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288 reviews for:
I'm No Philosopher, But I Got Thoughts: Mini-Meditations for Saints, Sinners, and the Rest of Us
Kristin Chenoweth
288 reviews for:
I'm No Philosopher, But I Got Thoughts: Mini-Meditations for Saints, Sinners, and the Rest of Us
Kristin Chenoweth
I’m no philosopher but I got thoughts by Kristian Chenowith
Is bubbly and fun.
This was a really short and fun book about nothing and everything. It’s a tiny bit about her life and a tiny bit about everything and advice.
Chenowith has a really cute Christian and Dolly Parton inspired spirituality. It was very entertaining and unlike other celebrities self help- spiritual books.
This book is for anyone who enjoys Kristian Chenowith and for those that enjoy Christian spirituality.
Is bubbly and fun.
This was a really short and fun book about nothing and everything. It’s a tiny bit about her life and a tiny bit about everything and advice.
Chenowith has a really cute Christian and Dolly Parton inspired spirituality. It was very entertaining and unlike other celebrities self help- spiritual books.
This book is for anyone who enjoys Kristian Chenowith and for those that enjoy Christian spirituality.
fast-paced
I’m No Philosopher, But I Got Thoughts: Mini Meditations for Saints, Sinners, and the Rest of Us
Sarah’s Scribbles, Book 5
I Picked Up This Book Because: Continue the series
Media Type: Audiobook
Source: Everand
Dates Read: 10/30/24
Rating: 4 Stars
Narrator(s): Kristin Chenoweth
The Story:
I love this little powerhouse of a human. She is so positive but still lets us see her human moments. I always enjoy time spent with her books.
Sarah’s Scribbles, Book 5
I Picked Up This Book Because: Continue the series
Media Type: Audiobook
Source: Everand
Dates Read: 10/30/24
Rating: 4 Stars
Narrator(s): Kristin Chenoweth
The Story:
I love this little powerhouse of a human. She is so positive but still lets us see her human moments. I always enjoy time spent with her books.
lighthearted
fast-paced
funny
inspiring
lighthearted
reflective
relaxing
fast-paced
adventurous
lighthearted
fast-paced
emotional
funny
inspiring
lighthearted
fast-paced
This book is hard because Kristin's first book, A Little Bit Wicked: Life, Love and Faith in Stages, was so incredibly formative for 13 year old me. I did a book report on it in eighth grade. I got it signed in person, I read it cover to cover numerous times. There were some moments in this book that I just new were copy pastes from the first one, which didn't bother me, but did swath me in this intense aura of nostalgia. A nostalgia for that first summer when I discovered Wicked in 2008 and everything was new and exciting and I would watch every single movie Kristin even had five seconds of screentime in and I felt all of these wonderful exciting feels of discovery and love and learning about life through those discoveries and feeling the world crack open at your feet and now all those years later I actually do work in the theater industry and everything is different but everything is the same, but I'll still always long for that feeling of joyous discovery.
All this to say, I loved the bits that felt distinctly Kristin. But it is no A Little Bit Wicked, not that it could have ever been.
All this to say, I loved the bits that felt distinctly Kristin. But it is no A Little Bit Wicked, not that it could have ever been.
hopeful
inspiring
lighthearted
fast-paced
inspiring
lighthearted
reflective
fast-paced
What I adored about this book was how intrinsically Kristin every word was. Read in her signature mix of regality and down home charm, "I'm No Philosopher" brings tale's of Chenoweth's life both light and dark into stark comparisons with her faith.
While each chapter is wrapped up with a "quick prayer", there is never a preachiness to the words. Chenoweth wants you to know what's brought her comfort and peace in her times of despair and joy, but there is never the "holier than thou" sense one can get from religious influenced stories. She shows herself, warts and all, with the hope not of conversion but of coming to a greater universal understanding.
Hearing Chenoweth mutter every giggle, sob, and sing-song note of this audiobook is a dream, and shows exactly why she is the enduring legacy that she has become.
While each chapter is wrapped up with a "quick prayer", there is never a preachiness to the words. Chenoweth wants you to know what's brought her comfort and peace in her times of despair and joy, but there is never the "holier than thou" sense one can get from religious influenced stories. She shows herself, warts and all, with the hope not of conversion but of coming to a greater universal understanding.
Hearing Chenoweth mutter every giggle, sob, and sing-song note of this audiobook is a dream, and shows exactly why she is the enduring legacy that she has become.
fast-paced