Reviews tagging 'Suicide attempt'

You Better Be Lightning by Andrea Gibson

8 reviews

marysia_p's review

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emotional hopeful reflective

4.5


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another_average_bibliophile's review

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emotional hopeful inspiring reflective fast-paced

5.0


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victoriarose12's review

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emotional funny hopeful fast-paced

4.25


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competencefantasy's review

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challenging emotional hopeful reflective sad fast-paced

4.5


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alisonvh's review

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challenging emotional hopeful inspiring reflective fast-paced

5.0

I always say I don’t like poetry, but then when I read it, I really enjoy it. The poems in this collection are so good I was sad to finish the book. I read a library copy, but I’m seriously considering buying a copy to add to my own collection.

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moonyreadsbystarlight's review

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emotional hopeful reflective sad

5.0

 Andrea Gibson has put out another heartbreaking, heartmending collection. While this collection hits on many topics, with each peice, this digs deep into love -- not just romance, but the love you put out to the world, love of people, family, friends, learning to love yourself, love in the face of some of the hardest things. This is another brilliant poetry collection that I know I will continue to revisit. 

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breekeeler's review

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emotional reflective slow-paced

4.5

When Andrea Gibson writes about love, it makes me believe I can be loved and can love in a myriad of ways.  

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chamomiatea's review

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dark emotional funny hopeful reflective sad

5.0

 
Thank you to NetGalley and Button Poetry for providing me with a free e-ARC of You Better Be Lightning by Andrea Gibson, in exchange for review. 

I have read and loved two of Andrea Gibson’s other poetry collections, Patsy, and Lord of the Butterflies. I find reading Gibson to be a full body experience. My eyes, whilst simultaneously gobbling up all their delicious words, are also constantly brimming with, and often spilling tears. My mouth, agape, gasping, or laughing. My emotional self, ignited over and over, as the poems wash over me in all their raw realness. My skin, constant goosebumps. Once you read the first poem of this collection, you will know why I felt Andrea must have been snooping around in my brain while writing this collection. 

In You Better Be Lightning, Gibson speak on themes of queerness (both gender and sexuality), on climate change, on the beauty of the world, on abuse (yes, I do recommend checking trigger warnings before embarking), on grief, on therapy, and much more. As dark as these topics might seem, you will find humour within these pages, sometimes wry, always sharp. Often just when you need it the most. Gibson’s poems give a tantalisingly intimate peek into their life, their loves, their pain, and their growth and change over the years. 

I will admit I am not a big poetry reader, and I think that my ability to connect to Gibson’s work speaks volumes. It is conversational and easy to approach. Gibson is a story-teller. I am never left reading lines over and over trying to figure out what they even mean, like I find I am when I try to read some styles of poetry. Don’t get me wrong, I read the lines over and over, but it’s because I love them and want to absorb them into me. 

I especially love Gibson’s use of language. Their wordplay has always delighted me, the way they use homonyms and spin them into fantastic metaphors and imagery. Their craft and skill is tremendous. 

You Better Be Lightning is Andrea Gibson at their best. Raw, relatable, emotional, fierce, beautiful, and with a delightful spark of humour. I whole-heartedly recommend this collection, and I can’t wait to get the chance to recommend this to my library patrons once released. 


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