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4.34k reviews for:

Dumplin'

Julie Murphy

3.87 AVERAGE


Gostei da premissa do livro: uma adolescente gorda que decide recuperar a autoconfiança fazendo a coisa mais surreal que consegue imaginar, ou seja, inscrever-se no concurso de miss alguma coisa.
Entretanto achei que teria mais obstinação por parte dela. Tudo pareceu como se somente o acaso a levasse até o concurso. Não se preparou para as provas com antecedência, pensou em desistir, mas voltou atrás por chantagem emocional de uma colega... isso ficou meio enfadonho. Uma amizade de anos que se rompe por bobeira. Ela tem 2, veja bem, 2 gatinhos a seus pés e ainda assim fica vendo problemas onde não tem.
Enfim... acho que poderia ter sido melhor aproveitado o livro se a personagem se mostrasse mais firme, renitente em participar do concurso para esfregar na cara de preconceituosos, inclusive da mãe, que ela (assim como qualquer uma) é capaz de participar de um concurso de miss.
funny hopeful inspiring lighthearted medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

4.5 stars

One of the rare times where the movie is better than the book.

My squishy lil heart loved it to bits.

This was kind of a disappointment. The cover and the book asked for so much more than what we got, which was kind of a chaotic mess. I was super disappointed.
First off can we start with Willowdean?
She was incredibly unlikeable. I mean she was always constantly judging herself and in a constant state of "omg I had such a wonderful idea!" and "omg, my idea sucks. I suck. The whole word sucks" which isn't that bad because that happens in real life. But after her lamenting about this again and again and again and not doing anything at all it got annoying.
Next on to the main problem I had with this book. It was supposed to be about feeling comfortable in your own skin and I wanted to see that happen with Will being independent and on her own feet instead of leaning on boys. The whole book was a rather flimsy stand for a romantic plot line.
Spoiler I mean seriously. Who ends a wonderful book about being happy with who you are with a romantic sigh.

Bo was horrible. He was that cliched, bad history bad boy. Basically all the works. And I found him unlikeable. He was childish and no where near what Mitch was like.
What I'm saying is basically that Bo was a really bad main boy character cause I didn't even like him that much, so much so that I wanted to smack him over the head with a Dolly Parton record and sit on him for good measure. I was Team Mitch all the way
Spoiler And look how that ended for all of us sad souls.

Overall, wonderful idea and concept. Ruined all because the author wanted some romance and oh also because of the characters who had no depth and basically were standing there as props.

Review for the ARC.

I was really looking forward to this book, there is a lot of hype all over the internet for this book, from posts on twitter of people re-enacting the pose, to buttons and other stuff. It is quite overwhelming and I was so excited. But was the book good in the end? Yes, and no. What I expected was a self-proclaimed fat girl who after finding a guy she really likes gets a bit scared and enters a pageant, because she wants to show the world how awesome she is. A lot of this is there, but sadly there is a love triangle, the pageant is a joke (the main character doesn't even treat it seriously until it is there), the girl herself had mood swings as big as a whale or 10 and let's not talk about the mother.

I was really looking forward to meeting Willowdean, she sounded like an epic girl who knew what she wanted, who didn't care about her body and was satisfied with it. She has a big mouth and I quite liked that she was just able to defend herself (and others) when needed. However, I also saw a girl who clearly was unsure of stuff, can't choose, was a bitch to her mom (yes, her mom not that nice or subtle at times, but no need to bore that woman in the ground). I saw a girl who clearly judges others on how they look, even thinking that they could use some improvements and then they would be fine. But, oh, oh, if someone says something about her weight, oh no, don't you dare. It was just a bit too silly and it quite took down the character for me. Judging others, but others have to be fine with your body? That is not how it works, not at all. You can't just go yes to you and no to the world. Maybe she tried to help them, maybe she didn't mean it harsh, but sorry, I felt it was just too much.
I hated her for how she treated Bo, how she treated that other guy. Leaving them both dangling and not deciding until one of the guys does it for her. Love triangles can be fun, but it was just fucked up in this one. It was just rotten and I just wanted to smack Willowdean and how she treated them both. They are not candy girl, you need to pick one. You can't just go from one to the other and then expect them all to be perfectly happy and dandy about it. That is not how it works.
I also got tired of her behaviour towards her best friend. At times I wondered how these 2 were friends. Willowdean was constantly comparing herself to her friend, constantly downgrading herself. And then that big fight that was for no fucking reason at all. Absolutely nothing, just because Willowdean wanted something for herself, and oh no her best friend thought to support her by entering, oh no, oh no, that is so no good at all of course. *rolls eyes so hard they fall out* A fight that kept on going on and on and on and on. Sorry, these are friends? *snort*No.

I was so looking forward to the pageant stuff, and while there is stuff, mostly about her mom claiming most of the house with stuff or people, the actual pageant was quite a disappointment. Willowdean doesn't even take it serious, not until later. Why enter, if you don't fucking care about anything at all? Why would you do that, to prove a point? A point that is quite lost now?

Willowdean herself had mood swings and I can imagine she has those, but after a while I had no clue what girl I had in front of me on the pages. Was it the nice Willowdean, empowered Willowdean, angry Willowdean or maybe the everything sucks in my life Willowdean? In the end I even got annoyed with her constant switching of moods and thoughts.

Then we have the mom. At times I liked her and at other times not. There were also times that I was sorry for her. While she pushed Willowdean a lot, she also meant well. She just wanted to protect her daughter and help her out. She herself was fat back in the day and she was very unhappy. And I think that she can also see that Willowdean isn't always happy with her body. And sure, there are better ways to help your kid, but from what I hear she tried a lot, and I can imagine that she just doesn't know what to do now.
Willowdean's mother didn't deserve her daughter's hateful words or angry fights. Again, I can imagine that it might be hurtful to Willowdean, but I wish she could also see her mom is just trying her best.
On the whole getting rid of stuff from the aunt? I can see why the mom is doing that. I can imagine it must be hard to lose someone you love, and finding out that people are moving on, but that, my dear Willowdean, is life. Some people move on by way of cleaning, others by keeping a shrine, you will have to find a middle ground, and not by continually harassing your mother and accuse her of being mean and that she didn't love her sister and other stuff. That is just plain bitchy.

There are various other characters and they were all pretty hit and miss. That new friend of Willowdean's best friend? I disliked her sooooo much.

The story itself was pretty decent in the first part, but around the middle I just got bored and I wanted it to be over, then by the end it perked up again, but with that ending, sorry.. no.

SpoilerI don't always mind open endings, but with this book it just doesn't fit. Who wins the pageant? Does she go with Bo in the end? What happens with other things? It is just a shame, it just ended, and that was it. There was nothing, I even searched through my copy to see if I missed something, a page, or a word, or a sentence even, but nothing. It just ends. And that is it. A real shame.


Now comes the last question, would I recommend this book? No. It is as easy as that. If you don't mind a character with mood swings as big as 10 or more whales, if you don't mind a love triangle that sucks, if you don't mind an open ending, then try this out. Otherwise I can assure you there are other books about pageants or about fat girls and their lives.

Review first posted at http://twirlingbookprincess.com/

I have the manners of a cat in a box of bubble wrap. Like, it's a problem.

A real surprise. Wil is still reeling from the death of her beloved aunt, who was a Dolly Parton superfan, drag queen groupie, and also happened to weigh upward of 400 lbs. Wil's mom is...something of a power-of-positive-thinking, diet guru....many white girls can probably relate to this. Wil's mom is also an ex beauty queen and she's never really measured up, literally or figuratively.

Wil feels like a real person. I don't generally like reading about things that hit as close to home as dead-end Texas towns and body issues, but I had to make an exception for this book. Maybe Willowdean IS Julie Murphy. Either way, she's an interesting character.

However, I spend a lot of the book being frustrated that she doesn't spend at least a minimal amount of time worrying about this pageant thing that she's gotten everyone into. It's kind of like watching someone make Grand plans and scrambled to make them not even happen. It made Wil seem like a background character.

Man, the Callie portrayed in this book is a very different person than the chilly mega-Slytherin portrayed in Puddin'.

The love interest guy is almost impossibly lame. So boring. What's his name? Bo? That's a dog name.

Her motley group of friends are crucial ingredients to this YA novel.
There's Hannah, the surly, gothic (self-labeled) "half-Dominican lesbian with buck teeth." (...although, Send in the Clowns? WTAF NO.)
Millie, another plus-sized girl who "wears shirts with puppies and kittens and not in an ironic way" and whose confidence and can-do attitude are radiant.
There's Amanda, a soccer enthusiast with a slight leg misalignment without corrective footwear.

What I appreciated about this book was the lack of makeover scenes. Thank you, Julie Murphy, for getting it. What I didn't like: (shocker) the love triangle. Cut it out, YA authors. Also, Ellen. I don't know how to feel about Ellen in general. She seems like she's wanting to get away from Wil the whole book, and Wil gains a new circle of friends plus the old ones she clearly has at work and around town. She might benefit from letting go of this person who cares too much about how other people see her. Someone who actually cares about her feelings.

so many tears

What a perfect beach read!

These characters are lovable and I loved the journey that Willowdean went on to process grief and increase her self-confidence. The relationships and friendships were written in such a relatable way and I found myself so satisfied by how it all ended.

I've already begun recommending this one to family, and know I'll be recommending it often at the library too!