to. She also speaks of the relationships  and small interactions that have facilitated he healing, from the kindness of strangers to reconciliation, to entering the world of kink. 

This was well-written and engaging. I listened to the audiobook over the course of just a couple of days.

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thelesbianlibrary's review against another edition

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challenging emotional funny reflective medium-paced

4.0

sahanac's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional slow-paced

2.5

meandering, hard to decipher the point. felt like the shock factor mattered more than the story at some points, to a distracting degree. i tore thru it and i appreciate the politics of this one, but perhaps the bold-faced brashness jarrar delights in is made for bolder folks than me

xanthao's review against another edition

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medium-paced

5.0

I listened to this as an audiobook. I really enjoyed her storytelling and her approach to her sexuality and her identity. This is a good read. 

selinaleona_'s review

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challenging dark emotional funny informative reflective sad tense medium-paced

5.0

amyjo25's review against another edition

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adventurous dark emotional reflective sad fast-paced

4.75


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spacem0nkeyyy's review against another edition

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emotional fast-paced

5.0

slenoch's review

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3.5

not the best memoir I've ever heard but still really enjoyable! I'm glad she got out of an abusive relationship and yet another book about understanding how parents are harmed as children and the way they perpetuate it (that I'm reading, I don't think there are too many books like it). I want to read her sex books and further work, which i think is a good indicator of a memoir actually.