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Reviews tagging 'Toxic friendship'
B.F.F.: A Memoir of Friendship Lost and Found by Christie Tate
3 reviews
torinyg's review against another edition
challenging
emotional
funny
inspiring
reflective
sad
tense
medium-paced
3.5
Graphic: Eating disorder, Grief, Toxic friendship, Terminal illness, Toxic relationship, Self harm, Body shaming, and Death
Moderate: Alcoholism and Bullying
kabe927's review against another edition
emotional
funny
hopeful
inspiring
reflective
sad
medium-paced
5.0
Moderate: Grief, Terminal illness, and Infertility
Minor: Eating disorder and Toxic friendship
savvylit's review against another edition
emotional
reflective
sad
medium-paced
3.0
B.F.F. is an intimate memoir about Christie Tate's female friendships throughout her life. With searing honesty, Tate examines how her own insecurities and flaws ended many of those friendships. With the help of therapy and a very dear friend named Meredith, Tate is able to get to the bottom of her struggles to stay connected to the women that she's loved. B.F.F. ultimately becomes an ode to Meredith and her efforts to help Tate heal herself.
This memoir is well-written and honest. Ultimately, though, it just was not for me. B.F.F. is rooted in the culture of middle-class, white Gen X women -- that's clearly the target audience. I think some of the points that Tate makes that attempt to be relatable and/or humorous fell flat for me as someone who was a teenager about twenty years after Tate had been. Additionally, this memoir was so focused on Tate's flaws and how she self-sabotaged that I was hoping for a little more evidence of how she'd developed/changed on this decades-long journey of healing and self-discovery regarding her role in her female friendships. There's surprisingly very little of that and it's not until the end of this book.
Many thanks to @avidreaderpress for the advanced copy in exchange for my honest review! All thoughts and opinions are my own.
This memoir is well-written and honest. Ultimately, though, it just was not for me. B.F.F. is rooted in the culture of middle-class, white Gen X women -- that's clearly the target audience. I think some of the points that Tate makes that attempt to be relatable and/or humorous fell flat for me as someone who was a teenager about twenty years after Tate had been. Additionally, this memoir was so focused on Tate's flaws and how she self-sabotaged that I was hoping for a little more evidence of how she'd developed/changed on this decades-long journey of healing and self-discovery regarding her role in her female friendships. There's surprisingly very little of that and it's not until the end of this book.
Many thanks to @avidreaderpress for the advanced copy in exchange for my honest review! All thoughts and opinions are my own.
Graphic: Terminal illness, Cancer, Self harm, Alcoholism, Eating disorder, Death, Grief, Pregnancy, and Toxic friendship
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