Reviews tagging 'Alcoholism'

Dog Flowers: A Memoir by Danielle Geller

31 reviews

yourlittleearthling's review

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hopeful reflective sad medium-paced

4.5


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maraculous's review

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emotional reflective sad medium-paced

4.25


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onewoman_bookclub's review

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emotional reflective sad medium-paced

4.5


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nordstina's review

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3.25

In her memoir Dog Flowers, Danielle Geller charts her complicated history with her family, where the perils of alcoholism and drug use run rampant, causing chaos within the family. Her mother leaves her and her sister Eileen. Both her parents are alcoholics and Eileen also begins drinking and using drugs. The move around frequently, and this memoir really is a peek into what instability, trauma, and abuse can do to a family. It's a difficult read, as individuals continue to cycle through challenges. Danielle also gets to know her mother's Navajo family better and begins to embrace her Native American culture.

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lady_bountiful's review

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dark emotional reflective sad

4.75


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siriface's review against another edition

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adventurous dark emotional reflective sad tense medium-paced

3.5


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jackieom4's review

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challenging emotional sad medium-paced

3.75


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leezreads's review

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emotional reflective sad medium-paced

4.0


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sammies_shelf's review

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emotional reflective medium-paced

5.0


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hollyd19's review

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challenging dark emotional reflective sad tense slow-paced

4.5

With sharp, honest writing Geller pieces together a mosaic of her life in the aftermath of her mother's death from alcohol withdrawal. Using her training as an archivist, Geller takes the fragmented records found in an old suitcase kept by her mother's on-again, off-again lover to formulate an account of her mom's history and revise her own memories of her youth.

Raised by alcoholic, often abusive parents and bounced between caregivers, Geller's youth was ragged and disjointed. Abandoned early on by her enigmatic mother, Geller was raised largely by her paternal grandmother -- possibly the only sober adult in her life until college. Knowing anecdotally about her mother's Navajo heritage but with no established connections herself, Geller is confronted with this added grief of lost community when a memorial service brings her back to the reservation where her mother was raised. 

The writing in this memoir reflects the contradictions and tensions Geller felt as a person trying to grow up in a wildly dysfunctional household, attempting to break the cycles but with virtually no support to do so. Her role within her family -- immediate and extended -- is one of mature caregiver, even to those who traditionally should be providing her guidance. Geller's resilience is remarkable, but the memoir does not feel like a victory story, rather an endurance. Her circumstances are devastating, but somehow she maintains enough softness toward the people she loves to continue to be their touchstone even when it seems to be destroying her. This is a memoir of love but also extraordinary tragedy -- both acute and drawn-out. 

I marveled at Geller's ability to write both poetically and phlegmatically, as if her numbness seeped through her pen. Critically, there was no sense of apathy, but rather a sense of unease and resignation. The end of the book was exceptionally poignant: Geller doesn't "triumph" over her circumstances. But she chooses her life and herself, and does so in small, faithful ways. 

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