Reviews

Empty: A Memoir by Susan Burton

blueridgebookworm's review

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5.0

When Burton wrote of eating issues as “a physical manifestation of emotion”, it felt like being with a friend who just knows what’s up without having to ask. Grateful to Burton for having the courage to share

stacykh's review

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dark informative medium-paced

3.0

kayebee13's review

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emotional reflective slow-paced

4.0

kevinsmokler's review

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dark hopeful reflective sad fast-paced

4.5

emmareads013's review

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informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

4.75


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fschulenberg's review

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dark emotional sad fast-paced

4.0

A deep dive into the eating disorders  that defined Susan Burton’s life , and the changes that diverted her from this trajectory. 

annatl4's review

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challenging dark emotional hopeful informative reflective sad tense medium-paced

4.0

empty was so beautifully written. although the main theme was regarding eating disorders and overall mental health, Susan did a wonderful job at telling her life story at the same time. as someone who grew up in connecticut and moved to boulder colorado, it was easy for me to picture her teenage years and college years. she described her struggle with such honesty, it was truly a heartbreakingly beautiful read. 

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mkyaxley's review

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emotional reflective sad slow-paced

3.0

k_mcday's review

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emotional informative

4.0

lemondropshot's review

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slow-paced

3.0

Well written, but redundant. I almost dropped it, and I heavily skimmed after page 200. Susan skirts around most of her life and problems, never really addressing anything in depth.  She spends a lot of time mentioning how great she is -- straight A student, on the swim team, always winning awards, accepted into prestigious boarding school, went to Yale, etc etc. Yet she's also apparently always partying, always drained from being preoccupied with food, and always busy having a fake personality. She doesn't ever explain how she juggled everything and came out of it with a successful academic life and career.

She also spends over 200 pages on just high school and college, treating the rest of her life with a magic wand wave.  Even though she's a real person writing about her own life, it felt like I was reading a flat Mary Sue who, even at her worst, wasn't that bad because she never purged (Susan has strange fixation on not being bulimic).

Overall, the book felt like a never ending essay to nowhere. I give it 3 stars due to the overall quality of her writing, but the content itself is closer to a 1. It felt like a waste of time.  Susan writes a lot about how important the secret of her having disorderer eating had always been to her, but it's clearly still a secret in the end, as she doesn't ever let the reader get close to her.