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lostinanovelidea's review against another edition
challenging
dark
emotional
hopeful
informative
inspiring
reflective
sad
medium-paced
4.25
Graphic: Addiction, Adult/minor relationship, Alcoholism, Child abuse, Child death, Drug abuse, Drug use, Violence, Toxic relationship, Suicidal thoughts, Suicide, Physical abuse, and Mental illness
Moderate: Animal cruelty, Animal death, Blood, Body shaming, Bullying, and Infidelity
deedireads's review against another edition
challenging
emotional
reflective
sad
medium-paced
5.0
All my reviews live at https://deedispeaking.com/reads/.
TL;DR REVIEW:
Ordinary Girls is an incredible memoir. Jaquira Díaz holds no punches, holds your stare while she turns her life story into an anthem for girls like her.
For you if: You like memoirs at all.
FULL REVIEW:
TL;DR REVIEW:
Ordinary Girls is an incredible memoir. Jaquira Díaz holds no punches, holds your stare while she turns her life story into an anthem for girls like her.
For you if: You like memoirs at all.
FULL REVIEW:
“We were girls, but we’d spend the rest of our days together if we could. Until one day we realized that without meaning to, we grew up, grew apart, broke each other’s hearts.”
I’ve had my eye on Ordinary Girls ever since it was published in 2019 to high praise. It wasn’t until I got a copy in my hand-curated Page 1 Books subscription that I finally had the nudge I needed to pick it up. And y’all, those folks over at Page 1 are so good at their jobs — I loved it.
Jaquira Díaz was born in Puerto Rico and lived there for a few years until violence pushed her family to Miami Beach. There, she grew up in housing projects with a defeated father and violent brother on one side, and a schizophrenic mother and beloved sister on the other. Violence, poverty, drugs — none of it was strange to her. And throughout all of it were her girls — her friends.
This is the kind of memoir that makes the world bigger, richer, and more human. The kind written by regular people with regular and exceptional, harsh and beautiful, small and big lives. The kind that opens a lot of eyes to the experiences that a lot of people live with.
And as anyone who’s read this book will tell you, it’s also just so, so well written. Certain passages stopped my breath. Díaz showed a promise for writing early on, and eventually her desire to be a writer is what helped her claw her way out of one life and into another. But this isn’t a story about someone who worked hard and overcame all odds; it’s about an ordinary girl who had a mix of good timing and luck and just enough stubbornness in her heart to keep pushing forward.
Strong recommend.
TRIGGER WARNINGS:
Sexual assault and rape; Drug addiction and use, alcoholism; Parental abuse/neglect; Self-harm and attempted suicide; Mental illness/schizophrenia; Violence by family members
Graphic: Sexual assault, Rape, Drug abuse, Child abuse, Suicide, Suicidal thoughts, Mental illness, and Violence
Moderate: Rape, Self harm, and Alcoholism
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