Reviews tagging 'Xenophobia'

Sick: A Memoir by Porochista Khakpour

5 reviews

lowbrowhighart's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional reflective sad tense medium-paced

3.0


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chronicallyplotting's review against another edition

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dark informative reflective sad slow-paced

1.0

This memoir is about an author who goes through a long struggle with her health and is ultimately diagnosed with end stage lime disease. And her struggles of also being an addict. She goes through what many with a hard to diagnose illness go through and that is medical trauma and being dismissed not only by medical professionals but her peers and family. 
What I could not understand is how the author did not have any personal growth from this or takeaways to help anyone else from her medical journey. It was disheartening that she never fought for herself or advocated for a diagnosis. The author even indicated in her book that she became the patient no doctor or nurse wanted to work with because she was whining all the time for things; she became a person who loved medical attention and wanted to be waited on. She wanted people to care for her and used her friends also. I was hoping for a story of how someone overcame addiction or a medical crises that they had to fight to overcome and get care. Because I personally know the struggle to find good care, but it instead was a book of a person who does not like America but lives here and has a political agenda versus a message about her health journey. She focuses widely on anti-trump rants and Anit-American healthcare rants but offers no solutions to change or how any of it personally impacted her. And it was a person who thinks they are the best author in the world who probably has a tinge of Munchausen disease. 

Being a person of the chronic illness community myself I was so hoping for more of a survival story, even if it doesn't have a happy ending. Instead I got a political platform and a woman who craves attention and anyone who doesn't give it to her must be racist. 

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krys_kilz's review against another edition

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dark emotional reflective medium-paced

4.0

This book deals with A LOT of heavy topics (tw: suicidal ideation, addiction, medical trauma/gaslighting, toxic relationships), but not in a way that veers towards trauma porn. Instead Khakpour wades through the discomfort and the ableism and the expectation for sick people to remain out of sight and cracks open her pain and messiness and aliveness. She pulls back the facade of certainty and pulls apart the myth that health is stable and within our individual control. And all of this grounded in place and an incredibly engaging voice.

I found parts of the book a bit repetitive at times and the timeline could be a little difficult to follow, but overall I saw so many of my own experiences between these pages and I am so grateful to Khakpour for opening space for sick storytelling.

"At some point I questioned why I had for much of my life leaped from one person to another, with no end in sight. I'm not sure my conclusions are good, but I can tell you when the body feels out of place it will cling to anything that looks like life. Cities. homes. People. Lovers.
Love is the only good way many of us know how to feel alive.
And the ghost I so often was wanted badly to feel real. And the characters in this section can at least tell you I existed. They might not have thought of me much, but they can tell you I was real. Sometimes too real.
"

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ssreadsintranslation's review

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challenging dark emotional reflective sad medium-paced

4.0


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festive_fossil's review

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challenging dark emotional sad slow-paced

4.75

I 'read' the audiobook of this, and finished it in two sittings.  A truly excellent memoir that explores dealing with undiagnosed chronic disease and battling addiction. I found a lot to identify with in this book, as I have also dealt with a chronic disease, the years-long quest for diagnosis - though on a much less extreme scale I am thankful to say. I would recommend this to anyone who wants to learn more about what the experience of having chronic disease is like. Khakpour is explicit that this is not a triumphal narrative, so be prepared for that.

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