Reviews tagging 'Eating disorder'

Sweet, Young, & Worried by Blythe Baird

14 reviews

culebraarcoiris's review

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dark emotional hopeful inspiring reflective sad medium-paced

4.0


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kalira's review against another edition

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emotional reflective tense medium-paced

3.75

While the issues and hurts focused upon are not mine, Blythe Baird represents them evocatively and opens a window into the depths even from far off.

The one that hits hardest for me remains, however, the very first one - In The Shape Of A Poem

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c100's review

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challenging dark emotional hopeful reflective medium-paced

4.0


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cer15712's review

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dark emotional sad tense fast-paced

0.25

Just boring trauma poems. Same writing style as Rupi Kaur. Cliché metaphors and phrases pulled from tumblr posts. 

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briannad4's review

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emotional reflective

5.0


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mushyt0ad's review

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emotional hopeful inspiring sad medium-paced

4.0


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diana_raquel's review against another edition

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challenging emotional reflective sad fast-paced

4.5

[Disclaimer: I won a digital copy of this book in a giveaway. However, the following review is my own opinion of this book.]

“It is one thing to want help and another to have the language to ask for it.”

Sweet, Young, & Worried by Blythe Baird is a collection of poems about suffering and healing, love, queerness, loss, mental health, and feminism. I didn't know what to expect from this book. I don't read a lot of poetry (I try to read more, I swear), but the title of this book caught my attention and I decided to enter the giveaway. Imagine my surprise when I receive an email telling me that I had won a digital copy! 

It was a pleasant surprise in the sense that I love it! The poems are raw and emotional. Some of them touch on very serious and dark themes that can be triggering to some people. Others just "hit the feels" and makes a person feel understood. As someone who struggles with mental health and anxiety, some of these poems were very relatable. I felt seen and understood. 

I didn't know what to expect from this book, but I love it and I have plans to read other books by the author. Really recommend it!!

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letstalkaboutbooksbaybee's review

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reflective

4.0

An unflinchingly honest and raw poetry collection

TW for eating disorders, self harm, abortion, depression

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kylakahrin's review

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dark emotional inspiring reflective sad tense

5.0

“It is one thing to want help and another to have the language to ask for it.”

I first heard Blythe Baird’s poetry through the Button Poetry youtube channel nearly 10 years ago. I bought her previously published poetry collection, If My Body Could Speak, as soon as it hit shelves back in 2019 and have read it many times over the last three years. I am so honored and grateful to have gotten an eARC of this newest collection of her work.

As I expected it to, Blythe’s writing hits me like watching old home videos. I am, thankfully, not in the depth of my mental health struggles like I was when I first found Blythe’s spoken word. Still, her words resonate with a part of me that will only ever hibernate and never fully retire. My favorite pieces in Sweet, Young, and Worried were “This Must Be Enough” and “Guilt Doesn’t Live Here Anymore.” Growing up with her poetry and reading it again now has made me appreciate and grieve the years I spent in the same boat as her. It’s heavy and hard to swallow but it’s real and it’s important. Massive TW for eating disorders, self harm, suicide and suicidal ideation, and abortion.

5⭐️

Thank you Netgalley and Button Poetry for the eARC! 

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angelsowllibrarian's review against another edition

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challenging emotional reflective sad fast-paced

2.5

Thank you Netgalley for approving me to read for a review! I also won an audibook of this on StoryGraph shortly after being approved and listened while I read along. I enjoyed this more having the author reading it as intended than I would have reading it by itself, especially with the awkward digital formatting.
I was hoping that this poetry book with lead more with queerness and healing than ED and SH like the author's previous books. But, as the author wrote in the book, "I still don't know how to write about the things that didn't hurt." I understand that both ED and SH are things that linger, but I have finally gotten myself out of that mental space so reading this felt a bit like backsliding for me. Or like trying to be nostalgic about being sick again, if that makes sense. 
I enjoyed the longer poems because they felt more substantial to me than the shorter ones did. I understand why there are more short, bite sized poems than there are long, deeper poems. Poetry like this is very personal and making yourself open and vulnerable for strangers to have pieces of. I just wish there was maybe a few more longer poems to think more deeply about. I enjoy the author's voice so I'm looking forward to the day when they're able to write about more than things that hurt.

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